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SULPICIA

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V26, Page 69 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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SULPICIA  . the name of two

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Roman poets . The earlier lived in the reign of Augustus, and was a niece of Messalla, the
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patron of literature . Her verses, which were preserved with those of Tibullus and were for long attributed to him, are elegiac poems addressed to a lover called Cerinthus, possibly the Cornutus addressed by Tibullus in two of his Elegies (bk. ii., 2 and 3; see Schanz, Gesch. d. rom . Litt . § 284; F . Plessis, La Poesie latine, pp . 376-377 and references there given) . The younger Sulpicia lived during the reign of Domitian . She is praised by Martial (x . 35, 38), who compares her to Sappho, as a model of wifely devotion, and wrote a
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volume of poems, describing with consider-able freedom of language the methods adopted to retain her
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husband Calenus's affection . An extant poem (70 hexameters) also bears her name . It is in the form of a
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dialogue between Sulpicia and the muse
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Calliope, and is chiefly a protest against the banishment of the philosophers by the edict of Domitian (A.D .

94), as likely to throw

Rome back into a state of barbarism . At the same time Sulpicia expresses the hope that no harm will befall Calenus . The muse reassures her, and prophesies the downfall of the tyrant . It is now generally agreed that the poem (the MS. of which was discovered in the monastery of
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Bobbio in 1493, but has long been lost) is not by Sulpicia, but is of much later date, probably the 5th century; according to some it is a 15th-century production, and not identical with the Bobbio poem .
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Editions by 0 . Jahn (with Juvenal and
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Persius, revised by F . Biicheler, 1893) and in E . Bahrens, De Sulpiciae quae vocatur satrra (1873) ; see also monograph by J . C .
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Boot (1868) ; R . Ellis in Academy, (Dec. i1, 1869) and Journal of
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Philology (1874), vol. v.; O . Ribbeck, Geschichte der romischen Dichtung (1892), vol. iii.; H .

E .

Butler,
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Post-Augustan
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Poetry (1909), pp . 174–176; M . Schanz, Geschichte der romischen Litteratur (1900), iii . 2; Teuffel, Hist. of Roman Literature (Eng. trans., 1900), p . 233, 6 . There are
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English
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translations by L . Evans in Bohn's Classical Library (
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prose, with Juvenal and Persius) and by J . Grainger (verse, 1759) .

End of Article: SULPICIA
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PUBLIUS SULPICIUS RUFUS (c. 121-88 B.c.)

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