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PUBLIUS See also: Roman senator and Stoic philosopher, lived during the reign of See also: Nero
.
He was the See also: husband of See also: Arria the daughter of Arria (q.v.), See also: father-in-See also: law of Helvidius See also: Priscus, and a friend and kinsman of the poet See also: Persius
.
He was See also: born at Patavium, and belonged to a distinguished and wealthy See also: family
.
The circumstances under which he came to See also: settle in See also: Rome are unknown
.
At first he was treated with See also: great consideration by Nero, probably owing to the influence of See also: Seneca, and became See also: consul in A.D
.
56 and one of the keepers of the Sibylline books
.
In 57 he supported in the senate the cause of the Cilician envoys, who came to Rome to accuse their See also: late governor, Cossutianus Capito, of extortion
.
In 59 Thrasea first openly showed his disgust at the behaviour of Nero and the obsequiousness of the senate by retiring without voting after the emperor's letter justifying the See also: murder of See also: Agrippina had been read
.
In 62 he prevented the execution of the praetor Antistius, who had written a See also: libel upon the emperor, and persuaded the senate to pass a milder See also: sentence
.
Nero showed his displeasure by refusing to receive Thrasea when the senate went in a See also: body to offer its congratulations on the See also: birth of a princess
.
From this See also: time (63) till his See also: death in 66 Thrasea retired into private See also: life and did not enter the senate-See also: house again
.
But his death had been decided upon
.
The simplicity of his life and his adherence to Stoic principles were looked upon as a reproach to the frivolity and debaucheries of Nero, who " at last yearned to put Virtue itself to death in the persons of Thrasea and See also: Soranus " (Tacitus)
.
Cossutianus Capito, the son-in-law of See also: Tigellinus, who had never forgiven Thrasea for securing his condemnation, and Eprius See also: Marcellus undertook to conduct the See also: prosecution
.
Various charges were brought against him, and the senate, awed by the presence of large bodies of troops, had no alternative but to condemn him to death
.
When the See also: news was brought to Thrasea at his house, where he was entertaining a number of See also: friends, he retired to his chamber, and had the See also: veins of both his arms opened
.
The narrative
of Tacitus breaks off at the moment when Thrasea was about to address See also: Demetrius, the Cynic philosopher, with whom he had previously on the fatal See also: day held a conversation on the nature of the soul
.
Thrasea was the subject of a See also: panegyric by Arulenus Rusticus, one of the tribunes, who had offered to put his See also: veto on the decree of the senate, but Thrasea refused to allow him to throw his life away uselessly
.
Thrasea's own See also: model of life and conduct was See also: Cato of See also: Utica, on whom he had written a
panegyric, one of Plutarch's chief authorities in his biography of Cato
.
See Tacitus, See also: Annals (ed
.
See also: Furneaux), xiii
.
49, xiv
.
12, 48, xv.20-22, xvi.,21-35, containing a full account of his trial and condemnation, Hist. ii
.
91, iv
.
5; Dio Cassius lxi . 15, lxii . 26; Juvenal 'v . 36; W . A .See also: Schmidt, Geschichte der Denk- and Glaubensfreikeit (Berlin, 1847) ; Merivale, Hist. of the See also: Romans under the See also: Empire, ch
.
53; F
.
Hersche, Zwei Characterbilder, on See also: Diogenes of See also: Sinope and Paetus (Lucerne, 1865) ; monographs by A
.
S
.
Hoitsema (See also: Groningen, 1852); and G
.
See also: Joachim (See also: Lahr, 1858); see also Pauly-Wissowa's Realencyclopadie der classischen Altertumswissenschaft (1900), iv. pt
.
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