The Gaius Verres Case: A Glossary &
Explanations
![]() Cicero GLOSSARY by Ann Linder Action de Repetundis: An action by provincials against an official for extortion. The law allowed banishment of a convicted official and a fine equal to 250% of the amount proven to have been extorted. Actio Prima: The name given to Cicero's opening speech in the trial of Gaius Verres. Actio Secunda: The name given to a set of five speeches edited and published by Cicero after the Gaius Verres trial. The five speeches (or books) each address a specific set of crimes Verres was alleged to have committed. Cupid: This son of Venus and symbol of love in ancient Roman mythology. Husband to Psyche, he is frequently depicted as a youth with wings. Decumae
(tithes): Taxes paid by many Sicilian farmers. The tax, calculated on
the basis on land acreage and the amount of seed sown, typically took
the form of heat, barley, wine, oil, fruit, or vegetables. Citizens who paid this tax were called decumani.
De Signis: The title given to “The Dogs": Verres's group of henchmen. They were charge with identifying targets for plunder, especially works of art, and then acquiring them for Verres's personal collection. The Dogs also helped locate candidates for affairs. They were experts at intimidation. Divinatio: The proceeding held to determine who should be selected as prosecutor when various plaintiffs propose more than one candidate for the job. It is also the name given to Cicero's speech identifying the reasons why he should be the one to prosecute Verres for his crimes against Sicilians. Edicta Repentina: Edicts issued to announce public events, funerals, holidays, etc. Another variety of the Edicta Repentina were legal decrees such as orders postponing a trial or banishing someone. Equites: The middle class of Emblemata: Ornaments, usually of silver, gold, or jewels, that adorned drinking vessels and other dinner ware. Verres had his henchment tear emblemata from the possessions of Sicilians, and then applied them to his own drinking vessels and other dinner ware. Fortuna: Goddess of fate and fortune. After being adopted by the Romans, she became a very popular deity especially among married women and was honored by a decadent temple on the Capitoline Hill. Frumentum Aestimatum: Literally “frumentum in cellam” or “grain in the celler”. This was grain the preator demanded and kept for his own personal use. Fruges Minutae: Fruits and vegetables paid as tithes. Jugerum: A unit of land measurement 240 ft by 120 ft. Originally the area necessary for a yoke of oxen to move across. Litter: A covered couch used for carrying important people through the streets. Medimni: A unit of measurement adopted to calculate amounts of grain. Roughly equivalent to 57 liters of cereal. Second Tithe: A compulsory purchase of grain at a fixed price agreed upon by the Senate in Sesterce: A low denomination of Roman currency introduced in 211 B.C.. Coins were made of silver and worth one-tenth as much as a denarii. Second Tithe: A compulsory purchase of grain at a fixed price agreed upon by the Senate in Slaves: Slaves consisted mainly of captured peoples, criminals, and those who were born to slaves. Their conditions varied greatly, ranging from fields slaves (who dealt with hard labor either in the quarries or in the fields) to household slaves (more akin to cooks or maids). Slaves were considered members of the household and typically were responsible for taking care of the children. Litter: A covered couch used for carrying important people through the streets. Verrines: The name given the set of seven speeches (two delivered and five published after the trial) by Cicero relating to the trial of Gaius Verres. EXPLANATIONS From Cicero's Orations (Gunnison and Harley, editors)(1912) STYLES OF ROMAN ORATORY* In the time of ROMAN CITIZENS* The old distinction
between patricians and plebeians was wiped out as early as 300 B.C., when
both classes alike were entitled to hold any office, civil or
religious. But
another distinction arose, dividing the people into three classes, the
senatorial
order, the knights, and the commons. The
Senatorial Order, or Optimates. - This order
included all who were descended from a
curule magistrate or who had themselves held office. They
therefore constituted an hereditary
nobility. They practically held a monopoly of the offices, for while
any
freeborn citizen might be a candidate, 'the power of the senatorial
party was
against all except the nobles. Senators were excluded by law from trade
and
banking. Their distinctive dress was the tunic with a broad purple
stripe. Freed slaves (liberti,
libertini) were citizens and had the
right to vote, but not to hold office until the taint of slavery was
removed by
two or more generations. Municipia, or municipal towns, were conquered communities
subject to taxation and military service, which finally gained full
citizenship. Civitates foederatae were
communities whose privileges depended on special treaty with THE
SENATE*
Membership. - In the earlier days of the republic any citizen of proper age was eligible to the Senate, though the preference was given to ex-magistrates. After Sulla, the Senate became exclusively a body of ex-magistrates, serving ex-officio for life. Before admission to membership, a candidate must be declared worthy by the censor, must be thirty-one years old, and must abstain from certain occupations. While there was no property requirement, only men of means would be able to serve, as they did, without pay. The senators in a body were addressed as patres conscripti, i.e. patres et conscripti, a phrase first used in 509 B.C. to include the original senators (patres) and the newly enrolled (conscripti) plebeians. The number of senators was fixed by Sulla at 600, by Caesar at 900, and afterwards reduced to 600. The Session. - The regular meeting place of
the Senate
was the Curia Hostilia on the north side of the Comitium, but
any temple
might be used instead. The first oration against Catiline was delivered
in the Procedure. - After the senators had been summoned by the herald (praeco) or by proclamation, the presiding officer took the auspices. He then proposed the question to be considered (rem ad senatum referre), and called upon the members to express their opinions (rogare sententias). The privilege of speech was given first to magistrates-elect, then to ex-magistrates ranking as consuls, praetors, aediles, tribunes, quaestors. The presiding officer was entitled to speak at any stage of the debate. The members either spoke at length or simply expressed agreement, or nonagreement with the motion. After the discussion the voting was by division. All voted except magistrates in office. A decision of the Senate which was not vetoed was called a senatus consultum; but if vetoed by any magistrate having the right of veto, it was only a senatus auctoraas. To be valid, the decision must be reached before sunset. Filibustering was practiced, for the opponent of a measure could prevent action on it by talking until sunset. Functions. - The Senate was primarily an advisory body, giving advice only when asked, but by reason of the dignity of its members, it gained in power until it controlled all legislation and elections. Among its special powers were the following: 1. In religious matters the Senate ordered the consultation of the soothsayers or the Sibylline books, decreed a thanksgiving (supplicatio), games, or holidays, and cooperated with the religious officers in times of peril. 2. In financial matters the Senate controlled taxation, revenues, appropriations, and coinage. 3. The Senate
declared war and
concluded peace, assigning troops and military commands, awarding the
title of imperator and granting a triumph or a supplicatio.
4. The Senate could enter into an alliance by treaty with a foreign nation, assume the protectorate of a territory, or confer the title of king or friend of the Roman people on a foreign potentate. Embassies from foreign nations were sent to it, and demands addressed to a foreign nation were sent by the Senate. 5. The government of the provinces was under the jurisdiction of the Senate, which assigned the proconsuls and the proprietors. 6. The Senate discussed bills which were to be presented to the legislative assemblies. 7. The Senate
had the sole right of
naming a dictator, or might suspend the ordinary laws by passing a senatus
consultum ultimum, directing the consuls videant ne quid res
publica
detrimenti capiat. THE MAGISTRATES* There were six ordinary magistrates in the republican period: consul, censor, and praetor, tribune of the plebs, aedile, and quaestor. The dictator and magister equitum were extraordinary, appointed only in critical times. The consul and praetor (dictator and magister equitum) were magistrates with imperium, i.e. with supreme executive authority, military, civil, and judicial, which had formerly belonged to the kings. The other officials were magistrates with potestas. The consul, censor, praetor, curule aedile (dictator and magister equitum) were curule magistrates, i.e. were entitled to use the sella curulis, an ivory chair of peculiar shape, as a symbol of authority. Non-curule magistrates used a subsellium, a low wooden bench. By a law in 180 B.C., a cursus honorum was established, making it necessary for one to have been quaestor before becoming praetor, and to have been praetor before becoming consul. Furthermore, it was considered desirable to be aedile before being praetor, though not essential. Besides this sequence; a minimum age limit was fixed for the incumbent of each office; for quaestor, thirty-one; aedile, thirty-seven; praetor, forty; consul, forty-three. The date of the elections was usually set by the Senate for July, but postponements might occur. Quaestors were inaugurated the following December 5; tribunes, December 10; others, January 1. The term of office was one year, except for the censor, who served eighteen months. An interval of two years was necessary between the different offices, and one of ten years before reelection to the same office. Every magistrate possessed the power of veto over his colleague or an inferior magistrate. There was no salary for public officials, but an ex-magistrate found a source of gain in the province to which he was assigned. Consuls.
- The two consuls were theoretically of equal
power, exercising their authority on alternate months. They were the
chief
magistrates, checking by veto any other except a tribune. Each consul
was
limited by the veto power of the other and of the tribune, and was
restrained
by the fact that he would have to give an account of his administration
to the
people. In the transaction of foreign affairs, they presided over the
Senate,
and executed its orders. They conducted the election of the curule
magistrates
in the popular assemblies. They had the power to levy troops, and were
nominally the commanders, but in Praetors.
- In case of the absence of both consuls from
the city, the praetors acted in their place. But their chief duty was
to act as
judges. As the government developed, their number was increased from
one to
eight, as it was in Aediles. - There
were four aediles, two "curule" and
two "plebeian." The former were chosen by the comitia
tributa, the latter by the concilium
plebis (24). Their duties were
practically the same, the city being divided into four districts, one
for each
aedile. These duties were the care of the streets and public buildings,
the
water supply and the grain market, the superintending of the police,
and the
providing against fire. An important function was to provide for the
public
games and festivals. For this purpose there was a state appropriation
of funds,
but the desire to win the favor of the people often led the aedile to
excessive
expenditure which he expected to pay by means of later income in the
provinces. Quaestors. - The
quaestors were the public treasurers. Before the third century B.C. they
also prepared evidence in public prosecutions (hence the name, from quaero).
They collected money due the state and
paid it out by order of the Senate. They were also custodians of the
public
documents such as census lists, contracts, and copies of laws. Their
number, at
first two, was increased by Sulla to twenty. Two of these (quaestores
urbani), served in the city as general
financial officers, while the others were with the army or in the
provinces as
paymasters. Their year of office began December 5, when they drew lots
for
assignments as referred to in Cat. IV. 7. Tribunes. - The
ten tribunes of the plebs were of necessity
plebeian, either by birth or adoption (24). The office was first
created to
protect the people against the arbitrary action of a magistrate. Though
they
had no positive duties except to preside at certain elections (24) they
came to
be the most powerful officers in the state, for by their power of veto (ius
intercedendi) they could prevent the act
of any curule magistrate, the passage of laws by the assemblies, or the
decree
of the Senate. The only check upon them was the veto of a colleague.
They could
also convoke and preside over the Senate (28) and the comitia
tributa, and initiate legislation. Their
activity was confined to the city, from which they were permitted to be
absent
only a day at a time. As protectors of the people, the houses of the
tribunes
stood open day and night. Their persons were declared sacred, i.e.
death might be inflicted on any man who harmed
the
tribune in the exercise of his authority. THE COURTS* The Roman courts were in charge of the praetors. In cases of minor importance, the praetor
either gave the
decision himself or referred it to a judge (iudex) or jury.
For cases of
greater importance, standing courts were established by Sulla, the quaestiones
perpetuae, presided over by the praetors. These courts considered
cases
concerning misgovernment (extortion), murder, forgery, embezzlement,
treason,
assault, etc. Juries varied in number of men, and were selected by the
presiding judge. After 70 B.C. a law
provided that they should be taken equally from the senators, the
knights, and
the tribuni aerarii. Their service was honorary. Trials were
first held
in the open air at the tribunal of the praetor in the Forum, but after
184 B.C., often in the basilicas around the
Forum. From the decisions of the standing courts there was no appeal.
By the
Valerian law (509 B.C.) citizens
condemned to death or excessive fine by any magistrate had the right of
appeal
to the comitia centuriata and tributa respectively.
But capital
punishment and the flogging of citizens were abolished by the Porcian
law (198
B.C.). Imprisonment as a penalty was not known in PROVINCES* A Roman province was organized under a
charter prepared
by the conquering general with the sanction of the Senate. Its
government was entrusted
to a proconsul when an army was necessary, to a propraetor when the
province
was quiet. As far as practicable, the freedom of the provincials in
local
matters was not interfered with. "The tax exacted of a province was a
tithe (decuma), or a fixed amount in money (stipendium). Besides
the tithe, the Senate might impose the burden of supplying further
produce at a
fixed price." (Gow.) During the later years of the republic,
especially,
the provinces were plundered by the governors as well as by the tax
farmers.
Although charges could be brought in the special court at THE FORUM AND THE The Forum was the open space between the |