April 2005 Archives

[The following is a research paper for my Roman history classes completed ten minutes before class started.]

The Catilinarian Conspiracy rose in the turbulent years of the late second to mid-first century BCE. Lucius Catiline represented himself as a representative of the lower classes and a friend of liberty. He conspired against the government of Marcus Tullius Cicero and, in so doing, against the people of Rome. Consequently, Cicero becomes the defender of Rome and the savior of the people. While both men claimed to fight for justice, the Catilinarian Conspiracy was ultimately a result of political opportunism, which found its resolution in the same.

In those tumultuous years, a civil war broke out in Rome led by Sulla and Gaius Marius. Sulla was a talented general whose foreign expeditions had brought wealth and prestige to his army, whose ranks included Catiline. He sought to defend the elite status (and concomitant financial benefits) of the ruling class. He belonged to the optimates party. Marius, a novus homo (self-made “new man”) led the populares, the political party of the lower classes. Marius died in the war and Sulla became a ruthless dictator. Sulla retired after three years of dictatorship and was replaced by the consuls Marcus Aemilius Lepidus and Catulus. Lepidus, in an attempt to restore some of the popular rights abolished by Sulla, provoked some of the masses to rebellion. Catulus, upon the request of the senate, gathered a force and put down the insurrection.[i] Senators may have had more in common with their fellow aristocrats, but by rallying the cause of the more controllable masses, they could gain significant political power for themselves. “Everyone was struggling for his own power.”[ii] Among such opportunists was Catiline. The civil war had seen an increase in the importance of the masses; their allegiance was required for any sort of meaningful power. With the war over, politicians had fewer reasons to appease them. Catiline saw an opportunity and exploited it. By all accounts, he was a less than kind person. He was cruel, tortured people, and reportedly murdered his brother, brother-in-law, and a friend of Cicero, among others.[iii]

Despite his unsavory character, Catiline had the ability to inspire people to his cause. Some men, though not part of his conspiracy, ventured out to join with Catiline. One such man was Fulvius, the son of a senator, who was caught en route and ordered to be killed by his father.[iv] People who had disgraced themselves stood to gain by the implementation of a new regime, particularly one headed by such an equally unscrupulous character as Catiline. Also, some soldiers had gained immense wealth and power by fighting for Sulla. Some hoped to likewise lift themselves by association with Catiline. Moreover, farm life was difficult and gave little reward; city life was, by comparison, quite easy, and public welfare abundant. Consequently, poor, rural young men came into Rome. Furthermore, the oligarchic system of the senate and consuls excluded many people from the political process. Any attack against the senate could result in their rise to power. All of these varied groups had little to lose. Such are the people who support revolution.[v]

Catiline publicly proclaimed that he was trying to help the downtrodden Romans but his eventual plan, if carried out, would have been devastating for the citizens.[vi] Catiline was a candidate for consul in 63 BCE, competing against Cicero. He lost, but then tried again the next year, employing brazen bribery to such an extent that Cicero created a new law against it in response. Catiline, knowing this was aimed at him, planned to murder Cicero and others on election day, October 20. Cicero found out and on election day presented this plot to the senate, which, on the following day passed senatus consultum de re publica defendenda, investing the consuls with absolute power so that they might defend the republic. Cicero doubled his bodyguard and, with additional precautions, thwarted Catiline’s plans when the election finally took place. Desperate, Catiline moved forward with a larger plan of military invasion. He gathered up a collection of Sulla’s veterans from Etruria under the capable leadership of the centurion Gaius Manlius on October 27.[vii] Many senators joined in Catiline’s conspiracy. Foremost among them were Publius Cornelius Lentulus, Caius Cethegus, Lucius Cassius Longinus, Marcus Porcius Lecca, Quintus Curius, and Lucius Bestia. They met at the house of Porcius on November 6 to affirm their commitment to the conspiracy and work out details.

Lentulus, was busy in Rome trying to secure support among key people. He and his underlings, among them Publius Umbrenus, also sought the assistance of the barbarians. Specifically, and most detrimentally to their cause, Umbrenus asked the Gallic Allobroges to ally with Catiline. The tribe was heavily in debt and, as bellicose Gauls, not opposed to war. The Allobroges’ envoys had come to Rome seeking help with their financial problems. The Senate, however, had in their view failed them. Umbrenus informed the envoys of Catiline’s plans. To gain their confidence, he gave the names of some of the more illustrious conspirators, despite the fact that many of those named people were, in fact, not involved in the conspiracy. The Allobroges assented to the plan, then later reconsidered. They loved fighting and stood to gain much if the conspiracy worked. The Roman war machine was still mighty, however, and a failure would have horrible repercussions for their people. War with Rome was a gamble they were unwilling to take. Instead, they chose to tell their patron in Rome, Quintus Fabius Sanga, about the conspiracy. Sanga told Cicero, who then told the envoys to continue along with the conspiracy plans, gaining more evidence and details.[viii]

Curius had a mistress, Fulvia, whom he kept apprised of the plans; she in turn kept Cicero apprised of the plans. Acting on this knowledge, Cicero was able to save himself from two assassins sent to his house in the early hours of November 7. The next day, he gave his first oration against Catiline, delivered in the Temple of Jupiter Stator, as opposed to the typical location, the Curia Hostilia. The Temple of Jupiter Stator was a particularly significant place for Cicero to speak to the Senate. It was located at the foot of the Palatine Hill, along the intersection of the Sacra Via and the Clivus Palatinus. Furthermore, the area housed equites, armed cavalry. The temple had a legendary founding by none other than Romulus, who built the temple in response to divine aid in defeating the Sabines, who invaded the city with the assistance of a traitor.[ix] “The Temple of Jupiter Stator, then, was associated with Rome’s first great military crisis.”[x] By delivering his invective at that temple, Cicero invoked this prior crisis. He set himself up in the position of Romulus, on the side of Jupiter. Catiline, who by Sallust’s account saw himself as a defender of liberty and the republic, is consequently presented as the enemy of the state, the people, and God.

Catiline had the audacity to show up himself, and so Cicero directed his oration directly to the traitor. Cicero asked if Catiline still thought his plans were secret and viable. Clearly, the plot had been uncovered and foiled; how could Catiline possibly think he could get away with such a thing? He continued, appalled that Catiline had been allowed to live for so long. He should have been executed by a consul long ago, in Cicero’s view. Despite the enormity of Catiline’s crimes, Cicero explained that he would not execute Catiline until there was not one person who would defend him. Cicero wanted no one to be able to say Catiline died unfairly. His execution would be on the unanimous consent of respectable Romans. Cicero would, however, keep Catiline under close watch to prevent him from any further actions against the republic. Cicero then continued to denigrate Catiline by listing elements of the plot that Cicero thwarted.[xi] This further reveals Cicero’s own political opportunism. In his careful oratory, Cicero presented himself as an almost omniscient force against the evil designs of Catiline, a man he considered responsible for all the crime and atrocities in Rome.[xii]

Cicero noted that Catiline initially attacked only him but expanded to include the entire republic. Catiline sought to destroy the “temples of the immortal gods, the houses of the city and the lives of all the citizens”[xiii] The conspiracy itself involved an overly-wrought plan too complex to not fail. Once Catiline’s army made it close enough to the city, Lucius Bestia, a tribune, was to publicly protest against Cicero for provoking such a grave conflict. This protest would further be a signal to the lesser conspirators to carry out their respective orders. One group, under the leadership of Cassius was to simultaneously start twelve fires throughout the city, creating the confusion necessary to execute the remainder of the conspiracy. Various conspirators were assigned targets to assassinate, with Cicero being the principal target. Youths of the nobility involved in the conspiracy were to murder their more conservative fathers. With these sundry atrocities complete, the conspirators would leave Rome to join Catiline and his army.[xiv] These conspiratorial plans were particularly odious. Fires for the Roman people were far more disastrous than in the modern Western world. Most of the populace lived in crowded, wooden tenements. While the wealthy lived in larger estates, their property too was still close together. Rome had previously been the victim of horrific fires, which would quickly spread. The people of Rome would not easily forgive someone who planned a crime as devastating as incendiarism. Furthermore, Cicero was a well-respected consul. Catiline may have publicly been fighting for liberty of the masses, but Cicero was hardly an enemy of the people. He had gained a reputation as a friend of the people by employing his lauded rhetorical skills defending people under trial. Moreover, patriarchal Roman society logically abhorred the concept of patricide. These planned crimes were considered worse than mere murder; they violated fundamental Roman institutions and threatened republican government.

Cicero, despite public clamor for blood, exhorted Catiline to go into a voluntary exile. Cicero said that there was nothing for Catiline in Rome—that everyone feared and hated him. “Now the fatherland, which is common parent to all of us, hates and also fears you....”[xv] Catiline disgraced his name and honor through not only this latest public infamy, but also a pattern of disreputable and infectiously corrupting behavior.[xvi]

Ostensibly to avoid suspicion, Catiline offered himself over to the custody of respected citizens. He was first rejected my Marcus Lepidus, then had the effrontery to come to Cicero’s house. Cicero, who could not possibly be safe with the man who so often tried to murder him in his own house, likewise rejected the traitor. Catiline was further rejected by the praetor Quintus Metellus. Cicero asked what he should make these attempts. His rhetoric somewhat unconvincingly indicates that Catiline clearly must have felt himself deserving of being in custody to submit himself to such a course of action.[xvii]

But why did Cicero want Catiline to not only live, but also go free, where he could be a further threat? He explained that if he thought it best Catiline should die, he would not let the “gladiator” live an hour longer.[xviii] There were some senators who, in ignorance, did not believe in the conspiracy, or who strengthened it with some degree of tacit approval or perhaps an expression of some sympathy. If Cicero simply executed Catiline, some of those men might have considered the action unfair. Catiline, for all his faults, was still a member of the nobility. Unlike authentic gladiators, who were slaves, he was a citizen who theoretically should have had all the associated rights. In the interest of the preservation of the state, however, Cicero and the rest of the would-be victims were quite willing to bend the rules. By killing Catiline, Cicero could attack the “plague” of the republic, but only in part. Catiline was only one man. Even without him, there was still an army of people who had taken up arms against the republic. Cicero would have to deal with them at some point. If he let Catiline go, and Catiline joined up with his army, it would provide incontrovertible proof of the conspirators’ guilt. Moreover, when the battle came, the republic would be able to kill the plague, “and also the root and seed of all future evils”[xix] This was not a fight merely against one man. Cicero would, in his mind, become the savior of Rome. His goal was somewhat ambitious, and ultimately unattainable, in an era of massive political turmoil and unchecked ambition.

Catiline fled that night and the next day Cicero delivered his second oration. In Catiline’s absence he wrote letters to influential men asking for assistance. Quintus Catulus, disinclined to offer such aid, read the letter Catiline sent him aloud to the Senate. In it, Catiline made it clear that he felt no guilt, but rather considered himself a loyal citizen working to restore justice and honor. Unworthy men, such as Cicero, had been promoted to high positions and he saw this as an affront to the dignity of the republic.[xx] When, in the middle of November, news of Catiline’s arrival at Manlius’s camp reached the senate, that body declared Catiline and Manlius public enemies. On December 2, the conspirator’s messengers were captured at Mulvian Bridge[xxi] and on the next day, Cicero presented the evidence before the senate. He further assured the people that he, as consul, and the gods, would protect the republic. In his third oration, he praised his own actions and asked the people to remember his formidable service to the state. On December 5, the senators debated on punishment of the conspirators, even though Catiline and many of his cohorts were still with his army. Caesar argued against execution, because it would set a bad precedent.[xxii] In January of 62 BCE, Catiline’s army was forced into battle at Pistoia. He gave an impassioned rally to his troops, then, dismounting so that he might fight on equal ground with his men, entered battle. In the ferocious melee that followed, Catiline’s army was utterly destroyed and he himself died.[xxiii]

i Merivale, Charles, Caii Sallusti Crispi Catilina. Introduction
(London: Macmillian, 1974), XX–XXI.
ii Sallust Bellum Catilinae, 38.
iii Merivale, XXII–XXIII.
iv Sallust, 39.
v Sallust, 37.
vi Handford, S. A., Sallust: The Jugurthine War & The Conspiracy of
Catiline. Introduction (London: Penguin, 1963), 162.
vii Sallust, 30.
viii Sallust, 40, 41.
ix Vasaly, Ann, “Transforming the Visible: In Catilinam 1 and 3,”
Representations: Images in the World of Ciceronian Oratory
(Berkeley: U of California P, 1993), 41–43
x Vasaly, 45.
xi Cicero, In Catilinam, 1.1, 5, 7, 8.
xii Cicero, 1.18.
xiii Cicero, 1.12.
xiv Sallust, 1.42–44.
xv Cicero, 1.17: Nunc te patria, quae communis est parens omnium
nostrum, odit ac metuit.
xvi Cicero, 1.13.
xvii Cicero, 1.19.
xviii Cicero, 1.29.
xix Cicero, 1.30.
xx Sallust, 36.
xxi Sallust, 45.
xxii Sallust, 50, 51.
xxiii Sallust 57–61.

Biliography
Primary
Cicero. In Catiliam.
Sallust. Bellum Catilinae.
Secondary
Handford, S. A. Sallust: The Jugurthine War & The Conspiracy of
Catiline. Introduction. London: Penguin, 1963.

Merivale, Charles. Caii Sallusti Crispi Catilina. Introduction.
London: Macmillian, 1974.

Vasaly, Ann. Representations: Images in the World of Ciceronian
Oratory. Berkeley: U of California P, 1993.

I wrote a paper for my Greek tragedies class Monday night. Indeed, I didn't even start reading the play until 9 pm. I'm not sure if it shows, but I suspect it might. See for yourself. Note: I took out all of the references to where the quotes from the play came out of (no line numbers). I originally used page numbers for the quotes, which isn't standard, but makes since in the context of the class, where we all have the same edition of the play. Since I never wrote down the line numbers, I didn't bother finding them for this. Also, I took the footnote for the one external source and just threw it into a parenthetical citation. It worked for me.