Historiae Romanae
Cassius Dio
Even Bibulus accordingly joked about it, saying that he had suffered the same fate as Pollux; for, although that hero possessed a temple in common with his brother Castor, it was named after the latter only.
Reprinted by permission of the publishers and the Trustees of the Loeb Classical Library from Cassius Dio: Roman History (Volume III. Books 36-40), Loeb Classical Library Vol. 53, translated by Earnest Carey, Herbert B. Foster, Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, © 1914, by the President and Fellows of Harvard College. The Loeb Classical Library ® is a registered trademark of the President and Fellows of Harvard College.
TextsAb Urbe Condita, 2.42.5 Ab Urbe Condita, 2.20.12 Antiquitates Romanae, l6.13.4 Castor Aedes Chronica, 146 De Natura Deorum, 3.13 De Re Publica, 46 De Vita Caesarum, 22.2 De Vita Caesarum, 10.1 De Vita Caesarum, 20 Epigrammata, 1.70.3 Fasti, 1.707-8 Historiae Romanae, 55.27.4 Historiae Romanae, 59.28.5 In Verrem (actio secunda), 2.1.129-54 In Verrem (actio secunda), 2.1.154 Marcius Coriolanus, 3.4 Naturalis Historia, 10.121 Philippicae, 3.27 Pompeius, 2.4 Saturae, 14.260-62 Sulla, 33.4 |
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