![Sallust](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly91cGxvYWQud2lraW1lZGlhLm9yZy93aWtpcGVkaWEvY29tbW9ucy90aHVtYi82LzZiL1NhbGx1c3RlXyUyOGNyb3BwZWQlMjkuanBnLzE2MDBweC1TYWxsdXN0ZV8lMjhjcm9wcGVkJTI5LmpwZw==.jpg )
Gaius Sallustius Crispus, usually anglicised as Sallust (/ˈsæləst/, SAL-əst; c. 86–35 BC), was a historian and politician of the Roman Republic from a plebeian family. Probably born at Amiternum in the country of the Sabines, Sallust became a partisan of Julius Caesar (100 to 44 BC), circa 50s BC. He is the earliest known Latin-language Roman historian with surviving works to his name, of which Conspiracy of Catiline on the eponymous conspiracy, The Jugurthine War on the eponymous war, and the Histories (of which only fragments survive) remain extant. As a writer, Sallust was primarily influenced by the works of the 5th-century BC Greek historian Thucydides. During his political career he amassed great and ill-gotten wealth from his governorship of Africa.
Gaius Sallustius Crispus | |
---|---|
![]() Imaginary portrait of Sallust | |
Born | 86 BC Amiternum |
Died | c. 35 BC |
Nationality | Roman |
Occupation(s) | Politician and soldier |
Office |
|
Relatives | Gaius Sallustius Passienus Crispus (great-nephew and adopted son) |
Military career | |
Allegiance | Caesarian |
Rank |
|
Wars | Caesar's civil war (49–44 BC) |
Life and career
Sallust was probably born in Amiternum in Central Italy, though Eduard Schwartz takes the view that Sallust's birthplace was Rome. His birth date is calculated from the report of Jerome's Chronicon. But Ronald Syme suggests that Jerome's date has to be adjusted because of his carelessness, and suggests 87 BC as a more correct date. However, Sallust's birth is widely dated at 86 BC, and the Kleine Pauly Encyclopedia takes 1 October 86 BC as the birthdate.Michael Grant cautiously offers 80s BC.
There is no information about Sallust's parents or family, except for Tacitus' mention of his sister. The Sallustii were a provincial noble family of Sabine origin. They belonged to the equestrian order and had full Roman citizenship. During the Social War Sallust's parents hid in Rome, because Amiternum was under threat of siege by rebelling Italic tribes. Because of this Sallust could have been raised in Rome. He received a very good education.
Early career
After an ill-spent youth, Sallust entered public life and may have won election as quaestor in 55 BC. However, the evidence is unclear; some scholars suggest he never held the post. The "earliest certain information" on his career is his term as plebeian tribune in 52 BC, the year in which the followers of Milo killed Clodius. During his year, Sallust supported the prosecution of Milo. He also organised "ferocious street demonstrations" to exert public pressure on Cicero, intimidating him into "giving a substandard performance" when defending Milo at his trial, seeing Milo leave the city into exile. In this year, he, with the other ten tribunes, all supported a law to permit Caesar to stand for a second consulship in absentia.
Syme suggests that Sallust, because of his position in Milo's trial, did not originally support Caesar. According to one inscription, some Sallustius (with unclear praenomen) was a proquaestor in Syria in 50 BC under Marcus Calpurnius Bibulus. Mommsen identified this Sallustius with Sallust the historian, but Broughton argued that Sallust the historian would not have been an assistant to Caesar's adversary or, as an ex-plebeian tribune, have taken the lowly title legatus pro quaestore.
Sallust's political affiliation is unclear in this early period, but after he was expelled from the senate in 50 BC by Appius Claudius Pulcher (then serving as censor), he joined Caesar. He was removed on grounds of immorality, but this was likely a pretext for his opposition to Milo during his tribunate.
Caesar's civil war
During the civil war from 49 to 45 BC, Sallust was a Caesarian partisan, but his role was not significant; his name is not mentioned in the dictator's Commentarii de Bello Civili. Plutarch reported that Sallust dined with Caesar, Hirtius, Oppius, Balbus and Sulpicius Rufus on the night after Caesar's crossing the Rubicon into Italy in early January. In 49 BC, Sallust was moved to Illyricum and probably commanded at least one legion there after the failure of Publius Cornelius Dolabella and Gaius Antonius. This campaign was unsuccessful. In 48 BC, he was probably made quaestor by Caesar, automatically restoring his seat in the senate. In late summer 47 BC, a group of soldiers rebelled near Rome, demanding their discharge and payment for service. Sallust, as praetor designatus and serving as one of Caesar's legates, with several other senators, was sent to persuade the soldiers to abstain, but the rebels killed two senators, and Sallust narrowly escaped death.
In 46 BC, he served as a praetor and accompanied Caesar in his African campaign, which ended in another defeat of the remaining Pompeians at Thapsus. Sallust did not participate in military operations directly, but he commanded several ships and organized supply through the Kerkennah Islands. As a reward for his services, Sallust was appointed proconsular governor of Africa Nova, either from 46–45 or for early 44 BC. It is not clear why: Sallust was not a skilled general; the province was militarily significant. Moreover, his successors as governor were experienced military men. However, Sallust successfully managed the organization of supply and transportation, and these qualities could have determined Caesar's choice. As governor he was so corrupt and avaricious that – on his return in late 45 or early 44 BC – only Caesar's dictatorial influence enabled him to escape conviction on charges of corruption and extortion. On his return to Rome he purchased and began laying out in great splendour the famous gardens on the Quirinal known as the Gardens of Sallust (Latin: Horti Sallustiani), which were later inherited by the emperors.
Retirement
![image](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZW5nbGlzaC5uaW5hLmF6L3dpa2lwZWRpYS9pbWFnZS9hSFIwY0hNNkx5OTFjR3h2WVdRdWQybHJhVzFsWkdsaExtOXlaeTkzYVd0cGNHVmthV0V2WTI5dGJXOXVjeTkwYUhWdFlpOWxMMlZrTDFCcGNtRnVaWE5wTFRFd01EUTNMbXB3Wnk4eU1qQndlQzFRYVhKaGJtVnphUzB4TURBME55NXFjR2M9LmpwZw==.jpg)
Due to those charges and without prospects for advancement, he devoted himself to writing history, presenting his historical writings as an extension of public life to record achievements for future generations. His political life influenced his histories, which produced in him a "deep bitterness toward the elite", with "few heroes in his surviving writings". He also further developed his gardens, upon which he spent much of his accumulated wealth. According to Jerome, Sallust later became the second husband of Cicero's ex-wife Terentia. However, prominent scholars of Roman prosopography such as Ronald Syme believe this is a legend. According to Procopius, when Alaric's invading army entered Rome they burned Sallust's house.
Works
Sallust's monographs of the Catiline conspiracy (De coniuratione Catilinae or Bellum Catilinae) and the Jugurthine War (Bellum Jugurthinum) have come down to us complete, together with fragments of his larger and most important work (Historiae), a history of Rome from 78 to 67 BC.
His brief monographs – his work on Catiline, for example, is shorter than the shortest of Livy's volumes – were the first books of their form attested at Rome.
Catiline's War
The monograph was probably written c. 42 BC. Some historians, however, give it an earlier date of composition, perhaps as early at 50 BC as an unpublished pamphlet which was reworked and published after the civil wars. It shows no traces of personal recollections on the conspiracy, perhaps indicating the Sallust was out of the city on military service at the time. It may have been written as "a plea for common sense" during the proscriptions of the Second Triumvirate, with its depiction of Caesar opposing the death penalty contrasting with the then-current slaughter.
It is Sallust's first published work, detailing the attempt by Lucius Sergius Catilina to overthrow the Roman Republic in 63 BC. Sallust presents Catiline as a deliberate foe of law, order and morality, and does not give a comprehensive explanation of his views and intentions (Catiline had supported the party of Sulla, whom Sallust had opposed). Theodor Mommsen suggested that Sallust particularly wished to clear his patron (Caesar) of all complicity in the conspiracy.[citation needed]
In writing about the conspiracy of Catiline, Sallust's tone, style, and descriptions of aristocratic behaviour illustrate "the political and moral decline of Rome, begun after the fall of Carthage, quickening after Sulla's dictatorship, and spreading from the dissolute nobility to infect all Roman politics". While he inveighs against Catiline's depraved character and vicious actions, he does not fail to state that the man had many noble traits. In particular, Sallust shows Catiline as deeply courageous in his final battle.[citation needed] He presents a narrative condemning the conspirators without doubt, likely relying on Cicero's De consulatu suo (lit. 'On his [Cicero's] consulship') for details of the conspiracy; his narrative focused, however, on Caesar and Cato the Younger, who are held up as "two examples of virtus ('excellence')" with long speeches describing a debate on the punishment of the conspirators in the last section.
The Jugurthine War
![image](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZW5nbGlzaC5uaW5hLmF6L3dpa2lwZWRpYS9pbWFnZS9hSFIwY0hNNkx5OTFjR3h2WVdRdWQybHJhVzFsWkdsaExtOXlaeTkzYVd0cGNHVmthV0V2WTI5dGJXOXVjeTkwYUhWdFlpODFMelZqTDBodmRXZG9kRzl1WDAxVFgxSnBZMmhoY21SemIyNWZNVGRmTFY5VFlXeHNkWE4wWDIxaGJuVnpZM0pwY0hRbE1rTmZZMkV1WHpFME9UQWxNa05mWmpVeExtcHdaeTh5TWpCd2VDMUliM1ZuYUhSdmJsOU5VMTlTYVdOb1lYSmtjMjl1WHpFM1h5MWZVMkZzYkhWemRGOXRZVzUxYzJOeWFYQjBKVEpEWDJOaExsOHhORGt3SlRKRFgyWTFNUzVxY0djPS5qcGc=.jpg)
Sallust's Jugurthine War (Latin: Bellum Jugurthinum) is a monograph on the war against Jugurtha in Numidia from 112 to 106 BC. It was written c. 41–40 BC and again emphasised moral decline. Sallust likely relied on a general annalistic history of the time, as well as the autobiographies of Marcus Aemilius Scaurus, Publius Rutilius Rufus, and Sulla.
Its true value lies in the introduction of Marius and Sulla to the Roman political scene and the beginning of their rivalry. Sallust's time as governor of Africa Nova ought to have let the author develop a solid geographical and ethnographical background to the war; however, this is not evident in the monograph, despite a diversion on the subject, because Sallust's priority in the Jugurthine War, as with War of Catiline, is to use history as a vehicle for his judgement on the slow destruction of Roman morality and politics.[citation needed]
Other works
His last work, Historiae, covered events from 78 BC; none of it survives except a fragment of book 5, concerning the year 67 BC. From the extant fragments, he seemed to again emphasize moral decline after Sulla; he "was not generous to Pompey". Historians regret the loss of the work, as it must have thrown much light on a very eventful period, embracing the war against Sertorius (died 72 BC), the campaigns of Lucullus against Mithradates VI of Pontus (75–66 BC), and the victories of Pompey in the East (66–62 BC).[citation needed]
Two letters (Duae epistolae de republica ordinanda), letters of political counsel and advice addressed to Caesar, and an attack upon Cicero (Invectiva or Declamatio in Ciceronem), frequently attributed to Sallust, are thought by modern scholars to have come from the pen of a rhetorician of the first century AD, along with a counter-invective attributed to Cicero. At one time Marcus Porcius Latro was considered a candidate for the authorship of the pseudo-Sallustian corpus, but this view is no longer commonly held.
Style and themes
The core theme of his work was decline, though his treatment of Roman politics was "often crude", with a historical philosophy influenced by Thucydides. In this, he felt a "pervasive pessimism" with decline that was "both dreadful and inevitable", a consequence of political and moral corruption itself caused by Rome's immense power: he traced the civil war to the influx of wealth from conquest and the absence of serious foreign threats to hone and exercise Roman virtue at arms. For Sallust, the defining moments of the late republic were the destruction of Rome's old foe, Carthage, in 146 BC and the influx of wealth from the east after Sulla's First Mithridatic War. At the same time, however, he conveyed a "starry-eyed and romantic picture" of the republic before 146 BC, with this period described in terms of "implausibly untrammelled virtue" that romanticised the distant past.
The style of works written by Sallust was well known in Rome. It differs from the writings of his contemporaries — Caesar and especially Cicero. It is characterized by brevity and by the use of rare words and turns of phrase. As a result, his works are very far from the conversational Latin of his time.
He employed archaic words: according to Suetonius, Lucius Ateius Praetextatus (Philologus) helped Sallust to collect them.Ronald Syme suggests that Sallust's choice of style and even particular words was influenced by his antipathy to Cicero, his rival, but also one of the trendsetters in Latin literature in the first century BC. More recent scholars agree, describing Sallust's style as "anti-Ciceronian", eschewing the harmonious structure of Cicero's sentences for short and abrupt descriptions. "The Conspiracy of Catiline" reflects many features of style that were developed in his later works.
Sallust avoids common words from public speeches of contemporary Roman political orators, such as honestas, humanitas, consensus. In several cases he uses rare forms of well-known words: for example, lubido instead of libido, maxumum instead of maximum, the conjunction quo in place of more common ut. He also uses the less common endings -ere instead of common -erunt in the third person plural in the perfect indicative, and -is instead of -es in the accusative plural for third declension (masculine or feminine) adjectives and nouns. Some words used by Sallust (for example, antecapere, portatio, incruentus, incelebratus, incuriosus), are not known in other writings before him. They are believed to be either neologisms or intentional revivals of archaic words. Sallust also often uses antithesis, alliterations and chiasmus.
This style itself called for "a 'return to values'" which was "made to recall the austere life of the idealised ancient Roman", with archaisms and abrupt writing contrasted against Cicero's "adornment" as present decadence was contrasted with ancient virtues.
Reception
![image](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZW5nbGlzaC5uaW5hLmF6L3dpa2lwZWRpYS9pbWFnZS9hSFIwY0hNNkx5OTFjR3h2WVdRdWQybHJhVzFsWkdsaExtOXlaeTkzYVd0cGNHVmthV0V2WTI5dGJXOXVjeTkwYUhWdFlpODBMelJsTDB4aGNYVnBiR0ZmVUdsaGVucGhYMUJoYkdGNmVtOWZUVzl1ZFcxbGJuUnZYMGRoYVc5ZlUyRnNiSFZ6ZEdsdlgwTnlhWE53YnpBd01ERXVhbkJuTHpJeU1IQjRMVXhoY1hWcGJHRmZVR2xoZW5waFgxQmhiR0Y2ZW05ZlRXOXVkVzFsYm5SdlgwZGhhVzlmVTJGc2JIVnpkR2x2WDBOeWFYTndiekF3TURFdWFuQm4uanBn.jpg)
As a historian
On the whole, antiquity looked favourably on Sallust as a historian. Tacitus speaks highly of him.Quintilian called him the "Roman Thucydides".Martial joins the praise: "Sallust, according to the judgment of the learned, will rank as the prince of Roman historiographers".
In late antiquity, he was highly praised by Jerome as "very reliable"; his monographs also entered the corpus of standard education in Latin, with Virgil, Cicero, and Terence (covering history, the epic, oratory, and comedy, respectively).
In the thirteenth century Sallust's passage on the expansion of the Roman Republic (Cat. 7) was cited and interpreted by theologian Thomas Aquinas and scholar Brunetto Latini. During the Late Middle Ages and Renaissance, Sallust's works began to influence political thought in Italy. Among many scholars and historians interested in Sallust, the most notable are Leonardo Bruni, Coluccio Salutati and Niccolò Machiavelli. Among his admirers in England in the early modern period were Thomas More, Alexander Barclay and Thomas Elyot.Justus Lipsius marked Sallust as the second most notable Roman historian after Tacitus.
Historians since the 19th century also have negatively noted Sallust's bias and partisanship in his histories, not to mention some errors in geography and dating. Also importantly, much of Sallust's anti-corruption moralising is "blunted by his sanctimonious tone and by ancient accusations of corruption, which have made him out to be a remarkable hypocrite".
Modern views on the period which Sallust documented reject moral failure as a cause of the republic's collapse and believe that "social conflicts are insufficient to account for the political implosion". The core narrative of moral decline prevalent in Sallust's works, is now criticised as crowding out his own examination of the structural and socio-economic factors that brought about the crisis of the republic while also manipulating historical facts to make them fit his moralistic thesis; he, however, is credited as "a clear-sighted and impartial interpreter of his own age".
His focus on moralising also misrepresents and over-simplifies the state of Roman politics. For example, Mackay 2009, pp. 84, 89:
Sallust paints a picture that is unsatisfactory in a number of ways. He has great interest in moralising, and for this reason, he tends to paint an exaggerated picture of the senate's faults... he analyses events in terms of a simplistic opposition between the self-interest of Roman politicians and the "public good" that shows little understanding of how the Roman political system actually functioned... The reality was more complicated than Sallust's simplistic moralising would suggest.
Stylistically
Quotations and commentaries "attest to the high status of Sallust's work in the first and second centuries CE". Among those who borrowed information from his works were Silius Italicus, Lucan, Plutarch, and Ammianus Marcellinus.Fronto used ancient words collected by Sallust to provide "archaic coloring" for his works. In the second century AD, Zenobius translated his works into Ancient Greek.
Other opinions were also present. For example, Gaius Asinius Pollio criticized Sallust's addiction to archaic words and his unusual grammatical features.Aulus Gellius saved Pollio's unfavorable statement about Sallust's style via quote. According to him, Sallust once used the word transgressus meaning generally "passage [by foot]" for a platoon which crossed the sea (the usual word for this type of crossing was transfretatio). Though Quintilian has a generally favorable opinion of Sallust, he disparages several features of his style:
For though a diffuse irrelevance is tedious, the omission of what is necessary is positively dangerous. We must therefore avoid even the famous terseness of Sallust (though in his case of course it is a merit), and shun all abruptness of speech, since a style which presents no difficulty to a leisurely reader, flies past a hearer and will not stay to be looked at again.
His works were also extensively quoted in Augustine of Hippo's City of God; the works themselves also show up in manuscripts all over the post-Roman period and circulated in Carolingian libraries. In the Middle Ages, Sallust's works were often used in schools to teach Latin. His brief style influenced, among others, Widukind of Corvey and Wipo of Burgundy.
Petrarch also praised Sallust highly, though he primarily appreciated his style and moralization. During the French Wars of Religion, De coniuratione Catilinae became widely known as a tutorial on disclosing conspiracies.
Friedrich Nietzsche credits Sallust in Twilight of the Idols (1889) for his epigrammatic style: "My sense of style, for the epigram as a style, was awakened almost instantly when I came into contact with Sallust" and praises him for being "condensed, severe, with as much substance as possible in the background, and with cold but roguish hostility towards all 'beautiful words' and 'beautiful feelings'".
Norwegian playwright Henrik Ibsen's first play Catiline (c. 1849) was based on Sallust's story.
Manuscripts
Several manuscripts of his works survived due to his popularity in antiquity and the Middle Ages.
Manuscripts of his writings are usually divided into two groups: mutili (mutilated) and integri (whole; undamaged). The classification is based on the existence of the lacuna (gap) between 103.2 and 112.3 of the Jugurthine War. The lacuna exists in the mutili scrolls, while integri manuscripts have the text there. The most ancient scrolls which survive are the Codex Parisinus 16024 and Codex Parisinus 16025, known as "P" and "A" respectively. They were created in the ninth century, and both belong to the mutili group. Both these scrolls include only Catiline and Jugurtha, while some other mutili manuscripts also include Invective and Cicero's response. The oldest integri scrolls were created in the eleventh century AD. The probability that all these scrolls came from one or more ancient manuscripts is debated.
There is also a unique scroll Codex Vaticanus 3864, known as "V". It includes only speeches and letters from Catiline, Jugurtha and Histories. The creator of this manuscript changed the original word order and replaced archaisms with more familiar words. The "V" scroll also includes two anonymous letters to Caesar probably from Sallust, but their authenticity is debated.
Several fragments of Sallust's works survived in papyri of the second to fourth centuries AD. Many ancient authors cited Sallust, and sometimes their citations of Histories are the only source for reconstruction of this work. But the significance of these citations for the reconstruction is uncertain; because occasionally the authors cited Sallust from memory, some distortions were possible.
Translations
- Sallust (1931) [Translation first published 1921]. Sallust. Loeb Classical Library. Translated by Rolfe, John C (Revised ed.). London: William Heinemann. ISBN 0-674-99128-1. OCLC 40186151.
- Sallust (2008). Catiline's War, The Jugurthine War, Histories. Translated by Woodman, A J. Penguin. ISBN 978-0-140-44948-5.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: ignored ISBN errors (link) - Sallust (2010). Catiline's conspiracy, the Jugurthine War, Histories. Oxford World's Classics. Translated by Batstone, William Wendell. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-161252-7. OCLC 759007075.
- Sallust (2013) [First published 1921, revised 1931]. The War with Catiline. The War with Jugurtha. Loeb Classical Library. Translated by Rolfe, J C; Ramsey, John T (Edited and revised ed.). Cambridge: Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-99684-7. OCLC 856191298.
- Sallust (2022). How to Stop a Conspiracy: An Ancient Guide to Saving a Republic. Ancient Wisdom for Modern Readers. Translated by Osgood, Josiah. New Jersey: Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-21236-4.
See also
- List of historians
- Roman historiography
- Unity makes strength
- Animus in consulendo liber
References
Citations
- Woodman 2008, p. xxvii. "When Sallust died, probably in 35..."
- Woodman 2008, p. xxvii, referencing his estate, "developed with ill-gotten gains from his year's governorship in Africa".
- Syme 1964, p. 7.
- Mellor 2002, p. 30
- Grant 1995, p. 13.
- Syme 1964, p. 15.
- Syme 1964, p. 13.
- (in Russian) Альбрехт, М. (2002) История римской литературы [Istoriya Rimskoy Literatury], Т. 1. Греко-латинский кабинет. С. 480
- (in Russian) Горенштейн, В. О. (1981) Гай Саллюстий Крисп. Сочинения. Наука. С. 148
- Schmidt, P. L. "Sallustius (4)", Der Kleine Pauly. Bd. IV. Sp. 1513
- Syme 1964, p. 14.
- Tacitus, Annales III.30.3
- Syme 1964, p. 9.
- Syme 1964, p. 12.
- Broughton 1952, p. 217. "The date of his quaestorship is probably 55, since he was born in 86 and held the [plebeian] tribunate... in 52".
- Syme 1964, p. 28
- Earl 1966, p. 306.
- Millar, Fergus (1998). The crowd in Rome in the late Republic. University of Michigan Press. pp. 181–83. ISBN 0-472-10892-1. OCLC 264095990.
- Mellor 2002, p. 31.
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- Syme 1964, p. 29.
- Broughton 1952, p. 242.
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- Earl 1966, p. 311.
- Pelling 2012, p. 1310.
- Broughton 1952, p. 248.
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- Dando-Collins, Stephan (2002). The Epic Saga of Julius Caesar's Tenth Legion and Rome. Wiley. p. 67. ISBN 0-471-09570-2.
- Broughton 1952, p. 274. Broughton notes disagreement about the dates. The pseudo-Cicero Invective dates his senatorial return to 50 via a quaestorship; Broughton places it in 48 BC.
- Broughton 1952, p. 291.
- Broughton 1952, p. 613.
- Broughton 1952, pp. 298, 613.
- Syme 1964, p. 37.
- Broughton 1952, p. 329.
- Mellor 2002, p. 32.
- Mellor 2002, p. 35.
- Hieronymus, Adversus Jovinianum 2.1.48. "Illa [Terentia] … nupsit Sallustio".
- Syme, Ronald (1978). "Sallust's Wife". The Classical Quarterly. 28 (2): 292–295. doi:10.1017/S0009838800034820. ISSN 0009-8388. JSTOR 638680. S2CID 170773851.
- Procopius (1916). "Vandalic War". History of the Wars. Loeb Classical Library. Vol. 2. Translated by Dewing, HB. Cambridge: Harvard University Press. 3.2.24. ISBN 978-0-674-99090-6. OCLC 747116798.
- Levene 2007, p. 277.
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- MacKay 1962, p. 190.
- Earl 1966, pp. 307–9.
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- MacKay 1962, p. 183.
- Pelling 2012, pp. 1310–11.
- Levene 2007, p. 281.
- Pelling 2012, p. 1311.
- Smith, William (1867), "Latro, M. Porcius", in Smith, William (ed.), Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology, vol. 2, Stefano Ciufferpebble, p. 726, archived from the original on 15 March 2009, retrieved 8 September 2007
- Hartswick, Kim J. (2004). The Gardens of Sallust: A Changing Landscape (1st ed.). Austin: University of Texas Press. p. 8. ISBN 0-292-70547-6. OCLC 52108727.
- Pelling 2012, p. 1311. Also citing Scanlon 1980.
- O'Gorman 2007, p. 382.
- O'Gorman 2007, p. 383.
- Levene 2007, p. 283.
- (in Russian) Альбрехт, М. (2002) История римской литературы, Т. 1. Греко-латинский кабинет. С. 494
- Suetonius, On Famous Grammarians and Rhetoricians 10.
- Syme 1964, p. 257.
- O'Gorman 2007, pp. 380, 381–82.
- Syme 1964, p. 266.
- (in Russian) Альбрехт, М. (2002) История римской литературы, Т. 1. Греко-латинский кабинет. С. 493
- McGushin, Patrick (1977). C Sallustius Crispus, Bellum Catilinae : a commentary. Brill. p. 19. ISBN 90-04-04835-9. OCLC 3414580.
- (in Russian) Горенштейн, В. О. (1981) Гай Саллюстий Крисп. Сочинения. Москва: Наука. С. 161
- Tacitus, Annals 3.30.
- (Mart. XIV, 191) Martial. Epigrams, XIV, 191: Hic erit, ut perhibent doctorum corda virorum, // Primus Romana Crispus in historia.
- Mellor 2002, pp. 46–47.
- Osmond 1995, p. 104.
- Osmond 1995, p. 107 et seq.
- Osmond 1995, p. 120.
- Osmond 1995, p. 101.
- Mellor 2002, p. 47.
- "Review of: The Breakdown of the Roman Republic: From Oligarchy to Empire". Bryn Mawr Classical Review. 2010. ISSN 1055-7660.
- Brunt, PA (1963). "Review of "The Political Thought of Sallust" by DC Earl". The Classical Review. 13 (1): 74–75. doi:10.1017/S0009840X00216417. ISSN 0009-840X. S2CID 153649280. On moral decline crowding out socio-economic factors, see Earl, DC (1961). The political thought of Sallust. Cambridge University Press. pp. 57–59.
- Mackay 2009, p. 84.
- Mackay 2009, pp. 89–90.
- O'Gorman 2007, p. 379.
- (in Russian) Альбрехт, М. (2002) История римской литературы, Т. 1. Греко-латинский кабинет. С. 504
- Rawson 1987, p. 164.
- (in Russian) Тронский, И. М. (1946) История античной литературы Ленинград: Учпедгиз. С. 47
- Suetonius, On Famous Grammarians and Rhetoricians 10
- Gellius, Noctes Atticae 10.26
- Quintilian, Institio Oratoria 4.2.44-45
- (in Russian) Альбрехт, М. (2002) История римской литературы, Т. 1. Греко-латинский кабинет. С. 505
- Osmond 1995, p. 106.
- Osmond 1995, p. 121.
- Nietzsche, Friedrich Wilhelm (1911). Levy, Oscar (ed.). Twilight of the Idols. The Complete Works of Fredrich Nietzsche. Vol. 16. Translated by Ludovici, Anthony M. Edinburgh: TN Foulis. p. 112.
- Ramsey 2007, p. 14.
- Rolfe 1931, p. xviii.
- Ramsey 2007, p. 26.
- (in Russian) Альбрехт, М. (2002) История римской литературы, Т. 1. Греко-латинский кабинет. С. 502
- Ramsey 2007, p. 15.
Sources
- Broughton, Thomas Robert Shannon (1952). The magistrates of the Roman republic. Vol. 2. New York: American Philological Association.
- Earl, DC (1966). "The Early Career of Sallust". Historia: Zeitschrift für Alte Geschichte. 15 (3): 302–311. ISSN 0018-2311. JSTOR 4434936.
- Grant, Michael (1995). Greek and Roman historians: information and misinformation. London: Routledge. ISBN 0-415-11769-0. OCLC 30974327.
- Levene, DS (2007). "Roman historiography in the late republic". In Marincola, John (ed.). A companion to Greek and Roman historiography. Vol. 1. Routledge. pp. 275–289. ISBN 978-1-4051-0216-2. LCCN 2006032839.
- Mackay, Christopher S. (2009). The breakdown of the Roman republic: from oligarchy to empire. New York: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-51819-2. OCLC 270232275.
- MacKay, LA (1962). "Sallust's "Catiline": Date and Purpose". Phoenix. 16 (3): 181–194. doi:10.2307/1086814. ISSN 0031-8299. JSTOR 1086814.
- Mellor, Ronald (2002). The Roman historians. London: Routledge. ISBN 0-203-29442-4. OCLC 50553430.
- O'Gorman, Ellen (2007). "The politics of Sallustian style". In Marincola, John (ed.). A companion to Greek and Roman historiography. Vol. 2. Routledge. pp. 379–84. ISBN 978-1-4051-0216-2. LCCN 2006032839.
- Osmond, Patricia J (1995). ""Princeps Historiae Romanae": Sallust in Renaissance Political Thought". Memoirs of the American Academy in Rome. 40: 101–143. doi:10.2307/4238730. ISSN 0065-6801. JSTOR 4238730.
- Pelling, Christopher (2012). "Sallust (Gaius Sallustius Crispus)". In Hornblower, Simon; Spawforth, Antony; Eidinow, Esther (eds.). The Oxford classical dictionary (4th ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 1310–11. doi:10.1093/acrefore/9780199381135.013.5674. ISBN 978-0-19-954556-8. OCLC 959667246.
- Ramsey, JT (2007). Introduction. Sallust's Bellum Catilinae. By Sallust. Translated by Ramsey, JT (2nd ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-1-4356-3337-7. OCLC 560589383.
- Rawson, Elizabeth (1987). "Sallust on the Eighties?". The Classical Quarterly. 37 (1): 163–180. doi:10.1017/S0009838800031748. ISSN 0009-8388. JSTOR 639353. S2CID 170610173.
- Rolfe, John C (1931) [Translation first published 1921]. Introduction. Sallust. By Sallust. Loeb Classical Library. Translated by Rolfe, John C (Revised ed.). Cambridge: Harvard University Press. ISBN 0-674-99128-1.
- Syme, Ronald (1964). Sallust. University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-02374-1.
- Woodman, AJ (2008). Introduction. Catiline's War, The Jugurthine War, Histories. By Sallust. Translated by Woodman, AJ. Penguin. ISBN 978-0-140-44948-5.
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: CS1 maint: ignored ISBN errors (link)
Further reading
- Aili, Hans (1979). The prose rhythm of Sallust and Livy (Thesis) (in Swedish). Stockholm: Almqvist & Wiksell. OCLC 464827054.
- Drummond, Andrew (1995). Law, politics and power: Sallust and the execution of the Catilinarian conspirators. Stuttgart: Franz Steiner. ISBN 9783515067416. OCLC 1150242411.
- Earl, Donald C (1961). The political thought of Sallust. Cambridge: University Press. OCLC 1907945.
- Funari, Rodolfo, ed. (2008). Corpus dei papiri storici greci e latini: Storici latini. Autori noti. Caius Sallustius Crispus. Parte B. 1. Vol. 2 (in Italian). F Serra. ISBN 978-88-6227-081-6.
- Hartswick, Kim J (2004). The gardens of Sallust: a changing landscape (1st ed.). Austin: University of Texas Press. ISBN 0-292-70547-6. OCLC 52108727.
- Renehan, R (1976). "A Traditional Pattern of Imitation in Sallust and His Sources". Classical Philology. 71 (1): 97–105. doi:10.1086/366238. ISSN 0009-837X. S2CID 162050128.
- Scanlon, Thomas Francis (1987). Spes frustrata: a reading of Sallust (in German). Heidelberg: Carl Winter. ISBN 978-3-533-03958-7. OCLC 800304023.
- Scanlon, Thomas Francis (1980). The Influence of Thucydides on Sallust. Carl Winter. ISBN 978-3-533-02909-0.
- Woodman, Anthony J (1988). Rhetoric in classical historiography: 4 studies. London: Croom Helm. ISBN 978-0-7099-5256-5. OCLC 246826029.
External links
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Sallust
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- Latin with English translation
- at LacusCurtius (J. C. Rolfe, 1921):
- Bellum Catilinae
- Bellum Jugurthinum
- Invectiva in Ciceronem (uncertain authorship, sometimes attributed to Sallust)
- Oratio ad Caesarem (uncertain authorship)
- Works by Sallust at Project Gutenberg (Schmitz and Zumpt, 1848):
- Bellum Catilinae
- Bellum Jugurthinum
- at the Perseus Project (Watson, 1899):
- Bellum Catilinae
- Bellum Jugurthinum
- at Attalus.org:
- Fragmenta Historiarum (translation of selected fragments)
- Fragmenta Historiarum (Latin text of all surviving fragments)
- Latin only
- at Latin Library (unknown edition):
- Bellum Catilinae
- Bellum Jugurthinum
- Fragmenta Historiarum
- Epistolae ad Caesarem
- Invectiva in Ciceronem
- C. Sallustius Crispus cum veterum historicorum fragmentis. Venetiis: Apud Iuntas, et Baba. 1645.
- English only
- Works by Sallust at Project Gutenberg
- Works by or about Sallust at the Internet Archive
- Works by Sallust at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)
- Works by Sallust at Open Library
Gaius Sallustius Crispus usually anglicised as Sallust ˈ s ae l e s t SAL est c 86 35 BC was a historian and politician of the Roman Republic from a plebeian family Probably born at Amiternum in the country of the Sabines Sallust became a partisan of Julius Caesar 100 to 44 BC circa 50s BC He is the earliest known Latin language Roman historian with surviving works to his name of which Conspiracy of Catiline on the eponymous conspiracy The Jugurthine War on the eponymous war and the Histories of which only fragments survive remain extant As a writer Sallust was primarily influenced by the works of the 5th century BC Greek historian Thucydides During his political career he amassed great and ill gotten wealth from his governorship of Africa Gaius Sallustius CrispusImaginary portrait of SallustBorn86 BC AmiternumDiedc 35 BCNationalityRomanOccupation s Politician and soldierOfficePlebeian tribune 52 BC Praetor 46 BC RelativesGaius Sallustius Passienus Crispus great nephew and adopted son Military careerAllegianceCaesarianRankLegatePraetorProconsulWarsCaesar s civil war 49 44 BC Life and careerSallust was probably born in Amiternum in Central Italy though Eduard Schwartz takes the view that Sallust s birthplace was Rome His birth date is calculated from the report of Jerome s Chronicon But Ronald Syme suggests that Jerome s date has to be adjusted because of his carelessness and suggests 87 BC as a more correct date However Sallust s birth is widely dated at 86 BC and the Kleine Pauly Encyclopedia takes 1 October 86 BC as the birthdate Michael Grant cautiously offers 80s BC There is no information about Sallust s parents or family except for Tacitus mention of his sister The Sallustii were a provincial noble family of Sabine origin They belonged to the equestrian order and had full Roman citizenship During the Social War Sallust s parents hid in Rome because Amiternum was under threat of siege by rebelling Italic tribes Because of this Sallust could have been raised in Rome He received a very good education Early career After an ill spent youth Sallust entered public life and may have won election as quaestor in 55 BC However the evidence is unclear some scholars suggest he never held the post The earliest certain information on his career is his term as plebeian tribune in 52 BC the year in which the followers of Milo killed Clodius During his year Sallust supported the prosecution of Milo He also organised ferocious street demonstrations to exert public pressure on Cicero intimidating him into giving a substandard performance when defending Milo at his trial seeing Milo leave the city into exile In this year he with the other ten tribunes all supported a law to permit Caesar to stand for a second consulship in absentia Syme suggests that Sallust because of his position in Milo s trial did not originally support Caesar According to one inscription some Sallustius with unclear praenomen was a proquaestor in Syria in 50 BC under Marcus Calpurnius Bibulus Mommsen identified this Sallustius with Sallust the historian but Broughton argued that Sallust the historian would not have been an assistant to Caesar s adversary or as an ex plebeian tribune have taken the lowly title legatus pro quaestore Sallust s political affiliation is unclear in this early period but after he was expelled from the senate in 50 BC by Appius Claudius Pulcher then serving as censor he joined Caesar He was removed on grounds of immorality but this was likely a pretext for his opposition to Milo during his tribunate Caesar s civil war During the civil war from 49 to 45 BC Sallust was a Caesarian partisan but his role was not significant his name is not mentioned in the dictator s Commentarii de Bello Civili Plutarch reported that Sallust dined with Caesar Hirtius Oppius Balbus and Sulpicius Rufus on the night after Caesar s crossing the Rubicon into Italy in early January In 49 BC Sallust was moved to Illyricum and probably commanded at least one legion there after the failure of Publius Cornelius Dolabella and Gaius Antonius This campaign was unsuccessful In 48 BC he was probably made quaestor by Caesar automatically restoring his seat in the senate In late summer 47 BC a group of soldiers rebelled near Rome demanding their discharge and payment for service Sallust as praetor designatus and serving as one of Caesar s legates with several other senators was sent to persuade the soldiers to abstain but the rebels killed two senators and Sallust narrowly escaped death In 46 BC he served as a praetor and accompanied Caesar in his African campaign which ended in another defeat of the remaining Pompeians at Thapsus Sallust did not participate in military operations directly but he commanded several ships and organized supply through the Kerkennah Islands As a reward for his services Sallust was appointed proconsular governor of Africa Nova either from 46 45 or for early 44 BC It is not clear why Sallust was not a skilled general the province was militarily significant Moreover his successors as governor were experienced military men However Sallust successfully managed the organization of supply and transportation and these qualities could have determined Caesar s choice As governor he was so corrupt and avaricious that on his return in late 45 or early 44 BC only Caesar s dictatorial influence enabled him to escape conviction on charges of corruption and extortion On his return to Rome he purchased and began laying out in great splendour the famous gardens on the Quirinal known as the Gardens of Sallust Latin Horti Sallustiani which were later inherited by the emperors Retirement Gardens of Sallust Due to those charges and without prospects for advancement he devoted himself to writing history presenting his historical writings as an extension of public life to record achievements for future generations His political life influenced his histories which produced in him a deep bitterness toward the elite with few heroes in his surviving writings He also further developed his gardens upon which he spent much of his accumulated wealth According to Jerome Sallust later became the second husband of Cicero s ex wife Terentia However prominent scholars of Roman prosopography such as Ronald Syme believe this is a legend According to Procopius when Alaric s invading army entered Rome they burned Sallust s house WorksSallust s monographs of the Catiline conspiracy De coniuratione Catilinae or Bellum Catilinae and the Jugurthine War Bellum Jugurthinum have come down to us complete together with fragments of his larger and most important work Historiae a history of Rome from 78 to 67 BC His brief monographs his work on Catiline for example is shorter than the shortest of Livy s volumes were the first books of their form attested at Rome Catiline s War The monograph was probably written c 42 BC Some historians however give it an earlier date of composition perhaps as early at 50 BC as an unpublished pamphlet which was reworked and published after the civil wars It shows no traces of personal recollections on the conspiracy perhaps indicating the Sallust was out of the city on military service at the time It may have been written as a plea for common sense during the proscriptions of the Second Triumvirate with its depiction of Caesar opposing the death penalty contrasting with the then current slaughter It is Sallust s first published work detailing the attempt by Lucius Sergius Catilina to overthrow the Roman Republic in 63 BC Sallust presents Catiline as a deliberate foe of law order and morality and does not give a comprehensive explanation of his views and intentions Catiline had supported the party of Sulla whom Sallust had opposed Theodor Mommsen suggested that Sallust particularly wished to clear his patron Caesar of all complicity in the conspiracy citation needed In writing about the conspiracy of Catiline Sallust s tone style and descriptions of aristocratic behaviour illustrate the political and moral decline of Rome begun after the fall of Carthage quickening after Sulla s dictatorship and spreading from the dissolute nobility to infect all Roman politics While he inveighs against Catiline s depraved character and vicious actions he does not fail to state that the man had many noble traits In particular Sallust shows Catiline as deeply courageous in his final battle citation needed He presents a narrative condemning the conspirators without doubt likely relying on Cicero s De consulatu suo lit On his Cicero s consulship for details of the conspiracy his narrative focused however on Caesar and Cato the Younger who are held up as two examples of virtus excellence with long speeches describing a debate on the punishment of the conspirators in the last section The Jugurthine War c 1490 manuscript of De Bello Jugurthino Sallust s Jugurthine War Latin Bellum Jugurthinum is a monograph on the war against Jugurtha in Numidia from 112 to 106 BC It was written c 41 40 BC and again emphasised moral decline Sallust likely relied on a general annalistic history of the time as well as the autobiographies of Marcus Aemilius Scaurus Publius Rutilius Rufus and Sulla Its true value lies in the introduction of Marius and Sulla to the Roman political scene and the beginning of their rivalry Sallust s time as governor of Africa Nova ought to have let the author develop a solid geographical and ethnographical background to the war however this is not evident in the monograph despite a diversion on the subject because Sallust s priority in the Jugurthine War as with War of Catiline is to use history as a vehicle for his judgement on the slow destruction of Roman morality and politics citation needed Other works His last work Historiae covered events from 78 BC none of it survives except a fragment of book 5 concerning the year 67 BC From the extant fragments he seemed to again emphasize moral decline after Sulla he was not generous to Pompey Historians regret the loss of the work as it must have thrown much light on a very eventful period embracing the war against Sertorius died 72 BC the campaigns of Lucullus against Mithradates VI of Pontus 75 66 BC and the victories of Pompey in the East 66 62 BC citation needed Two letters Duae epistolae de republica ordinanda letters of political counsel and advice addressed to Caesar and an attack upon Cicero Invectiva or Declamatio in Ciceronem frequently attributed to Sallust are thought by modern scholars to have come from the pen of a rhetorician of the first century AD along with a counter invective attributed to Cicero At one time Marcus Porcius Latro was considered a candidate for the authorship of the pseudo Sallustian corpus but this view is no longer commonly held Style and themes4th century AD bronze medallion inscribed SALUSTI VS AVTOR an imaginary likeness sometimes identified as Sallustius Crispus The core theme of his work was decline though his treatment of Roman politics was often crude with a historical philosophy influenced by Thucydides In this he felt a pervasive pessimism with decline that was both dreadful and inevitable a consequence of political and moral corruption itself caused by Rome s immense power he traced the civil war to the influx of wealth from conquest and the absence of serious foreign threats to hone and exercise Roman virtue at arms For Sallust the defining moments of the late republic were the destruction of Rome s old foe Carthage in 146 BC and the influx of wealth from the east after Sulla s First Mithridatic War At the same time however he conveyed a starry eyed and romantic picture of the republic before 146 BC with this period described in terms of implausibly untrammelled virtue that romanticised the distant past The style of works written by Sallust was well known in Rome It differs from the writings of his contemporaries Caesar and especially Cicero It is characterized by brevity and by the use of rare words and turns of phrase As a result his works are very far from the conversational Latin of his time He employed archaic words according to Suetonius Lucius Ateius Praetextatus Philologus helped Sallust to collect them Ronald Syme suggests that Sallust s choice of style and even particular words was influenced by his antipathy to Cicero his rival but also one of the trendsetters in Latin literature in the first century BC More recent scholars agree describing Sallust s style as anti Ciceronian eschewing the harmonious structure of Cicero s sentences for short and abrupt descriptions The Conspiracy of Catiline reflects many features of style that were developed in his later works Sallust avoids common words from public speeches of contemporary Roman political orators such as honestas humanitas consensus In several cases he uses rare forms of well known words for example lubido instead of libido maxumum instead of maximum the conjunction quo in place of more common ut He also uses the less common endings ere instead of common erunt in the third person plural in the perfect indicative and is instead of es in the accusative plural for third declension masculine or feminine adjectives and nouns Some words used by Sallust for example antecapere portatio incruentus incelebratus incuriosus are not known in other writings before him They are believed to be either neologisms or intentional revivals of archaic words Sallust also often uses antithesis alliterations and chiasmus This style itself called for a return to values which was made to recall the austere life of the idealised ancient Roman with archaisms and abrupt writing contrasted against Cicero s adornment as present decadence was contrasted with ancient virtues ReceptionStatue of Sallust in L AquilaAs a historian On the whole antiquity looked favourably on Sallust as a historian Tacitus speaks highly of him Quintilian called him the Roman Thucydides Martial joins the praise Sallust according to the judgment of the learned will rank as the prince of Roman historiographers In late antiquity he was highly praised by Jerome as very reliable his monographs also entered the corpus of standard education in Latin with Virgil Cicero and Terence covering history the epic oratory and comedy respectively In the thirteenth century Sallust s passage on the expansion of the Roman Republic Cat 7 was cited and interpreted by theologian Thomas Aquinas and scholar Brunetto Latini During the Late Middle Ages and Renaissance Sallust s works began to influence political thought in Italy Among many scholars and historians interested in Sallust the most notable are Leonardo Bruni Coluccio Salutati and Niccolo Machiavelli Among his admirers in England in the early modern period were Thomas More Alexander Barclay and Thomas Elyot Justus Lipsius marked Sallust as the second most notable Roman historian after Tacitus Historians since the 19th century also have negatively noted Sallust s bias and partisanship in his histories not to mention some errors in geography and dating Also importantly much of Sallust s anti corruption moralising is blunted by his sanctimonious tone and by ancient accusations of corruption which have made him out to be a remarkable hypocrite Modern views on the period which Sallust documented reject moral failure as a cause of the republic s collapse and believe that social conflicts are insufficient to account for the political implosion The core narrative of moral decline prevalent in Sallust s works is now criticised as crowding out his own examination of the structural and socio economic factors that brought about the crisis of the republic while also manipulating historical facts to make them fit his moralistic thesis he however is credited as a clear sighted and impartial interpreter of his own age His focus on moralising also misrepresents and over simplifies the state of Roman politics For example Mackay 2009 pp 84 89 Sallust paints a picture that is unsatisfactory in a number of ways He has great interest in moralising and for this reason he tends to paint an exaggerated picture of the senate s faults he analyses events in terms of a simplistic opposition between the self interest of Roman politicians and the public good that shows little understanding of how the Roman political system actually functioned The reality was more complicated than Sallust s simplistic moralising would suggest Stylistically Quotations and commentaries attest to the high status of Sallust s work in the first and second centuries CE Among those who borrowed information from his works were Silius Italicus Lucan Plutarch and Ammianus Marcellinus Fronto used ancient words collected by Sallust to provide archaic coloring for his works In the second century AD Zenobius translated his works into Ancient Greek Other opinions were also present For example Gaius Asinius Pollio criticized Sallust s addiction to archaic words and his unusual grammatical features Aulus Gellius saved Pollio s unfavorable statement about Sallust s style via quote According to him Sallust once used the word transgressus meaning generally passage by foot for a platoon which crossed the sea the usual word for this type of crossing was transfretatio Though Quintilian has a generally favorable opinion of Sallust he disparages several features of his style For though a diffuse irrelevance is tedious the omission of what is necessary is positively dangerous We must therefore avoid even the famous terseness of Sallust though in his case of course it is a merit and shun all abruptness of speech since a style which presents no difficulty to a leisurely reader flies past a hearer and will not stay to be looked at again His works were also extensively quoted in Augustine of Hippo s City of God the works themselves also show up in manuscripts all over the post Roman period and circulated in Carolingian libraries In the Middle Ages Sallust s works were often used in schools to teach Latin His brief style influenced among others Widukind of Corvey and Wipo of Burgundy Petrarch also praised Sallust highly though he primarily appreciated his style and moralization During the French Wars of Religion De coniuratione Catilinae became widely known as a tutorial on disclosing conspiracies Friedrich Nietzsche credits Sallust in Twilight of the Idols 1889 for his epigrammatic style My sense of style for the epigram as a style was awakened almost instantly when I came into contact with Sallust and praises him for being condensed severe with as much substance as possible in the background and with cold but roguish hostility towards all beautiful words and beautiful feelings Norwegian playwright Henrik Ibsen s first play Catiline c 1849 was based on Sallust s story ManuscriptsSeveral manuscripts of his works survived due to his popularity in antiquity and the Middle Ages Manuscripts of his writings are usually divided into two groups mutili mutilated and integri whole undamaged The classification is based on the existence of the lacuna gap between 103 2 and 112 3 of the Jugurthine War The lacuna exists in the mutili scrolls while integri manuscripts have the text there The most ancient scrolls which survive are the Codex Parisinus 16024 and Codex Parisinus 16025 known as P and A respectively They were created in the ninth century and both belong to the mutili group Both these scrolls include only Catiline and Jugurtha while some other mutili manuscripts also include Invective and Cicero s response The oldest integri scrolls were created in the eleventh century AD The probability that all these scrolls came from one or more ancient manuscripts is debated There is also a unique scroll Codex Vaticanus 3864 known as V It includes only speeches and letters from Catiline Jugurtha and Histories The creator of this manuscript changed the original word order and replaced archaisms with more familiar words The V scroll also includes two anonymous letters to Caesar probably from Sallust but their authenticity is debated Several fragments of Sallust s works survived in papyri of the second to fourth centuries AD Many ancient authors cited Sallust and sometimes their citations of Histories are the only source for reconstruction of this work But the significance of these citations for the reconstruction is uncertain because occasionally the authors cited Sallust from memory some distortions were possible TranslationsSallust 1931 Translation first published 1921 Sallust Loeb Classical Library Translated by Rolfe John C Revised ed London William Heinemann ISBN 0 674 99128 1 OCLC 40186151 Sallust 2008 Catiline s War The Jugurthine War Histories Translated by Woodman A J Penguin ISBN 978 0 140 44948 5 a href wiki Template Cite book title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint ignored ISBN errors link Sallust 2010 Catiline s conspiracy the Jugurthine War Histories Oxford World s Classics Translated by Batstone William Wendell Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 161252 7 OCLC 759007075 Sallust 2013 First published 1921 revised 1931 The War with Catiline The War with Jugurtha Loeb Classical Library Translated by Rolfe J C Ramsey John T Edited and revised ed Cambridge Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 99684 7 OCLC 856191298 Sallust 2022 How to Stop a Conspiracy An Ancient Guide to Saving a Republic Ancient Wisdom for Modern Readers Translated by Osgood Josiah New Jersey Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 21236 4 See alsoAncient Rome portalBiography portalList of historians Roman historiography Unity makes strength Animus in consulendo liberReferencesCitations Woodman 2008 p xxvii When Sallust died probably in 35 Woodman 2008 p xxvii referencing his estate developed with ill gotten gains from his year s governorship in Africa Syme 1964 p 7 Mellor 2002 p 30 Grant 1995 p 13 Syme 1964 p 15 Syme 1964 p 13 in Russian Albreht M 2002 Istoriya rimskoj literatury Istoriya Rimskoy Literatury T 1 Greko latinskij kabinet S 480 in Russian Gorenshtejn V O 1981 Gaj Sallyustij Krisp Sochineniya Nauka S 148 Schmidt P L Sallustius 4 Der Kleine Pauly Bd IV Sp 1513 Syme 1964 p 14 Tacitus Annales III 30 3 Syme 1964 p 9 Syme 1964 p 12 Broughton 1952 p 217 The date of his quaestorship is probably 55 since he was born in 86 and held the plebeian tribunate in 52 Syme 1964 p 28 Earl 1966 p 306 Millar Fergus 1998 The crowd in Rome in the late Republic University of Michigan Press pp 181 83 ISBN 0 472 10892 1 OCLC 264095990 Mellor 2002 p 31 Broughton 1952 p 236 Syme 1964 p 29 Broughton 1952 p 242 Broughton 1952 p 247 Earl 1966 p 311 Pelling 2012 p 1310 Broughton 1952 p 248 Syme 1964 p 36 Dando Collins Stephan 2002 The Epic Saga of Julius Caesar s Tenth Legion and Rome Wiley p 67 ISBN 0 471 09570 2 Broughton 1952 p 274 Broughton notes disagreement about the dates The pseudo Cicero Invective dates his senatorial return to 50 via a quaestorship Broughton places it in 48 BC Broughton 1952 p 291 Broughton 1952 p 613 Broughton 1952 pp 298 613 Syme 1964 p 37 Broughton 1952 p 329 Mellor 2002 p 32 Mellor 2002 p 35 Hieronymus Adversus Jovinianum 2 1 48 Illa Terentia nupsit Sallustio Syme Ronald 1978 Sallust s Wife The Classical Quarterly 28 2 292 295 doi 10 1017 S0009838800034820 ISSN 0009 8388 JSTOR 638680 S2CID 170773851 Procopius 1916 Vandalic War History of the Wars Loeb Classical Library Vol 2 Translated by Dewing HB Cambridge Harvard University Press 3 2 24 ISBN 978 0 674 99090 6 OCLC 747116798 Levene 2007 p 277 Levene 2007 p 280 MacKay 1962 p 190 Earl 1966 pp 307 9 Mellor 2002 p 38 MacKay 1962 p 183 Pelling 2012 pp 1310 11 Levene 2007 p 281 Pelling 2012 p 1311 Smith William 1867 Latro M Porcius in Smith William ed Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology vol 2 Stefano Ciufferpebble p 726 archived from the original on 15 March 2009 retrieved 8 September 2007 Hartswick Kim J 2004 The Gardens of Sallust A Changing Landscape 1st ed Austin University of Texas Press p 8 ISBN 0 292 70547 6 OCLC 52108727 Pelling 2012 p 1311 Also citing Scanlon 1980 O Gorman 2007 p 382 O Gorman 2007 p 383 Levene 2007 p 283 in Russian Albreht M 2002 Istoriya rimskoj literatury T 1 Greko latinskij kabinet S 494 Suetonius On Famous Grammarians and Rhetoricians 10 Syme 1964 p 257 O Gorman 2007 pp 380 381 82 Syme 1964 p 266 in Russian Albreht M 2002 Istoriya rimskoj literatury T 1 Greko latinskij kabinet S 493 McGushin Patrick 1977 C Sallustius Crispus Bellum Catilinae a commentary Brill p 19 ISBN 90 04 04835 9 OCLC 3414580 in Russian Gorenshtejn V O 1981 Gaj Sallyustij Krisp Sochineniya Moskva Nauka S 161 Tacitus Annals 3 30 Mart XIV 191 Martial Epigrams XIV 191 Hic erit ut perhibent doctorum corda virorum Primus Romana Crispus in historia Mellor 2002 pp 46 47 Osmond 1995 p 104 Osmond 1995 p 107 et seq Osmond 1995 p 120 Osmond 1995 p 101 Mellor 2002 p 47 Review of The Breakdown of the Roman Republic From Oligarchy to Empire Bryn Mawr Classical Review 2010 ISSN 1055 7660 Brunt PA 1963 Review of The Political Thought of Sallust by DC Earl The Classical Review 13 1 74 75 doi 10 1017 S0009840X00216417 ISSN 0009 840X S2CID 153649280 On moral decline crowding out socio economic factors see Earl DC 1961 The political thought of Sallust Cambridge University Press pp 57 59 Mackay 2009 p 84 Mackay 2009 pp 89 90 O Gorman 2007 p 379 in Russian Albreht M 2002 Istoriya rimskoj literatury T 1 Greko latinskij kabinet S 504 Rawson 1987 p 164 in Russian Tronskij I M 1946 Istoriya antichnoj literatury Leningrad Uchpedgiz S 47 Suetonius On Famous Grammarians and Rhetoricians 10 Gellius Noctes Atticae 10 26 Quintilian Institio Oratoria 4 2 44 45 in Russian Albreht M 2002 Istoriya rimskoj literatury T 1 Greko latinskij kabinet S 505 Osmond 1995 p 106 Osmond 1995 p 121 Nietzsche Friedrich Wilhelm 1911 Levy Oscar ed Twilight of the Idols The Complete Works of Fredrich Nietzsche Vol 16 Translated by Ludovici Anthony M Edinburgh TN Foulis p 112 Ramsey 2007 p 14 Rolfe 1931 p xviii Ramsey 2007 p 26 in Russian Albreht M 2002 Istoriya rimskoj literatury T 1 Greko latinskij kabinet S 502 Ramsey 2007 p 15 Sources Broughton Thomas Robert Shannon 1952 The magistrates of the Roman republic Vol 2 New York American Philological Association Earl DC 1966 The Early Career of Sallust Historia Zeitschrift fur Alte Geschichte 15 3 302 311 ISSN 0018 2311 JSTOR 4434936 Grant Michael 1995 Greek and Roman historians information and misinformation London Routledge ISBN 0 415 11769 0 OCLC 30974327 Levene DS 2007 Roman historiography in the late republic In Marincola John ed A companion to Greek and Roman historiography Vol 1 Routledge pp 275 289 ISBN 978 1 4051 0216 2 LCCN 2006032839 Mackay Christopher S 2009 The breakdown of the Roman republic from oligarchy to empire New York Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 51819 2 OCLC 270232275 MacKay LA 1962 Sallust s Catiline Date and Purpose Phoenix 16 3 181 194 doi 10 2307 1086814 ISSN 0031 8299 JSTOR 1086814 Mellor Ronald 2002 The Roman historians London Routledge ISBN 0 203 29442 4 OCLC 50553430 O Gorman Ellen 2007 The politics of Sallustian style In Marincola John ed A companion to Greek and Roman historiography Vol 2 Routledge pp 379 84 ISBN 978 1 4051 0216 2 LCCN 2006032839 Osmond Patricia J 1995 Princeps Historiae Romanae Sallust in Renaissance Political Thought Memoirs of the American Academy in Rome 40 101 143 doi 10 2307 4238730 ISSN 0065 6801 JSTOR 4238730 Pelling Christopher 2012 Sallust Gaius Sallustius Crispus In Hornblower Simon Spawforth Antony Eidinow Esther eds The Oxford classical dictionary 4th ed Oxford Oxford University Press pp 1310 11 doi 10 1093 acrefore 9780199381135 013 5674 ISBN 978 0 19 954556 8 OCLC 959667246 Ramsey JT 2007 Introduction Sallust s Bellum Catilinae By Sallust Translated by Ramsey JT 2nd ed Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 1 4356 3337 7 OCLC 560589383 Rawson Elizabeth 1987 Sallust on the Eighties The Classical Quarterly 37 1 163 180 doi 10 1017 S0009838800031748 ISSN 0009 8388 JSTOR 639353 S2CID 170610173 Rolfe John C 1931 Translation first published 1921 Introduction Sallust By Sallust Loeb Classical Library Translated by Rolfe John C Revised ed Cambridge Harvard University Press ISBN 0 674 99128 1 Syme Ronald 1964 Sallust University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 02374 1 Woodman AJ 2008 Introduction Catiline s War The Jugurthine War Histories By Sallust Translated by Woodman AJ Penguin ISBN 978 0 140 44948 5 a href wiki Template Cite book title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint ignored ISBN errors link Further readingAili Hans 1979 The prose rhythm of Sallust and Livy Thesis in Swedish Stockholm Almqvist amp Wiksell OCLC 464827054 Drummond Andrew 1995 Law politics and power Sallust and the execution of the Catilinarian conspirators Stuttgart Franz Steiner ISBN 9783515067416 OCLC 1150242411 Earl Donald C 1961 The political thought of Sallust Cambridge University Press OCLC 1907945 Funari Rodolfo ed 2008 Corpus dei papiri storici greci e latini Storici latini Autori noti Caius Sallustius Crispus Parte B 1 Vol 2 in Italian F Serra ISBN 978 88 6227 081 6 Hartswick Kim J 2004 The gardens of Sallust a changing landscape 1st ed Austin University of Texas Press ISBN 0 292 70547 6 OCLC 52108727 Renehan R 1976 A Traditional Pattern of Imitation in Sallust and His Sources Classical Philology 71 1 97 105 doi 10 1086 366238 ISSN 0009 837X S2CID 162050128 Scanlon Thomas Francis 1987 Spes frustrata a reading of Sallust in German Heidelberg Carl Winter ISBN 978 3 533 03958 7 OCLC 800304023 Scanlon Thomas Francis 1980 The Influence of Thucydides on Sallust Carl Winter ISBN 978 3 533 02909 0 Woodman Anthony J 1988 Rhetoric in classical historiography 4 studies London Croom Helm ISBN 978 0 7099 5256 5 OCLC 246826029 External linksWikiquote has quotations related to Sallust Wikimedia Commons has media related to Sallust Wikisource has original works by or about Sallust Wikisource has the text of the 1905 New International Encyclopedia article Sallust Library resources about Sallust Online books Resources in your library Resources in other libraries By Sallust Online books Resources in your library Resources in other libraries Latin with English translationat LacusCurtius J C Rolfe 1921 Bellum Catilinae Bellum Jugurthinum Invectiva in Ciceronem uncertain authorship sometimes attributed to Sallust Oratio ad Caesarem uncertain authorship Works by Sallust at Project Gutenberg Schmitz and Zumpt 1848 Bellum Catilinae Bellum Jugurthinum at the Perseus Project Watson 1899 Bellum Catilinae Bellum Jugurthinum at Attalus org Fragmenta Historiarum translation of selected fragments Fragmenta Historiarum Latin text of all surviving fragments Latin onlyat Latin Library unknown edition Bellum Catilinae Bellum Jugurthinum Fragmenta Historiarum Epistolae ad Caesarem Invectiva in Ciceronem C Sallustius Crispus cum veterum historicorum fragmentis Venetiis Apud Iuntas et Baba 1645 English onlyWorks by Sallust at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Sallust at the Internet Archive Works by Sallust at LibriVox public domain audiobooks Works by Sallust at Open Library