Quintus Ligarius
Quintus Ligarius (died c. 43 BC) was a
Civil war
Quintus Ligarius was a member of an
Trial
Ligarius' brothers asked Cicero to intercede on behalf of their exiled relative. Cicero secured a meeting with Caesar, who seemed receptive, but then an order was made to arrest Ligarius on charges that are no longer clear, but appear to have involved the claim that he conspired with King Juba I.[2] The prosecution seems to have emerged from a grudge held by Quintus Aelius Tubero over an incident when Ligarius denied Tubero's family help when he was in charge of Africa.[2]
At the trial, Cicero gave an impassioned speech in Ligarius' defence, known as the Pro Ligario. He ignored the actual charges, but instead made an emotional appeal for reconciliation and clemency, warning of the dangers of vendettas. According to Plutarch, "Caesar was emotionally overcome, his body shook, and some documents fell from his hand. And so under compulsion he acquitted Ligarius".[2][3]
Conspirator
The acquittal allowed Ligarius to return to Rome. Plutarch writes that he did not forgive Caesar for pardoning him. This hatred, and his friendship with other Liberators, caused him to join the assassination plot. According to Plutarch, Ligarius was ill in bed when he was visited by Marcus Brutus. He told Brutus that he would be made well again by helping him with his plot.[4] Plutarch refers to him as "Caius Ligarius" in the passage, but the context strongly implies that he is referring to the same person who was tried and acquitted.
Although no author specifically identifies Ligarius as a victim of the proscriptions of the Second Triumvirate in 43 BC, there is little doubt, as Cicero mentions that there were three brothers, and Appian mentions three brothers with this name who perished in the proscriptions.[5][6][1]
In Shakespeare
Ligarius is a character in William Shakespeare's tragedy Julius Caesar. He is called "Caius Ligarius", which is the name used by Plutarch when describing the episode of his sickness.
He is depicted, following Plutarch, as a sickly man, though strong in mind, with a grudge against Caesar for reprimanding him for admiring Pompey. His absolute trust in Brutus sets up the role of Brutus as a moral model whose leadership is necessary to bring others on board.[7] Though part of the conspiracy, he does not participate in the assassination itself.[8]
References
- ^ a b John Hazel, Who's Who in the Roman World, Routledge, London, 2001, p.168.
- ^ a b c d Harold C. Gotoff, Cicero's Caesarian Speeches: A Stylistic Commentary, University of North Carolina Press, 1993, p.xxxiii.
- ^ Christian Meier, (trans David McLintock), Caesar, Basic Books, 1995, p.484
- ^ David F. Epstein, "Caesar's Personal Enemies on the Ides of March", Latomus, T. 46, Fasc. 3 July-September 1987, pp. 566-570
- ^ Cicero, Pro Ligario, 12.
- ^ Appian, Bellum Civile, iv. 22, 23.
- ^ Alfred Harbage, William Shakespeare: A Reader's Guide, Noonday Press, New York, 1963, p.255
- ^ F. E. Halliday, A Shakespeare Companion, 1550-1950, Funk & Wagnalls, 1952, p.361.
External links
- Cicero, Pro Ligario, English translation at attalus.org