Lucius Vettius
Lucius Vettius (died 59 BC) was a
Earlier life
Vettius was an
By 63 BC, Vettius had turned professional informant.
Suetonius relates that after these accusations, Vettius was then badly handled by Caesar, who "punished [him] quite severely... destroying some of his personal goods, allowing him to be roughly beaten by a crowd at a contio [public meeting], and throwing him into prison". Robert Morstein-Marx, a classicist, notes that Caesar's actions are "consistent with Roman legal custom protesting the dignity of magistrates and attitudes toward those who gave false accusation".[5]
Vettius affair and death
Some time in 59 BC,
His accusations were disbelieved: he claimed that he had received a dagger from a servant of the consul Bibulus, to laughter from the senators who asked how he had no other means to acquire a weapon; one of the Curiones protested Paullus could not be involved, for he was in Macedonia.[10] Moreover, Bibulus had himself notified Pompey earlier of a plot against his life; after hearing his accusations, the senators ordered Vettius thrown in jail for his self-incriminating confession of carrying a dagger within the city.[11][12][13]
The next day, he was produced before the public in a contio by Caesar and his tribunician ally Publius Vatinius; dropping mention of Brutus and Bibulus, he then accused Lucullus, Lucius Domitius Ahenobarbus, Gaius Fannius, Gaius Calpurnius Piso, Marcus Iuventius Laterensis, and Cicero – indirectly under the terms of a certain "eloquent ex-consul" – of being part of the plot.[14][15][12] It is likely that the changes in his story were induced by Caesar: who "it appears, intimidated Vettius and induced him to alter his testimony... in particularly to drop the name of Brutus, son of Caesar's mistress Servilia".[12] Vatinius pressured Vettius to name more names and promised to pass legislation to establish a special tribunal.[16] These changed accusations also were not believed, as there was little corroborating evidence available. Returned to jail, shortly thereafter, Vettius was found dead.[12] His death, officially of natural causes but rumoured to be murder, put an end to thoughts of a special tribunal.[17]
Views on the affair differ. Cicero, writing around the time (and also accused of being part of it), stressed his suspicions of Caesar and Vatinius' roles.[18] For him, "Caesar had stage-managed the whole affair for the beginning... as a means of casting suspicion over the rising star of [the younger] Curio".[19] However, Cicero's later speech In Vatinium blames Vatinius for inciting the affair.[20] This hypothesis, that Vettius was induced to fabricate accusations to ruin the younger Curio's electoral chances and discredit certain opponents of Caesar, has "won the assent of most commentators".[12][21]
Walter Allen, in The "Vettius Affair" Once More (1950), argued that Caesar was to blame for the accusations with the additional motive of trying to drive a wedge between Pompey and Cicero.[22] Erich Gruen, in The Last Generation of the Roman Republic (1995), dismisses this theory, arguing that "Pompey's relations with the nobilitas were already sufficiently strained" and that "the notion of Vettius as Caesar's agent is difficult to swallow [when he] had endeavoured to implicate Caesar in the Catilinarian conspiracy" three years earlier in 62 BC.[12] It is also possible that Pompey or his allies concocted the accusations "in order to deflect the growing odium onto Bibulus" and lend credence to his often claims of fearing for his life.[14][23]
The aftermath of the affair led to no major changes: "no wave of popular indignation arose against Bibulus or his allies... no discernible pressure was exerted to take preemptive vengeance on those who might have wanted Pompey dead; there were no 'kangaroo courts'[;] in the senate [there was] no rush to condemn in order to please the powerful... as one sees in a true dominatio": the allegations were, "for all practical purposes, discounted".[17] Different interpretations of who instigated the affair lead to different interpretations of who had failed to achieve their goals. Lily Ross Taylor viewed Vettius as a Caesarian agent and that "Caesar blundered badly" in the plot.[24] Other modern works generally dismiss reading too much into the poorly-understood and badly-documented affair.[25][26]
Legacy
Vettius was possibly the subject of the Roman poet Catullus' 98th poem,[2] the subject of which is described as having a stinking and rotten mouth which is verbosus et fatuus and "always accusing other people of being involved in conspiracies".[27]
See also
- Second Catilinarian conspiracy
- Julius Caesar and Marcus Calpurnius Bibulus
References
Citations
- ^ a b Badian 2012.
- ^ a b Tempest 2017, p. 267 n. 10.
- S2CID 244136525. Retrieved 2022-03-28. Citing Suet. Iul. 17.1.
- ^ Morstein-Marx 2021, p. 74.
- ^ Morstein-Marx 2021, p. 76.
- ^ Historians differ as to the dating of the affair. Morstein-Marx 2021, p. 158 places it in August;Gruen 1995, p. 95 argues that it occurred in autumn; Taylor 1950, p. 46 argues it could not have occurred later than July. Taylor's dating to July has won some support among scholars. Tempest 2017, p. 267 n. 11.
- ^ a b Gruen 1995, p. 95.
- ^ Tempest 2017, p. 36.
- ^ Tempest 2017, p. 38.
- ^ Taylor 1950, pp. 49–50.
- ^ Tempest 2017, p. 37. Doing so was "a criminal offence under the... lex Plautia de vi".
- ^ a b c d e f Gruen 1995, p. 96.
- ^ Taylor 1950, p. 50.
- ^ a b Morstein-Marx 2021, p. 159.
- ^ Tempest 2017, p. 37. Quoting Cic. Att. 2.24.3.
- ^ Morstein-Marx 2021, pp. 159–60.
- ^ a b Morstein-Marx 2021, p. 160.
- ^ Gruen 1995, p. 96 n. 38.
- ^ Tempest 2017, p. 37.
- ^ Tempest 2017, p. 267 n. 17.
- ^ Eg Taylor 1950.
- JSTOR 283576.
- ^ Gruen 1995, p. 96. "It is not impossible that Pompey or Pompeian partisans concocted the scheme in order to tarnish the moral image of some of his tormentors".
- ^ Taylor 1950, p. 51.
- ^ Gruen 1995, p. 96. "The meaning and motivation of the affair will probably never be known. Excessive speculation is pointless".
- ^ Morstein-Marx 2021, p. 160. "Much too much time has passed for anyone to get to the bottom of that mystery".
- JSTOR 4349084.
Sources
- Badian, Ernst (2012). "Vettius, Lucius". In Hornblower, Simon; Spawforth, Antony; Eidinow, Esther (eds.). The Oxford classical dictionary (4th ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 1546–47. OCLC 959667246.
- Gruen, Erich (1995). The last generation of the Roman republic. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 0-520-02238-6.
- Morstein-Marx, Robert (2021-08-05). Julius Caesar and the Roman People. Cambridge University Press. S2CID 242729962.
- Taylor, Lily Ross (1950). "The date and the meaning of the Vettius affair". Historia: Zeitschrift für Alte Geschichte. 1 (1): 45–51. JSTOR 4434287.
- Tempest, Kathryn (2017). Brutus: the noble conspirator. New Haven: Yale University Press. LCCN 2017948509.
Further reading
- Lintott, Andrew (1999). Violence in Republican Rome. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-815282-8.
- Lintott, Andrew (2001–2003). "Delator and iudex: informers and accusers at Rome from the republic to the early Principate". Accordia Research Papers. 9: 105–22.
- Lintott, Andrew (2008). Cicero as Evidence: A Historian's Companion. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-921644-4.