Monday, April 8, 2019


Fulvia and Sempronia

Sallust's treatment of Fulvia and Sempronia could be compared to the treatment accorded women in U.S. politics, for example, that of Hillary Rodham Clinton, by parts of the U.S. and Russian media.  Writing about Fulvia and Sempronia, Sallust characterized similar treatment of women in the Roman comedies Russell was reading at the time.  It struck him then, during the Presidential campaign while studying Sallust, that her treatment by her Republican opposition was comparable with how Roman literature, in general, treated women.

Sallust's description of the Catiline conspiracy also dramatized the great gulf between Left and Right in Caesar's days before the tyranny of Augustus, similar to today's lack of bi-partisanship.  Can we speculate that, two years later: Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (A. O. C.) has inherited Hillary's attraction for such partisan attack?

                                           Fulvia and Sempronia

                                        Before the Age of Chivalry

In Bellum Catilinae, Cicero, a Roman consul, learns details about Catiline’s conspiracy from Fulvia, a woman Sallust describes as of noble birth, although another source dismisses her as merely vilissimum scortum, a cheap price whore.[1]   Fulvia betrays her impoverished lover’s boastings to her circle of friends, who, alarmed by hearing about dire threats to the Republic, endeavor to have Cicero, their new man, elected Consul to deal with this situation.  Fulvia’s informant is one of Catiline’s close conspirators who can no longer afford to buy her expensive gifts.[2]  He is, in fact, a disgraced former Senator.  From this, we can infer that Fulvia was a courtesan with access to influential people in Rome.  Cicero finds Fulvia invaluable in spying on Catiline’s intentions (Sallust 23).
If Fulvia was married, she was committing adultery, no doubt excused because of the value of her information and the general permissiveness towards educated women of her time.  In any event, at the time Sallust was writing, adultery was less of a crime than it became later under Augustus.[3]  If a prostitute, she was merely conducting her legitimate business.  There were strict divisions between women at that time.  “Roman society had almost no honorable place for women who never married.”[4]  By providing sexual services as well as entertainment, women could have a recognized profession even if it was one considered dishonorable.  Fulvia as a legitimate citizen, is likely to have had servants and staff who were illegitimate (mostly slaves). 
In Sallust’s telling it is remarkable how many supporters Catiline’s conspiracy had.  Yet from among this vast multitude none were prepared to betray his cause for money when it was offered (Loeb 36.5).  Thus, the conspiracy was initially betrayed, he makes clear, by the agency of one person alone, Fulvia, who continued to act as Cicero’s spy.  It is interesting that to accomplish the plot of what he called an historical monologue, Sallust required the services of a woman, a meretrix; and, in Chapter 25, the passage on Sempronia, he describes one in detail. 
 Sallust spends an entire chapter describing Sempronia.  Some see in Sallust’s description a resemblance to Catullus’ poems about Lesbia.[5]   This essay also suggests that Sallust and Catullus were both influenced by Roman comedy, particularly in the way that women are portrayed.[6]   Sallust depicts a stereotype of a courtesan, recognizable from Plautus’ play Menaechmi and others.  Whatever his intent, this chapter provides a diverting interlude in an otherwise somber story.  In any event, Sempronia has proven to be good box-office as Sallust’s work has survived!  
Chapter 25 comes as a surprise to readers of Sallust’s Bellum Catilinae.  Sallust has been writing about the perils of allowing laziness and a luxurious mode of living to usurp virtues like those of hard physical work and integrity.  He has been critical of Rome’s moral decline.  This has been a constant theme throughout his work.  As discussed below, in this he was echoing a contemporary of his youth, the poet Catullus, who had written scathingly about the corruption of one of Caesar’s associates as well as the current depravity of Rome.[7]  Plautus, whose works were being performed a hundred years before Catullus and Sallust were born, also took up this theme.  For example, In Menaechmi, Plautus criticizes “the dubious practices of contemporary Roman businessmen” and the prevailing culture of Rome (Plautus 571-601).  In the same play, Plautus also depicts a meretrix, Erotium, who has similarities to Sallust’s Sempronia.
Sempronia is depicted as a woman of high social standing with a scandalous reputation.  Sallust alleges that Sempronia was one of those women who supported Catiline.  Such women he says had “first met their expenses by prostitution but later, when their time of life had set a limit to their traffic but not their extravagance, had contracted a huge debt” (Loeb 24.3).  He typecasts Sempronia as beautiful, a gifted musician and dancer, learned in both Latin and Greek, promiscuous, proactive in seeking sexual affairs with men, a liar, a debtor, immodest in language but, notwithstanding all her defects, excellent company.  Sallust allows nobody to come to her rescue with an opposing point of view.  Thus, it is possible an old woman still living at the time of Sallust’s writing could have been offended by his detailed description, his lack of chivalry, if chivalry to women existed in Rome then.   Sempronia is associated with the Catiline conspiracy on only one specific occasion in Sallust’s history as he mentions her husband’s house once being used for a meeting place, although Sempronia herself presumably played hostess for the conspirators, alone, as, Sallust writes, her husband, Decimus Brutus, was away from Rome at the time (Loeb 40.5).  
By choosing to write about Catiline, Sallust used a convenient story from recent history to mirror a contemporary, ongoing conflict between political factions in Rome, perhaps one in which Sempronia’s husband and children played an important part.  It is likely that Sallust was writing at a time when it was dangerous to take sides among competing factions.[8]  Among those dangerous to offend were those loyal to Octavian, Caesar’s heir, who would subsequently become sole ruler of Rome; senators, like Brutus, complicit in Caesar’s murder; those loyal to Mark Antony, or to Crassus, Cassius, other generals. 
Catullus is thought to have died about ten years before Caesar’s assassination, but he would have lived to witness the Catiline conspiracy also, creation of the First Triumvirate.[9]   The twelve-line coda which Catullus wrote to end his longest work, an epyllion, Poem 64, credits the bad behavior of Roman citizens with driving the gods away so that they no longer honored mortals with their presence at events, festivals, state marriages.[10]  It has been suggested that Catullus used a famous marriage in mythology, that of Pelius and Thetis, as a vehicle to write, safely, about the marriage of Caesar’s seventeen years old daughter, Julia, to Pompey, thirty years older, in 59 BC, a marriage sealing the establishment of The First Triumvirate in 60 BC.[11]  Whether the bad behavior Catullus has in mind in this passage alludes to the uprising prompted by Catiline, or whether this was an editorial comment on the wedding of Pompey and Julia, or not, the passage would certainly resonate with Sallust.  If Sallust died in 35BC, after the turmoil of Catiline’s conspiracy he had seen both a Civil War eventually won by Caesar, then the struggles post-Caesar, including massive proscriptions, leading up to the Second Triumvirate in 43 BC and the marriage of Antony and Octavia (Octavian’s sister), reminiscent of the marriage of Pompey and Julia, in 40 BC.
Sallust credits Catiline with one of the crimes listed by Catullus in two lines of his coda, a father’s guilt at murdering his adult son to clear the way for a marriage to a young woman.  He cites Catiline’s subsequent guilt at murdering his son as driving Catiline in his conspiracy to lead a revolution against the State (Sallust 15.2-15.3).   Sallust is likely alluding to the Catullus lines when citing this same charge against Catiline.  Both Catullus and Sallust would have been in their youthful twenties at the time of the conspiracy.[12]  Sallust writes that Catiline was generally believed to have murdered his grown son to facilitate a marriage to Orestilla who was hesitant to marry when Catiline’s stepson was about her own age.  In Sallust’s account, he attributes to Catiline an acknowledgement that Orestilla’s wealth (and that of her daughter) had helped him clear away not only his own debts “but those incurred by others.”  (Sallust 35.3)
Catullus’ short coda is a condemnation of some of the same immoralities that Sallust will go on to enumerate throughout his much lengthier prose work.  By extolling long dead, hard-working, virtuous great grandfathers and older, who had built the Republic and its tributary empire, Sallust could indirectly imply criticism of current events, perhaps the excesses of the Second Triumvirate.[13]   
Clearly, Sallust had a purpose when devoting one of his sixty-one chapters to Sempronia.  A plausible reason could be that she was illustrative of how much support Catiline was alleged to have among the ancient, powerful, families of Rome.   Passages in Sallust indicate that both Crassus and Caesar could have been sympathetic or supportive of Catiline (Sallust 48.9, 49 and 52.1).  Also, her son, D. Junius Brutus Albinus, was later a conspirator against Caesar and one of those contending for power following the death of Caesar.  So Sempronia is more than a courtesan, she symbolizes Rome’s most powerful families. 
Finally, there is the suggestion that if Sallust’s Bellum Catilinae is historical fiction, rather than an historical monograph, then Sallust was throwing in some spice to interest his readers, pointing out that women as well as men were jointly responsible for Rome’s moral decline.  After Sallust’s death the Emperor Augustus passed laws encouraging marriage and procreation as well as proscribing serious penalties for adultery.[14]  If Sallust was employing fiction to convey a story based on known facts, he could either have been writing propaganda for Caesar’s successors in Rome; or attempting a readable, definitive history, with some invention on his part, along the lines of what Cato was likely to have said in rebuttal to Caesar, when punishment for the conspirators was debated in the Senate, or, how Catiline might have addressed his troops before the death of all of them in battle.  Whatever his motive, he would have been influenced by the literary culture of his time when comedies by Plautus and other playwrights were popular.   In such comedies, women are often depicted as prostitutes, usually self-employed.[15]  In Menaechmi, Erotium is depicted as a business woman in control of her own house, presumably in a good part of town as she is the next-door neighbor of her wealthy client, Menaechmus, whose long-lost twin brother, also called Menaechmus, has just now arrived in town seeking his abducted brother.  Plautus gives us a vivid impression of Erotium.  We can assume she is attractive.  She has a professional cook working for her, as well as at least one maid and other attendants.   Like Fulvia and Sempronia, she enjoys receiving expensive gifts from her clients, even if they have been stolen from her client’s wife.  The character that Sallust presents named Sempronia is essentially the same woman as Erotium with the main difference being that Sempronia has a husband, albeit often out-of-town, and she is well educated in Latin and Greek whereas Erotium is described as stupid and ignorant by newly arrived Menaechmus II (Plautus 439).   In his time, women are thought to have had less access to education than at the time Sallust was writing.  If so, it could be said that Plautus provided a template of a typical meretrix that Sallust embellished in his history by bringing her up to date with an education and a husband.  Sempronia was presumably in a form of marriage that allowed her to be independent of her husband and in control of her assets.[16]  
Some Plautine imagery from the same comedy is also reflected in Catullus’ poems.  For example, in a footnote, the editor of a work on Plautus compares Erotium to a bird intent on a tasty morsel (Plautus 193 Commentary 158-9); suggesting that the word passer (masc. sparrow) would have been a better word for Plautus to use than meretrix (fem. prostitute), in the line meretrix tantisper blanditur dum illud quod rapiat videt (a whore fawning all over that which she sees as prey) thereby linking Plautus with Catullus, Poem 2.  In another footnote, a line or two later, the same editor contrasts Plautus describing how Erotium is so promiscuous as to smother a man’s face, almost bite off his nose, with kisses in appreciation of a gift (Plautus 194-195), with Catullus who wonders whose lips his former girl will bite instead of his (Cat. 8.18).
In Chapter 25, Sallust, despite devoting a full chapter to her, gives us only a list of the complexities inherent in a character like Sempronia.  She is merely a diversion from the main plot of the story he is telling.  Women at the time of Plautus are disposed of just as easily in the comedies.  In Menaechmi, a happy ending is two twins becoming re-united and deciding to return home to their birthplace together, leaving the women of one of them, Erotium and the aggrieved wife, behind with presumably no care for their future. Sometimes they might marry, sometimes they might get their freedom, only rarely are they dominant and powerful as in the play Truculentus.[17]   Sallust does not tell us what fate has in store for Fulvia and Sempronia.   We should probably assume that aspects of Sempronia and Fulvia resemble Catullus’ Lesbia, a married woman who had illicit affairs, one of which Catullus documented.   For Catullus and Lesbia there is no happy ending except that their relationship marks the first time in literature that a love affair was subjected to examination in a series of “mutually deepening poems.”[18]  
What meaning does Chapter 25 add to Sallust’s work?  Sallust dates Rome’s moral decline as beginning after the final destruction of Carthage when: “Fortune began to be cruel and to bring confusion into all our affairs” (Loeb 10.1).   He also suggests that Roman manliness was contaminated by prolonged contact with the effeminacy of the East (Loeb 11.6).  He suggests that a man’s natural ambition to succeed in Rome’s increasingly confused culture made it easy for avarice to destroy honor and integrity (Loeb 10.1).  But, by his own example, admitted at the outset of Bellum Catilinae, he demonstrates that while he once let ambition compromise his own morals, he, himself, reverted to a higher standard (Loeb 3.3-3.5).   Thus, from the vantage point of Sallust’s peak of redemption, perhaps Sempronia is a reminder of his own misspent youth, of his own adulterous affairs, which are said to have included an affair with Fausta, daughter of the dictator Sulla, for which he was caught and flogged by Fausta’s husband.[19]   He craves a time when Rome was great, so that is why he is a supporter of Octavian, Caesar’s heir, whom he believes will make Rome great again.


Copyright © Dick Russell, 2017


Bibliography


Boardman, John, Jasper Griffin, and Oswyn Murray eds.  The Oxford History of the Classical 
World.  Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1986

Boatwright, Gargola, Talbert.  The Romans.  Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2004.

Catullus.  Catullus, The Complete Poems.  Trans. Guy Lee with an Introduction and Notes,
Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1990.

Lowe, N.J. Comedy.  Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 2007.

Plautus.  Menaechmi.   Ed. A.S. Gratwick with an Introduction and Commentary. Cambridge:
            Cambridge University Press, 1993.

Sallust. Bellum Catilinae.  Ed. J.T. Ramsey with an Introduction and Commentary, Oxford:
Oxford University Press, 2007.









[1]Florus who wrote about 100 years after Sallust, probably in the time of the Emperor Hadrian. (Bellum Catilinae, Commentary 23.3, page 128).  An interesting research topic might be how a woman of Fulvia’s standing is treated in literature starting with Greek comedy through the present.
[2] Quintus Curius.  He is noteworthy for having been expelled from the Senate for immorality (Sallust 23.1 
[3] The Romans, 211.
[4] Ibid 209.
[5] Claus CLAS461 lecture on Sallust 25.
[6] For example, in an analysis of 21 comedies attributed to Plautus, fully 13 have plots that involve a meretrix: Asinaria, Bacchides, Casina, Cistelaria, Curculio, Epidicus, Menaechmi, Mercator, Persa, Poenulus, Pseudolus, Rudens, Truculentia.  Source: Comedy.
[7] Catullus xix
[8] As Sallust refers to Caesar in the past tense, we can assume Bellum Catilinae was written after his death in 44 B.C (Loeb 53.6).
[9] Catullus, Introduction, xviii.
[10] Catullus 64.397-408.                  After Catullus (64.397)

The gods will not come now impiety stains us
now that nobody desires justice for injustice
brothers killing brothers parents un-mourned

they will not come now to funerals
for a father wished death on his grown-up son
so he might marry her hesitant of his heir

they will not come now to marriages
for they see auguries in incest
even household gods flee such pollution

an evil mix blended thoroughly with madness
has turned them away they will not mind us
they do not want to dignify our feasts
not suffer their clear brilliance to be stained. 

[11] The Glenn Hughes Lectures.  Dick Russell Senior Paper for Professor J. J. Clauss. Summer 2016.  University of Washington.  https://www.academia.edu/28055193/The_Glenn_Hughes_Lectures
[12] Jerome’s Chronicle provides dates of birth for both Sallust and Catullus.  Catullus died aged 30, while Sallust lived to be 51.  Sallust was comparable in age to Catullus, possibly two years older than Catullus.
[13] Sallust’s Bellum Catilinae, Introduction, page 5: Retirement from Public Life.
[14] The Romans, 211.
[15] For example, in an analysis of 21 comedies attributed to Plautus, fully 13 have plots that involve a meretrix: Asinaria, Bacchides, Casina, Cistelaria, Curculio, Epidicus, Menaechmi, Mercator, Persa, Poenulus, Pseudolus, Rudens, Truculentia.  Source: Comedy.
[16] The Romans 209.  A woman could elect for a manus marriage in which case she had no independence.
[17] Truculentus provides an example in Plautus of a dominant meretrix juggling three men at once.
[18] Catullus xxiii
[19] Sallust 4.

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