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Marcus Caelius Rufus

Caelius Rufus, Marcus (82–48 BC), young Roman with political ambitions, friend and pupil of Cicero from 66 to 63, when he broke away and associated with Catiline for a while. After a successful prosecution in 59 of Antonius, Cicero's colleague in the consulship in 63, Caelius became popular in fashionable circles and rented a house in the desirable Palatine quarter near Clodia, perhaps supplanting the poet Catullus in her affections, if he is the Rufus whom Catullus mentions. Their affair was over by 56, the year in which he was prosecuted by L. Sempronius Atratinus after he had himself successfully prosecuted the latter's father earlier in the year. It would appear that Clodia was the driving force behind the case. Cicero defended him in a notable speech which still survives (see CICERO (1) 4), and Caelius was acquitted. Clodia thereafter disappears from view, a coincidence which may indicate the social importance of Caelius' victory. He was tribune in 52, a supporter of Milo and enemy of Pompey. In 51 Cicero went to Cilicia as governor, and during his year's absence Caelius kept him informed of home affairs in seventeen witty and politically acute letters which survive in Cicero's correspondence. In 49, as civil war became imminent, he declared for Caesar, but soon grew discontented; he joined Milo in raising a rebellion in south Italy, but it was easily suppressed by Caesar, and Caelius and Milo were both killed.

 
 
Wikipedia: Marcus Caelius Rufus

Marcus Caelius Rufus (82 BCE - 48 BCE) was a Roman orator and politician. He was born to an eques family in Interamnia (Teramo) or Puteoli. In his twenties he became associated with Crassus and Cicero, although he was also briefly connected to Lucius Sergius Catilina and his Catilinarian conspiracy. Caelius first achieved fame through his successful prosecution in 59 BC of Gaius Antonius Hybrida for corruption. Antonius had been co-consul with Cicero in 63 BC, and his prosecution was a sign of the negative political atmosphere towards Cicero at the time.

A year later, in 58 BCE, Cicero was exiled, partly through the efforts of his political enemy Publius Clodius Pulcher. Several years earlier, Clodius had infiltrated a ceremony at the house of Julius Caesar in honor of the Bona Dea dressed as a woman, because men were not allowed in. It is believed that he did this in order to carry on an affair with Pompeia Sulla, Caesar's wife. Although Clodius was acquitted, he never forgave Cicero for his testimony against him (some online sources list Cicero as one of the prosecuting lawyers, but Cicero's own letters [Ad Atticum 1.16] support that he was only one of the called witnesses). Clodius’ sister, Clodia, is believed to be the pseudonymous “Lesbia” that the poet Catullus wrote about.

Cicero was recalled from exile in 57 BCE with the help of his ally Titus Annius Milo, who was tribune at the time. Sometime around 57 BC, Marcus Caelius Rufus and Clodia are believed to have had an affair which ended acrimoniously. In 56, Caelius was prosecuted for vis (violence), specifically for murdering an ambassador. He was successfully defended by Crassus and, more famously, Cicero, whose speech Pro Caelio argued that the prosecutor, Atratinus, was being manipulated by Clodia Metelli to get revenge on Caelius for an affair gone wrong.

Catullus’ Poem 77 is about a “friend” named Rufus who betrays Catullus in an unspecified way. This could refer either to Rufus’ affair with Clodia/Lesbia, his unproven attempt to poison her, or his subsequent attacks on her through Cicero. The end of Poem 77 reads “Eripuisti, heu heu nostrae crudele venenum vitae, heu heu nostrae pestis amicitiae,” which translates to “You ripped it away, alas, alas cruel poison of our life alas, alas destroyer of our friendship.”

Rufus was elected to the office of tribune in 52 BC and the office of aedile in 50 BC. During this period he wrote a series of witty and informative letters to Cicero, who was serving as proconsul at the time. Soon he sided with Julius Caesar against Pompey in the Roman Civil War and was rewarded with the office of praetor peregrinus (“judge of suits involving foreigners”). However, when his proposed program of debt relief was opposed by the Senate and he was suspended from office, he joined Milo in a rebellion against Caesar which was quickly crushed. Both Rufus and Milo were executed.

Appearances in Popular Culture

Rufus appears as a reoccurring character in the Roma Sub Rosa series of historical mystery novels by Steven Saylor.

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