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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: SAR-SCY |
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SCAEVOLA , the name of a famous family of ancient Rome, the most important members of which were: I. Gm us Mums SCAEVOLA, a legendary hero, who volunteered to assassinate Lars Porsena when he was besieging Rome. Making his way through the enemy's lines to the royal tent,but not knowing Porsena by sight, he slew his secretary by mistake. Before the royal tribunal Mucius declared that he was one of 300 noble youths who had sworn to take the king's life, and that he had been chosen by lot to make the attempt first. Threatened with death or torture, Mucius thrust his right hand into the fire blazing upon an altar, and held it there until it was consumed. The king, deeply impressed and dreading a further attempt upon his life, ordered Mucius to be liberated, made peace with the Romans and withdrew his forces. Mucius was rewarded with a grant of land beyond the Tiber, known as the "Mucia Prata " in the time of Dionysius of Halicarnassus
Dion
2. PUBLIUS MUCIUS SCAEVOLA, Roman orator and jurist, consul
See A. H. J. Greenidge, History of Rome. 3. QUINTUS MUCIUS SCAEVOLA, son of (2), usually called " Pontifex Maximus," to distinguish him from (4), consul
chief
governor of the province of Asia, in which capacity he distinguished himself by his just dealing and his severe measures
touch Mucius, attacked him in the person of his legate, Publius Rutilius Rufus (q.v.). In honour of his memory the Greeks of Asia set aside a day for the celebration of festivities and games called Mucia. He was subsequently appointed Pontifex Maximus, and, in accordance with a custom that had prevailed since the first plebeian appointment to that office (about 150 years before), was always ready to give gratuitous legal advice. His antechamber was thronged, and even the chief
1 Some authorities hold that Quintilian(Inst. Orat. xi. 2, 38) refers to Scaevola (3). value upon the gods, while people of intellect had no need of religion at all. He was proscribed by the Marian party, and in 82, when the younger Marius, after his defeat by Sulla at Sacriportus, gave orders for the evacuation of Rome and the massacre of the chief men of the opposite party, Scaevola, while attempting to reconcile the opposing factions, was slain at the altar of Vesta and his body
Scaevola was the founder of the scientific study of Roman law and the author of a systematic treatise on the subject, in eighteen books, frequently quoted and followed by subsequent writers. It was a compilation of legislative enactments, judicial precedents and authorities, from older collections, partly also from oral tradition. A small handbook called "Opoc (Definitions) is the oldest work from which any excerpts are made in the Digest, and the first example of a special
4. QUINTUS MUCIUS SCAEVOLA (C. 15988 B.C.), uncle of (3), from whom he is distinguished by the appellation of " Augur." He was instructed in law by his father, and in philosophy by the famous Stoic Panaetius of Rhodes. In 121 he was governor of Asia. Accused of extortion on his return, he defended himself and, though no orator, secured his acquittal by his legal know-ledge and common sense. In 117 he was consul. He did not take a prominent part in the Senate, but his brief, unpolished remarks sometimes made a great impression. He was a great authority on law, and at an advanced age he gave instruction to Cicero and Atticus. He had a high appreciation of Marius, and when Sulla assembled the senate, to obtain from it a declaration that Marius was the enemy of his country, Scaevola refused his assent. He married Laelia (the daughter of Gaius Laelius, the friend of the younger Scipio), by whom he had a son and two daughters, one of whom became the wife of Licinius Crassus the orator. Scaevola is one of the interlocutors in Cicero's De oratore, De amicitia and De republica.For the legal importance of the Scaevolas, see A. Schneider, Die drei Scaevola Ciceros (Munich, 1879), with full references to ancient and modern authorities. End of Article: SCAEVOLA If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
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