Publius Antistius

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Publius Antistius (c.Template:TrimScript error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". – 82 BC) was a Roman orator and senator. As tribune of the plebs in 88 BC, he rose from poorly regarded obscurity to prominence by delivering an exceptionally good speech in opposition to the irregular candidacy of a prominent senator to the consulship. In 86 BC, Antistius presided over a sham court which acquitted Pompey of a charge of embezzlement, and afterwards married his daughter to him. He adopted a careful political stance during the civil wars of the 80s BC, but was murdered by partisans of Marius at a senate meeting for suspected sympathy to the opposing faction of Sulla.

Biography

Publius Antistius belonged to a generation of Roman orators whose members were all born around 124 BC and flourished during Cicero's youth.Template:Sfnm A seemingly modest speaker, he started out his public career inauspiciously, spending many years in poorly-regarded obscurity.Template:Sfnm In 88 BC, Antistius was tribune of the plebs, in which capacity he successfully opposed the irregular candidacy of a senator, Gaius Julius Caesar Strabo, to the office of consul.Template:Sfn He is said to have argued his case exceptionally well, speaking "at greater length and with greater penetration" than a renowned orator, Publius Sulpicius, a fellow tribune who spoke on the same side of the debate as him.Template:Sfnm Antistius's distinguished presentation on the occasion brought him to public acclaim for the first time, and he became a highly sought-after court advocate in the years following; soon, all the important court cases were brought to him.Template:Sfn The contemporary Cicero considered him one of the best orators active at the time, though he attributed his success partly to a lack of worthy competition.Template:Sfnm In his dialogue Brutus (227), Cicero described Antistius's style of oratory as follows:Template:Sfn

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The career of Antistius peaked between the civil wars of 87 and 83 BC, when the general Sulla was away from Italy and Sulla's enemies, Gaius Marius and then Cornelius Cinna, dominated politics in Rome. Cicero described this as a time when law and dignity were lacking,Template:Sfn and Antistius's prominence in the courts would seem to implicate him in the judicial irregularities of the period.Template:Sfn In 86 BC, Antistius presided over a court which tried Pompey (the future triumvir) for embezzlement of public funds (Script error: No such module "Lang".) during the Social War.Template:SfnmTemplate:Efn-lr The trial was "deliberately planned and contrived from the outset".Template:Sfn Throughout the hearing, AntistiusTemplate:Efn-lr displayed conspicuous favor to the defendant, and secretly betrothed his own daughter, Antistia, to him behind the scenes.Template:Sfnm Several leading aristocrats connected to Cinna's regime came to defend Pompey in court.Template:Sfnm Pompey married Antistia immediately after being acquitted, leading many to suspect judicial corruption from conflict of interest.Template:Sfn The whole affair has been variously interpreted, on the government's point of view, as a genuine attempt to prosecute a crime, a scheme to fill up the Roman treasury, a begrudging acquittal of a potential political opponent, or simply a state-managed farce.Template:Sfn For Antistius in particular, it gave him the opportunity to form a connection with a prominent and promising young aristocrat.Template:Sfn

Generally, Antistius seems to have cooperated cautiously with the Marian and Cinnan regime during the peaceful years 86–83 BC, holding at some point the office of aedile but going no further up the Script error: No such module "Lang"..Template:Sfn However, when the civil war between Sulla and the Marians began in 83, Pompey joined the former, which turned his father-in-law, Antistius, into a natural target of suspicion from the government.Template:Sfn The Marians did not take any chances: in 82, the praetor Junius Damasippus arranged for Antistius and other unreliable senators to be murdered at the Curia Hostilia during a senate meeting (according to Appian, Antistius specifically was killed while still in his seat); their corpses were all thrown into the Tiber river.Template:Sfn Upon hearing of the act, the wife of Antistius, Calpurnia, daughter of Lucius Bestia (consul in 111 BC), committed suicide.Template:Sfnm Pompey later ignominiously divorced their daughter, Antistia, at Sulla's instigation.Template:Sfn

Describing the overall life and career of Antistius, Bulst wrote that he seems "typical for the majority of the senate", for whom "no strong political attachment seems to exist".Template:Sfn His collaboration with the tribune Sulpicius against Caesar Strabo in 88 BC may indicate that he sympathized with the cause of Sulpicius and his ally, Gaius Marius, during the events that led to Sulla's march on Rome that year.Template:Sfn Barry Katz suggested that, since Strabo was Marius's enemy, Antistius may have simply been in Marius's employ, or perhaps even received the talking points against Strabo from Marius himself.Template:Sfn One author also speculated that Antistius had been the one to introduce Marius to Sulpicius.Template:Sfn Antistius did indeed collaborate, if only cautiously, with the Marians during the 80s BC, but not enough to save him from being suspected and disposed of during a time of crisis.Template:Sfnm On the other hand, Sulla also felt no attachment to him, and saw no problem in prompting his supporter, Pompey, divorce the dead man's daughter to suit his own interests.Template:Sfn In the end, by not fully committing himself to either side, Antistius became valued or trusted by neither.Template:Sfnm "He may have over-calculated the risks and prospects at each stage".Template:Sfn

Notes

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Citations

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References

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  • <templatestyles src="Citation/styles.css"/>Klebs, Elimar, "Antistius 18", Realencyclopädie der classischen Altertumswissenschaft (RE, PW), volume I.2, column 2547 (Stuttgart, 1894).
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