Ad Atticum 6.1
Ad Atticum 6.1
Headnote
Cicero to Atticus, written from Laodicea on the sixth day before the Kalends of March (24 February) 50 BC (the manuscript dateline: Scr. Laodiceae vi K. Mart. a. 704 (50)). The opening letter of Ad Atticum book 6, and the longest and most substantial of Cicero’s surviving despatches from his proconsular year in Cilicia. He has come down from the late-summer campaign on the Amanus to winter in Laodicea, where the regional assizes occupy him through the spring; the date of the letter is fixed in its first sentence to five days before the Terminalia. The letter answers, in order, an unusually full bulletin from Atticus, and discharges the major accumulated business of the governorship at one sitting.
The substantive heart of the letter — sections five through seven — is Cicero’s first detailed handling of the Salaminian-loan affair, which becomes a leitmotif of his correspondence for the rest of the proconsulship. M. Iunius Brutus, behind the proxies M. Scaptius and P. Matinius, had lent money to the city of Salamis on Cyprus at four percent per month compounded — forty-eight percent a year — under a senatorial dispensation procured to evade the Lex Gabinia’s twelve-percent ceiling. The predecessor Appius Pulcher had given Scaptius a prefecture and squadrons of cavalry to enforce collection, with which he had besieged the Salaminian senate in their own council-house until five of them starved to death. Cicero, holding himself to twelve percent uniformly across the province by his own edict, has refused to endorse the higher rate, refused the prefecture to Scaptius as a man of business (per a standing exception Atticus had himself negotiated), and withdrawn the squadrons. He is now writing to Atticus to set out the moral and legal accounting of the choice — and to brace him for the certainty that Brutus, whose moneylending Cicero had not understood to be personal until the affair began, will be displeased. The tone is dry, organised, almost legal, broken by flashes of indignation at Scaptius and of weary irony at his own situation as the trustee of an honour he had not realised he was being asked to underwrite.
Around this core the letter ranges across the whole field of Cicero’s current preoccupations: the contrast between his administration and Appius’s (section two), the financial straits of the king Ariobarzanes and the disproportionate share Pompey is extracting from him (section three), the praetextate education of the two Cicero boys at Laodicea (section twelve), the impending Parthian invasion and the auxiliaries of Deiotarus (section fourteen), the two-part structure of his own provincial edict (also section fourteen), his handling of the publicans (section sixteen), the antiquarian quibbles raised by Atticus about the statue of Africanus and the calendar of Cn. Flavius (sections seventeen and eighteen), the domestic question of Tullia’s marriage (section ten), the news of Vedius’s baggage and the five portraits of married ladies it contained (section twenty-five), and a last whimsical thought about building a propylaeum for the Academy at Athens to match Appius’s at Eleusis (section twenty-six). The political backdrop is the deferral of the great question — the consular provinces, the Parthian command, the standing of Caesar — to the Kalends of March, the day after this letter is written, with Cicero acutely afraid that his own command will be extended and his return to Italy prevented. The Greek-tag scaffolding is dense and intimate throughout, in the inside-Atticus voice; the closing date-formula — “the seven hundred and sixty-fifth day after the battle of Leuctra” — is the kind of antiquarian flourish the two of them exchange for amusement.