Ad Familiares 13.60
Ad Familiares 13.60
Headnote
Cicero at Rome to Gaius Munatius, son of Gaius, written after his return from the eastern campaign, probably late in 46 BC (the manuscript dateline: Scr. Romae post reditum fortasse ex. a. 708 (46), where the Perseus text’s ex. a. 698 appears to be a transcription slip for ex. a. 708). A short recommendation of Lucius Livineius Trypho, freedman of Cicero’s friend L. Regulus, whose own calamitas — presumably his civil-war condemnation — has put Cicero under a renewed obligation to his household. The freedman, however, is loved on his own merits, for services rendered during “those times of ours” (the civil-war years following Pharsalus, when Cicero was detained at Brundisium): Trypho had run many risks for Cicero’s sake and made repeated voyages through the depth of winter — a glancing reference to the courier duties freedmen of well-placed households so often performed for their patrons’ friends in that period.