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1 This fact is mentioned by Valerius Maximus, B. viii. c. 13. There is some variation in the spelling of the name of the son of Masinissa; Solinus calls him Mathumannus.—B.
2 Hardouin gives a detailed account of the children of Cato, by which it appears that the Licinian branch descended from the issue by his wife Licinia, and the Saloniani, of whom Cato of Utica was one, from his son Salonianus, by his second wife, Salonia.—B
3 Volusius Saturninus is again mentioned in the 49th Chapter, as a re- markable instance of longevity; also by Tacitus, B. xiii. c. 30.—B
4 This reading seems preferable to sixty-second, adopted by Sillig; as there would be nothing very remarkable in a man becoming a father when sixty-two years of age.
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- A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities (1890), MAPPA
- Smith's Bio, Cu'rio
- Smith's Bio, Saturni'nus, Volu'sius
- Smith's Bio, Saturni'nus, Volu'sius
- Smith's Bio, Sci'pio
- Smith's Bio, Sci'pio
- Smith's Bio, Sci'pio
- Cross-references in general dictionaries to this page (8):