Cicerón, el dispensador Filótimo y los esclavos de Milón

2001; University of Valladolid; Issue: 25 Linguagem: Espanhol

ISSN

2530-6464

Autores

Joaquín Muñiz Coello,

Tópico(s)

Comparative International Legal Studies

Resumo

espanolCuando Milon, el asesino de Clodio, fue condenado en el 52 y tuvo que exilarse a Masilia, dejo atras un acuerdo pactado entre Fausta, su mujer, y Ciceron, para que sus bienes de condenado, que iban a ser subastados, no pasaran a manos extranas. Pero a punto Ciceron de dejar Italia con rumbo a Grecia, estalla el escandalo en Roma. Los rumores apuntan a una turbia societas entre Ciceron y el liberto Filotimo, para hacerse con los bienes y sacar beneficios de ellos. Al final, todo quedo en una confusa bellaqueria del liberto Filotimo. EnglishWhen Milo, the murderer of Publius Clodius, was condemned in a trial of 52 and fled into exile at Masilia, there was an agreement between Fausta, the wife of Milo, and Cicero, in order to save the goods of the exilated in friend hands. But just Cicero leaving Italy to Greece, a cry of scandal became in Rome. There are many suspicious about a societas between Cicero and Philotimus, a freedman, to get benefits from those goods. Finally, everything seems that it were a confuse knavery of Philotimus.

Referência(s)