S.U.T.
- Tablets of wax used by judges, i., [93].
- Tacitus, as to Cicero, i., [16];
- Terentia, Cicero's wife, i., [98];
- Cicero's affection for, [324];
- as to the divorce, ii., [105];
- his style to is changed, [115];
- Cicero in a sad condition as to, [138];
- divorced, [145], [154].
- Teucris, nickname for Antony, Cicero's colleague, i., [251].
- Thapsus, battle of, ii., [147].
- Thessalonica, Cicero's sojourn there during his exile, i., [325].
- Tiro, Cicero's slave and secretary, i., [42];
- Cicero's affectionate letters to, ii., [119];
- Cicero writes to, respecting Antony, [184].
- Toga virilis, Cicero assumes it, i., [48].
- Topica, The, prepared for Trebatius, ii., [189], [252];
- Torquatus, elected Consul, i., [214].
- Torquatus, young, attacks Cicero, i., [253].
- Translating, Roman feeling in doing it, ii., [252].
- Travels, gives his own reasons for going to Greece and Asia,
i., [58].
- Trebatius, confided to Cæsar, i., [62];
- recommends him to Cæsar, ii., [48];
[49].
- Trebonius, massacred by Dolabella, ii., [217].
- Tribunate, Cicero's defence of, ii., [311].
- "Triennium fere fuit, urbs sine armis," i., [67].
- Triumph, Cicero applies for, ii., [103];
- nature of, ibid.;
- the cause of trouble to him, [115], [120].
- Triumvirate, the first, i., [264];
- not mentioned by Mommsen, [265];
- description by Horace, ibid. ;
- not so known, [269].
- Tubero, accuses Ligarius, ii., [153];
- Cicero refuses to alter his speech, [154].
- Tullia, Cicero's daughter, i., [106], [170];
- betrothed to Caius Piso, [171];
- meets Cicero at Brundisium, ii., [11];
- she is a widow, ibid.;
- divorced from Crassipes, [58];
- marries Dolabella for her third husband, [111];
- Cicero had desired that she should marry Tiberius Nero,
ibid.;
- calls her the light of his life, [115];
- dies, [158];
- her proposed monument, [160].
- Tullius Marcus Decula, defended by Cicero, i., [123].
- Tusculanæ Disputationes, i., [33]; ii., [251], [290];
- Tusculum Villa, gives commission for purchase of statues, i., [170].
- Tusculum, Dialogue de Oratore held there, ii., [259].
- Twenty-six years old when Cicero pleaded his first cause, i.,
[54].
- Tyranny, in the Senate, Cicero charged with, ii., [72].
- Tyrrell, Mr., arrangement of Cicero's letters, i., [169];
- doubts thrown on a letter to Atticus, [191].