[1] Webster, Readings in Ancient History, chapter xxi, "Roman Life as Seen in Pliny's Letters"; chapter xxii, "A Satirist of Roman Society."
[2] Euripides, Iphigenia in Tauris, 57.
[3] See page 237.
[4] In "Marcus Tullius Cicero," "Marcus," the praenomen, corresponds to our "given" name; "Tullius," the nomen, marks the clan, or gens; "Cicero," the cognomen, indicates the family.
[5] See pages 151, 206.
[6] See page 218.
[7] See page 148.
[8] See page 144.
[9] See the illustrations, pages 117, 271.
[10] The corresponding names of women's garments were stola and pallet.