Beneficence; see [Generosity].
Bribery, in Rome, [ii, 21-22], [75].
[Brutus], Lucius Junius, led the Romans to expel the Tarquins; helped by Collatinus, who shared with him the first consulship (509), [iii, 40].
Brutus, Marcus Junius, an eminent jurist, one of the three founders of the civil law; father of "the Accuser," [ii, 50].
Brutus; Marcus Junius Brutus Accusator, orator and vigorous prosecutor, son of the preceding, [ii, 50].
Caelian Hill, the south-east hill of Rome, [iii, 66].
Caesar, Gaius Julius, son of Lucius Caesar Strabo Vopiscus, candidate for the consulship (88), slain by Marius (87); poet and orator, [i, 108], [133].
[Caesar], Gaius Julius (100-44), consul (59), in Gaul (58-50), conquered Pompey at Pharsalus (48), dictator (48-44), assassinated (44); orator, statesman, scholar, soldier; despot, [ii, 2]; tyrant, [i, 112]; [ii, 23-28], [83]; confiscator, [i, 43]; [ii, 84]; enslaver of Rome, [iii, 85]; treatment of Marseilles, [ii, 28]; a victim of depraved ambition, [i, 26]; [iii, 83]; a conspirator with Catiline, his love of wrong, [ii, 84]; deserved his death, [iii, 19], [32], [82].
Caesar, Lucius Julius, father of the Dictator, [i, 108].
Callicratidas, succeeded Lysander as admiral of the Spartan fleet, [i, 109]; defeated Conon, took Lesbos, lost the battle and his life at Arginusae (406), [i, 84].