Antonius ‘Hybrida’, Gaius, son of M. *Antonius (1). An officer under *Sulla in Greece and rewarded in his *proscriptions, he was prosecuted and escaped conviction by appealing to the tribunes. The *lex (2)Antonia de Termessibus was passed in his tribunate. Expelled from the senate by the censors (70), he became praetor (66) with *Cicero's help, but in 64 made an election compact with *Catiline and was assailed by Cicero. As consul 63, he was bribed by his colleague Cicero with the province of Macedonia, agreed to march against Catiline, but left the fighting to M. *Petreius. Oppressive and unsuccessful in Macedonia, he was prosecuted repetundarum (see
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Antonius Saturninus, Lucius, *suffect consul
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Marcus Aquilius Regulus, of aristocratic background, recouped his family fortunes after his father's exile by securing under *Nero the conviction of three consulars on capital charges, receiving seven million sesterces and a priesthood. In
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A lawyer of equestrian family and a leading pupil of Q. *Mucius Scaevola (2), Gaius Aquil Gallus was praetor in 66
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Aretas, the name of several kings of the *Nabataeans (Nabataean Aramaic form ḥrtt).
reigned in the early 2nd cent.
(c.120–96
‘Philhellen’ (c.84-60/59