Gaius Curtius Philo

Gaius Curtius Philo was a consul in 445 BC during the Roman Republic. He served with Marcus Genucius Augurinus. The Conflict of the Orders continued during his time in office, with violent clashes between patricians and plebeians.[2]

Gaius Curtius Philo
Consul of the Roman Republic
In office
13 December 445 BC  12 December 444 BC [1]
Preceded byTitus Quinctius Capitolinus Barbatus, Agrippa Furius Fusus
Succeeded byConsular Tribunes: Aulus Sempronius Atratinus (consular tribune 444 BC), Titus Cloelius Siculus, Lucius Atilius Luscus
Personal details
BornUnknown
Ancient Rome
DiedUnknown
Ancient Rome

Family

Philo belonged to the patrician gens Curtia. A few Curtii held lesser magistracies during the Republic, and there were two consuls suffectus in imperial times.[3]

gollark: X is sort of Y if you stretch the/a definition, so X should have all the connotations of Y.
gollark: Particularly the noncentral fallacy.
gollark: It's basically entirely appeal to emotion, vague word association and stacks upon stacks of fallacies.
gollark: It's also very hard to empirically test anything in politics, not that people want to anyway.
gollark: The world is annoyingly complicated, so trying to start from a set of known premises and use formal logic to get results isn't very workable, plus there's Hume's guillotine.

References

  1. Robert Maxwell Ogilvie, Commentary on Livy, books 1–5, Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1965, pp. 404, 405.
  2. "The Biographical Dictionary of the Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge--". 1844.
  3. Schmitz, Leonhard (1870). "Curtia gens". In Smith, William (ed.). Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology. 1.
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