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This is an archive of past discussions about Mark Antony. Do not edit the contents of this page. If you wish to start a new discussion or revive an old one, please do so on the current talk page. |
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"He was an important supporter and the best friend of Gaius Julius Caesar as a military commander and administrator, being Caesar's second cousin, once removed, by his mother Julia Antonia." Is there any source from antiquity that lists Antony as Caesar's best friend? Seems a bit biased, and unproven, to me.
— Preceding unsigned comment added by 87.208.52.122 (talk) 20:21, 2 May 2009 (UTC)
Someone oughta put that back in there. 68.84.228.122 01:01, 17 October 2007 (UTC)
When Octavius invaded Egypt, where did he take the children captive? Were they all with Cleopatra and Mark Antony or were they all sent away and just ran into Octavius on the way? The children were Caesarion, Alexander Helios, Cleopatra Selene, Ptolemy Philadelphus and Mark Antony's two boys Antyllus and Iullus. Octavius killed Caesarion and Antyllus, but let the others go, sending them all to live with Octavia. Why did he let the others go? Selene I could understand, she a girl and couldn't cause too much trouble. The two boys Antony had with Cleopatra, were both quite young and may have been let off... But why Iullus? --80.193.19.191 20:24, 6 April 2006 (UTC)
A separate consideration:
Octavian did not let Alexander Helios nor Ptolemy Philadelphus go -- they were hung on crosses next to their brother. The Holy Bible says that the malefactors that were cruxified with Christ shared in his condemnation (shared in his accusation, were also accused of being Kings). These three Kings.. three Theives...Three Male-factors... with the "Donations" of Alexandria, octavian's propoganda was that "Cleopatra" had stolen these lands from rome. Thus her children who were in possession of this "stolen" property are the "Theives". The birth of Jesus Christ starts with the Imposter imposing a tax on all the world, and further it states, that the taxing was first made when quirnius was governor of Syria (this is only possible after the removal of young Philadelphus). This is octavian asserting all the authority he derived from murdering the King of Kings and rightful heir. Some may consider this heresy, but the reality is that octavian and herod both were imposters that stole other's Rightful kingdoms. herod bleed to an end the Hasmonean house and Octavian brought to an end the House of Ptolemais.Proverbs 1. +*
Since the article itself refers to Antony as Marcus Antonius, which was the name to which he would have answered, wouldn't it make sense to make Marcus Antonius the article and render Mark Antony as a redirect like Marc Antony, the other recognized Anglicized spelling? Jeff Anonymous 14:13, 23 Oct 2004 (UTC)
I think the title of a page is supposed to be the name which is most often searched for/recognized by, and how many people actually know his name was Marcus Antonius?
Kuralyov 07:26, 13 Nov 2004 (UTC)
For me you are welcome to make the move. [[User:Muriel Gottrop|muriel@pt]] 10:02, 13 Nov 2004 (UTC)
It should stay at Mark Anthony, as this is the most common name in English. -- ALoan (Talk) 11:12, 15 Nov 2004 (UTC)
This is old, but i've always seem him referred to as Marc Anthony(not Mark) in every history book and article on him i've ever read. I agree with JeffTL's suggestion to change the name. Spyke 21:26, 16 May 2006 (UTC)
Articles on Horace, Virgil, Ovid, Lucan, Julius Caesar, Pompey, and others are titled as listed, by their anglicized name. "Mark Antony" I believe is usually thought of as the most often used anglicization of his name. It is the one used by Shakespeare. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 15lsoucy (talk • contribs) 21:02, 28 May 2009 (UTC)
I've read both the Marcus Antonius and the Cicero articles, and there is a discrepancy between the two entries on the death of Cicero. In the Cicero article, the death of Cicero is attributed to Antonius' request. In the Antonius article, Cicero's death is attributed to suicide. It might be helpful to edit one or the other of the articles for consistency's sake. -Hilary Agrippina121@aol.com (19 Jan 2005) roy antony
"Cicero fled, but was caught and decapitated by his pursuers on December 7, 43 BC." The Marcus Antonius article states that he committed suicide. That seems like a discrepancy to me. I like your user name too. -Ariadne (21 January 2005)
Now that I've raised the issue, I'm not sure of the appropriate method to correct it. According to Plutarch, the centurion Herennius decapitated Cicero. Plutarch does remark that Cicero held forth his head for judgment, but I am not sure that it can be classified as a suicide in the same sense as that of Antonius or Cleopatra. Livy's description accords with this. I'm more inclined to edit the article to label Cicero's death as murder, but that he gave himself up to death with dignity. Plutarch: Cicero (48) "He was all covered with dust; his hair was long and disordered, and his face was pinched and wasted with his anxieties -- so that most of those who stood by covered their faces while Herennius was killing him. His throat was cut as he stretched his neck out from the litter." -- Hilary (21 Jan 2005)
Following on a little from the discussion on the article's Title above, I'd like to gauge people's reaction to the idea of changing Antony's name to Antony (from Antonius) throughout the article. Personally I'm very much in favour of referring to Romans with anglicised names by those names; I've discussed the issue at a little length on my user page and encourage any comments people have about it on my talk page, but to summarise briefly for a discussion on Mark Antony:
I look forward to hearing everyone else's comments. Binabik80 17:32, 1 Mar 2005 (UTC)
Do we know why Mark Antony / Marcus Antonius has only two names, when most Roman nobles had the standard three (or sometimes four)? Why does he have no cognomen? His father was called Creticus, but it seems that name was not used by Antony? — Preceding unsigned comment added by Shulgi (talk • contribs) 18:03, 23 January 2011 (UTC)
I dont write in English so good,so I apologise for it, but this part of the article is not accurate:
"Then came the day of Caesar's funeral. As Caesar's ever-present second in command, partner in consulship and cousin, Antony was the natural choice to make the funeral eulogy. In his speech, he sprang his accusations of murder and ensured a permanent breach with the conspirators. Showing a talent for rhetoric and dramatic interpretation, Antony snatched the toga from Caesar's body to show the crowd the scars from his wounds. That night, the Roman populace attacked the assassins' houses, forcing them to flee for their lives."
^^^^^^^^^^
It is historical fact that Shekspare wrote that speech in his act:"Mark Anthony and Cleopatra".
The real, original speech was not preserved and Shekspare only wrote what he thought Mark Anthony might have said.
Therefore,it would be good if someone added it up to this article. I could have done it, but like I said, I dont write English very well, so its better if someone else do itDzoni 02:36, 8 April 2006 (UTC)
Can you give the link to that,or at least show that passage in latin languageDzoni 13:21, 14 April 2006 (UTC)
You gave me english version by accident.Can you give the original,latin version,just to make sure that its right,because you know that someone could change english version any way he wants.You dont have to give the whole version,just that passage in latin,because im pretty sure there is no passage like thatDzoni 01:45, 16 April 2006 (UTC)
Please stop focusing on irrelevant things.I know its written in Greek,but I dont know Greek,do I,so I asked you for Latin passage.My point is:your are English,and your sources could be very well written by yourself or some other English or American historian.
I think tht we`ll agree that they are not the highest experts in this matter,since Amirica wasnt made back in the time about we are talkin about,and England was a land full of Wild people.So,Latin translation of Greek writings would be accetable,if you want to have a serious grounds.Off course,you can always just use force and put whaetever you like in the article,but if you dont prove it with Latin or at least Greek(old Greek) passage,then you know as well as I do that its not valid at all.Dzoni 03:44, 17 April 2006 (UTC)
anyone think this should be a new section of this article?Im thinking of adding it but also think that someone will delete it straight away. Dermo69
I like the idea. The popular interpretations of Antony (Shakespeare's Antony-as-avenger, Colleen McCullough's Antony-as-accessory) are at least as influential today as the historical record. Cranston Lamont 22:15, 31 August 2006 (UTC)
Has anyone heard of the arguments that our account of MA has been corrupted by Augustan propaganda?
All Roman citezens had three names, but Marcus Antonius's third name, the cognomen, is not found in the article. Forget about the name of the article; it's missing part of the person's name. —The preceding unsigned comment was added by 75.35.93.125 (talk) 02:32, 21 March 2007 (UTC).
I agree. I came to the page specifically to look for that information! It seems he didn't have one. Plutarch mentions absent cognomens in his piece on Marius and Antony is the most famous example so maybe a line about its absence could be added here? Sally quasa 20:13, 24 June 2007 (UTC)
In the section "Enemy of the state and triumvir", it talks about Antony meeting Cleopatra but repeats itself; the last sentence should be incorporated into the paragraph above it. Specifically, I would reword it as:
"After the battle, a new arrangement was made between the members of the Second Triumvirate: while Octavian returned to Rome, Antony went to Egypt where he allied himself with Queen Cleopatra VII, who was the former lover of Julius Caesar and mother of Caesar's infant son, Caesarion. He wanted Cleopatra for Egypt's wealth, and she wanted Antony for the Roman armies under his control. Lepidus went on to govern Hispania and the province of Africa.
The original text: " After the battle, a new arrangement was made between the members of the Second Triumvirate: while Octavian returned to Rome, Antony went to Egypt where he allied himself with Queen Cleopatra VII, who was the former lover of Julius Caesar and mother of Caesar's infant son, Caesarion. Lepidus went on to govern Hispania and the province of Africa.
Later in October Antony set out to Egypt and met Caesar's former lover, Cleopatra. He wanted Cleopatra for Egypt's wealth, and she wanted Antony for the Roman armies under his control."
One could possibly omit the entire last sentence, to be honest. Not sure if it's totally necessary.
— Preceding unsigned comment added by Xfireworksx (talk • contribs) 03:36, 24 June 2007 (UTC)
This strikes me as a partisan pro-Octavian way to explain the cause of war -- and probably not even true. Plutarch's account says that the Donations of Alexandria declared Caesarion co-ruler of Egypt with Cleopatra -- nothing about him being heir to Caesar. An heir is someone named in your will, so it seems unreasonable for someone other than Caesar to be declaring anyone his heir. The triumvirate originally consisted of Octavian, Anthony, and Lepidus, with Anthony as first among equals. Octavian later took the Western provinces from Lepidus as well as Sicily from Sextus (36 BC). This altered the balence of power between himself and Anthony. After defeating the Illyrians in 33 BC, Octavian's home base in Italy was secure and he was ready to attack Anthony. Anthony's plan was to win a striking victory over the Parthians and return to Rome as a conquering hero, much as Caesar did after conquering Gaul. To look at Cleopatra, Octavia, and Caesarion as reasons for war is a lot of romantic nonsense. Anthony's heir was Antyllus, his son by Fulvia. So none of Octavia's or Cleopatra's children were ever likely successors. The issue in the war was that both Octavian and Anthony wanted to be No. 1, but only one of them could be. Kauffner 07:43, 15 July 2007 (UTC)
The article states:
Plutarch mentions the rumor that before Antony reached 20 years of age, he was already indebted the sum of 250 talents (equivalent to $165,000,000 USD).
Really? How is the equivalent money in modern USD arrived at? Who worked this out?
The Prime Source 21:21, 15 July 2007 (UTC)Dale
How on earth does someone rack up $165 million in debts by age 20?
Does anyone else find this more than a little hard to swallow?I elliot 11:23, 2 September 2007 (UTC)
The Romans also used silver as a unit of value, so that could have been 250 talents of silver, which would be worth a lot less. (Maybe only $2M.)207.47.120.50 19:36, 29 October 2007 (UTC)
Image:Marcus Antonius1.jpg is listed as being from the Vatican Museum and licenced as a work of the United States Government, which I find rather curious. I've left a query on the uploader's talk page, but I also wished to note here in case anyone else has more info on the image. Thanks, -- Infrogmation 19:17, 25 August 2007 (UTC)
Just like many other ancient Romans and Greeks, he had done men too. I've read this in "Philippics against Mark Anthony" By Marcus Tullius Cicero (can't remember which part though). However, in this book, which contains a dozen speeches held in the Senate, Cicero isn't too objective and he used many other means to persuade the Senate about his point (and he was good at it), so I'm not sure if Cicero said the truth OR modified it in order to serve his goals. 79.114.228.101 20:17, 13 October 2007 (UTC)
Bagdardus? What is this? Vandalism? —Preceding unsigned comment added by 193.212.171.26 (talk) 09:12, 13 November 2008 (UTC)
This article, though full of worthy work, reads like a Victorian "Story From History". It is inadequately sourced, does not discuss variant interpretations of the evidence, and is in many respects historically naive. Wikipedia ought to be able to do better.Deipnosophista (talk) 07:54, 4 April 2009 (UTC)
The original image as uploaded contained an inadequate license. It has been deleted. During research for another article I stumbled across the original image in it's original publication dated from 1899 and have uploaded a scan from the book "A short History of Rome" with proper license and correct citations. I cannot seem to get the image to load properly in the infobox....but here it is if editors still want it on the page.
—Preceding unsigned comment added by 69.62.180.178 (talk) 00:43, 24 April 2009 (UTC)
This article has fallen into disrepair and needs much work. Please help to identify the needed improvements by scanning through the Project ratings boxes that I have un-nested to show how far this page has fallen. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 69.62.180.178 (talk) 03:21, 10 June 2009 (UTC)
The section regarding Mark Antony's relationship with Cleopatra seems biased and is heavily influenced by subsequent literature. It's more a mixture of roman propaganda and shakespearean drama than an actual account of verifiable events. Particularly, the depiction of Cleopatra as a sovereign, as opposed to the ruler of a de facto vassal state, should be edited. The section's counterpart in the article for Cleopatra is, while not perfect, much more professional and impartial. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Chilreu (talk • contribs) 21:07, 13 July 2009 (UTC)
The result of the move request was not done. Skomorokh, barbarian 10:15, 20 October 2009 (UTC)
Mark Antony → Marcus Antonius — — The page should be at his real name. — 75.10.49.89 (talk) 22:02, 12 October 2009 (UTC)
Why is his birth year listed as 83 in the first paragraph? He was either 53 or 56 at the date of his death, yet he was the eldest son of 3, the oldest of the other two having been born in 84 (according to ) indicating he was 56 when he died (and thus born in 86). —Preceding unsigned comment added by 188.27.191.222 (talk) 23:42, 28 October 2010 (UTC)
Hello (sorry for the mistakes),
I understood, by reading the article about Julii Caesares, that Antony and Julius Caesar shared a common ancestor : Sextus Julius Caesar I. Indeed, Antony mother, Julia Antonia, daughter of Lucius Julius Caesar III, was Caesar third cousin. I'd like to add this information, but I don't have any references. My question is : do you know a reference work about Republican gentes in general, and Julii in particular ?
Actually, which ancient author(s) do(es) give pieces information about genealogy to us ?
Regards, Fsojic (talk) 22:16, 15 June 2012 (UTC)
According to Suetonius 11.3, Mark Antony had the same birthday as Drusus, the father of Claudius. Augustus made sure Antony's birthday was a dies vitiosus, but Claudius restored it, as he could legitimately do out of pietas for both Antony and his father. That shared date is January 14, as this commentary on the Suetonius passage states. So too Goldsworthy, though he's less about nitpicking facts than the overall narrative. A recent biography of Livia also goes with January 14 for Antony's dies natalis, as does this biography of Antonia. And in snippet, the biography of Antony himself by Pat Southern. The confusion has to do in part with the shift to the Julian calendar, but it isn't entirely clear to me where the summer date is coming from—one source I saw mentions that Antony was born under the sign of Leo, presumably accepting the July date. Cynwolfe (talk) 04:58, 14 January 2013 (UTC)
I cannot believe that the discussion of Marc Antony's birthday is based upon two items that couldn't be more superfluous: A series of emulative commentaries by modern biographers of classical Roman chroniclers, and the idea of Antony's proposed astrological sign (!!). Give academics and serious scholarship a break (!) With all due respect, this discussion resembles 60s hippies and 70s post-hippies who would probably discuss Linda Goodman's Sun Signs as serious conversation at a coffee table. The facts are that none of those commentaries which propose January 14 as Antony's birthday are conclusive or confirmed. It isn't like the established birthdates of Caesar, Pompey, Cicero, etc...January 14 is mere speculation. Weigall, in his 1931 biography, does not imply but unequivocally states that Antony was born on the day Lucius Cornelius Sulla landed at Brundisium in (Spring) 83 BC. Tracking Sulla's progression from the time of his landing at Brundisium (in Spring) to the eventual sacking of Rome on 6th July (Quintillus) 83 BC (recorded by Plutarch), narrows down the timeframe of Sulla's landing at Brundisium to the month of April 83 BC. I don't know where the proposed birthday of July 30th for Antony came from (?) I couldn't trace it to any source, so far. Arthur Weigall (in page 39 of his The Life and Times of Marc Antony) of the cited link provided in the secondary sources section, is rather detailed and probably as convincing an account in comparison to any of those "commentaries" by modern biographers who seem to be on a "crusade" to make Jan. 14 Marc Antony's birthday...LOL And btw, I did not insert the following: Huzar pp. 10–11 as a cited source. I only inserted Arthus S. Weigall as a cited source. Flagrantedelicto (talk) 15:35, 20 January 2013 (UTC)
With all due respect, I don't need you to advise me on my tone. It is what it is and there was no personal attack to anyone in particular, but just an observation about the apparent nature of discussion regarding Antony's birthday. It is you who have called me "ignorant"...Now, that is a personal attack. You watch your tone and retract that statement, if you please. And I NEVER put a July 30th birthday for Antony. Before you keep harping on it, do your research first. Is that understood(?) And you still have resolved nothing about establishing Jan. 14 as a most likely date for Antony's birth. Furthermore, there is no ancient confirmed chronicle which recorded Nero Claudius Drusus to be born on January 14, 38 BC. It seems that this was an unsourced change in Wikipedia and consequently replicated all over the internet reference archives to make it look like generally accepted historical data. Here is an excerpt from the previous encyclopedic entry on Nero Claudius Drusus:
Childhood
Drusus was the youngest son of Roman Empress Livia Drusilla from her marriage to Tiberius Claudius Nero. Drusus was born between 18 March 38 BC and 13 April 38 BC. He was born shortly after Livia divorced Tiberius Nero and married Augustus (17 January, 38 BC), giving rise to rumors that Augustus was the real father, although this is widely discredited by modern historians as Augustus had not yet met Livia when Drusus would have been conceived (During his reign, Claudius revived this rumor to give the impression that Augustus was his paternal grandfather in addition to being his maternal great-uncle). Before Augustus married Livia, Tiberius Claudius Nero was declared Drusus' biological father. According to Suetonius, he was born with the praenomen Decimus, but it was later changed to Nero. He was raised in Claudius Nero's house with his brother, the future emperor Tiberius, until his father's death. Drusus and his brother Tiberius developed a famously close relationship in this environment that would last the rest of their lives. Tiberius named his eldest son after his brother (a departure from Roman naming convention), and Drusus did likewise.
Now if Seutonius is correct in recording that Claudius honoured Marc Antony by proclaiming that his father Drusus shared the same birthday as Antony, than that adds all the more validity to Marc Antony being born in the Spring of 83 BC...Most likely between the 1st and the 13th of April 83 BC, coinciding with Sulla's landing at Brundisium. Flagrantedelicto (talk) 16:51, 20 January 2013 (UTC)
Actually, you are right, the Nero Claudius Drusus article seems to have been manipulated without any sources. Drusus has no fixed birthday but someone apparently inserted Jan. 14, 38 BC without citing the source. I would like to add that I am not "arguing", just discussing...In addition to actually calling me "ignorant", you have surmised that I am also "arguing"...LOL Flagrantedelicto (talk) 17:23, 20 January 2013 (UTC)
One summarizing point I would like to make is that there is NO POSSIBLE WAY Nero Decimus Claudius Drusus was born Jan. 14, 38 BC, considering that his mother Livia Drusilla was 6 months pregnant with him in January 38 BC, when she was forced to divorce Drusus' father by Octavian (Augustus Caesar) and then marry him on Jan. 17, 38 BC. This obviously means that Drusus was born (as documented) between 18th March and 13th April of 83 BC. Flagrantedelicto (talk) 20:26, 20 January 2013 (UTC)
It is you, dear sir, that has completely missed the point. Did you fully read your own provided source (???) Emperor Claudius already adjusted (or explicated) the shift in calendars which pinpoints Marc Antony's correct birthdate to 28 MARCH 83 BC (!) On Page 106 of Suetonius' DIUUS CLAUDIUS if you read the ENTIRE page, Jan. 14, 83 BC (pre-Julian reform) re-calculates to Mar. 28, 83 BC. Which coincides with Drusus' birth between mid-March and mid-April (in year 38 BC), which is also stated in Page 106 in the link you provided. Conclusion: Marcus Antonius III / aka Marcus Antonius Triumvir / aka Marc Antony was born on 28th March 83 BC (from Suetonius' SUETONIUS: DIUUS CLAUDIUS). Why in the world would any scholar (or scholars) record an incorrect/inaccurate birthdate of Marc Antony which has been correctly re-calculated from Jan. 14 to Mar. 28 in 83 BC (???) This is beyond me. You should insert 28 March 83 BC (as also re-calculated by modern scholar Radke in 1978). Flagrantedelicto (talk) 21:27, 20 January 2013 (UTC)
Alright, so you are not a "sir"...However, re-read that page of Hurley's commentary. She is saying the opposite. It was Jan. 14, 83 BC back then (a matter of public record). The adjusted date of our Julio-Gregorian reform is 28 March 83 BC...Unless you are stuck on Jan. 14 and cannot see otherwise. Do yourself a favour and re-read Page 106 about 10 times (very slowly). It should sink in that the adjustment is from Jan. 14 to Mar. 28, 83 BC. As is stated in Page 106, when Claudius brought attention to the conjunction of birthdays of Drusus and Antony, he was informing the populace of something it did not know: That Antony was not actually born on Jan. 14, but Mar. 28, which coincided with his father Drusus' birthday, between mid-March and mid-April. I don't how it could be any clearer than what Hurley states in that page. Don't worry, the honour is all yours to insert the correct date of Marc Antony's birth (from Jan. 14 to Mar. 28, 83 BC). I'll just wait to see how long it will take you to understand and figure out your own provided source...Excellent research, btw (no sarcasm intended). Flagrantedelicto (talk) 22:12, 20 January 2013 (UTC)
I almost forgot to mention that in Hurley's commentary (in Page 106), she states an addition of 93 days from the pre-Julian reform date of Jan. 14, 83 BC...This, however, does not adjust to 28 March 83 BC, but 17 April 83 BC...Unless Hurley misquoted the number of additional days from 73 days to 93 days. The addition of 73 days as adjustment re-calculates Jan. 14, 83 BC to Mar. 28, 83 BC. This is something you might sort out. Either way, Antony was either born on 28 March or 17 April 83 BC. This still coincides with Sulla's springtime landing at Brundisium and Drusus' birth in between mid-March and mid-April (in year 38 BC). Consequently, there exist no conflict in any of these coincidences. Peace. Flagrantedelicto (talk) 22:55, 20 January 2013 (UTC)
Sorry Cynwolfe, I know I said the honour was all yours (and it still is), but I couldn't wait any longer for you to see that Hurley clarified the adjustment from Jan. 14 (pre-Julian) to Mar. 28 (Julian) in Page 106 of the link you provided. Peace. Flagrantedelicto (talk) 00:33, 21 January 2013 (UTC)
For now, I'll leave that up to you. Since you have appointed yourself WP guardian to Marc Antony's birthday (I'm sure his spirit is flattered, wherever he may be, LOL). But your provided source couldn't be more clear than what I've already stated: Jan. 14th is the pre-Julian Roman date, while Mar. 28th is the Julian date. If you cannot perceive this, than you ought to get some other WP editors to read Page 106 of Donna W. Hurley's commentary from SUETONIUS: DIVUS CLAUDIUS by Suetonius. It is crystal clear to me, however. Just think of all the dictionary and encyclopedic sources which recorded the founding fathers of the U.S. and their pre-Gregorian birthdates (Franklin, Adams, Washington), or the Old Style birthdates of the fathers of Bolshevism (Lenin, Stalin, Trotsky)...Eventually, most of them went out of print by now. I guess those scholars who uphold Jan. 14, 83 BC have not adjusted it to the Julian Mar. 28, 83 BC. You see, logic dictates that if Suetonius is right about Antony and Drusus, then it has to be Mar. 28, 83 BC. Drusus was NOT BORN on Jan. 14, 38 BC. I think you should take the step forward and reinstate Mar. 28, 83 BC...After all, you have the cited source ready and available for all to see. Unless of course, you are having a difficult time accepting that Marc Antony was really an Aries, and not a Capricorn (LOL)...Flagrantedelicto (talk) 01:01, 21 January 2013 (UTC)
My own understanding from Donna W. Hurley's commentary from Page 106 of Suetonius: Diuus Claudius is that Hurley's quote of scholar Radke's 1978 calculation of Marc Antony's birthdate (with the addition of the 93 days) brings it to 17 April (not 28 March) 83 BC of the Julian Calendar. This ties in with Hurley's reiteration of the traditional birthdate of Nero (Decimus) Claudius Drusus, which is said to have been three (3) months from the date (17 January 38 BC) of Drusus' mother Livia Drusilla's marriage to Octavian (Augustus Caesar): 17 April 38 BC. This further ties in with Arthur S. Weigall's 1931 biography The Life and Times of Marc Antony, which explicitly states that Antony was born on the day Lucius Cornelius Sulla landed in Italy (at Brundisium) in the spring of 83 BC. Conclusion: Marc Antony was born on 17 April 83 BC (based upon Donna W. Hurley's commentary on Page 106 of Suetonius' Divus Claudius). Flagrantedelicto (talk) 03:18, 21 January 2013 (UTC)
Summarizing this topic, I would like to mention that any reader who views Page 106 of Donna W. Hurley's commentary from Suetonius: Diuus Claudius (by Suetonius), can comprehend that Emperor Claudius recalculated the year 83 BC (as stated by Hurley) for the Secular Games as well. Hurley made an error in her adjustment of scholar Radke's 1978 corroborating recalculation of the year 83 BC (in Julian chronology) since the time of Emperor Claudius. In Julian chronology, the year 83 BC would have 93 days added to the date of January 14th, which adjusts the date to April 17th (NOT March 28th, which is what Hurley miscalculated). What Hurley did was add 73 days to the date of January 14th in year 83 BC...That is how she miscalculated her adjustment to March 28th, instead of April 17th (which is the correct adjustment for year 83 BC). I hope all this makes sense, as it is really not complicated at all, just simple math. Flagrantedelicto (talk) 07:33, 22 January 2013 (UTC)
It is not what "I" recalculated, it is clearly a miscalculation on Hurley's part. After all, it is not original research to catch a typographical error or a misprint / miscalculation. Logic and common sense dictates that 93 days added to Jan. 14th (for the year 83 BC) adjusts to 17th Apr. There is no original research here, just a correction of Hurley's miscalculation. You still are lost in the clouds and cannot fathom that Hurley has CLEARLY stated that the corrected Julian chronology adjustment is NOT Jan. 14th, but Mar. 28, 83 BC (or actually Apr. 17, 83 BC). No offense intended, but you clearly have some type of psychological blockage or denial going on here. You proved that when you embellished Weigall's statement from Page 39 of his The Life and Times of Marc Antony (1931), adding your own version of something Weigall never wrote. Furthermore, in the Marc Antony article edit section, you made the statement that the cited source of Suetonius: Diuus Claudius (from Donna W. Hurley's commentary) does not state that Drusus was born between mid-March and mid-April, when it most certainly does. What an embarrassment for you...Not even knowing what your own provided source actually stated (!). If you cannot remotely comprehend that the adjustment is to 28th Mar. (or 17th Apr.) from Jan. 14th, then you do have some comprehension issues, as anyone who reads Page 106 of Hurley's commentary (which you yourself provided) can plainly see that the adjustment is from the pre-Julian Roman chronology of Jan. 14th to the Julian chronology of Mar. 28th [Apr. 17th] of 83 BC. What is truly surprising (almost shocking) is that you of all people (the provider of this detailed source) cannot even comprehend your own researched source. Either that, or you are just plain unwilling to accept that Jan. 14 is the pre-Julian Roman birthdate. It wouldn't surprise me that if we backtracked and researched who inserted the Jan. 14 birthday for Nero Claudius Drusus in various article pages in WP, that it might turn out to be you...Drusus was born three (3) months from the time of his biological mother Livia's wedding to Octavian (Augustus Caesar): That would be 17th April 38 BC (or mid-April), as Livia wedded Octavian on 17th January 38 BC. All these dates being in Julian chronology. Consequently, when Emperor Claudius publicly proclaimed that his father Drusus shared Marc Antony's birthday, it was the recalculated date of mid-April, which is what Donna W. Hurley clearly states in Page 106 of Suetonius: Diuus Claudius. I could revert your edit, but that would be engaging in an edit war which no one in WP desires between their editors. In my analysis of Donna W. Hurley's research, I must say she eclipsed any of those other "preponderance" of scholars who cannot see past the pre-Julian Roman chronology of Marc Antony's pre-adjusted birthdate of Jan. 14th. The only error Hurley made was in miscalculating scholar Radke's corroborating recalculation of the addition of 93 days, since the time of Emperor Claudius' Julian chronological recalculation of the year 83 BC. Face it, you just don't want to accept Hurley's clarification, elucidation, and correction of the alleged discrepancy between Antony's pre-Julian birthday of Jan. 14 and Drusus' birthday of mid-April (i.e., April 17th). Just contemplate upon a scenario in which a "preponderance" of scholars who documented Washington's original birthday of Feb. 11 or Adams' original birthday of Oct. 19 instead of the Gregorian adjustments of Feb. 22 or Oct. 30...What would anyone think of this (?) I rest my case. Hopefully, another WP editor will see the light and take the initiative and insert Marc Antony's actual Julian chronological birthdate of the Hurley miscalculated Mar. 28, 83 BC (or better yet, the correct Apr. 17, 83 BC, which corroborates Suetonius' chronicle that Drusus and Antony shared the same birthday: mid-April or 17th April). Flagrantedelicto (talk) 15:59, 22 January 2013 (UTC)
Once again, you are missing the point of your own provided source. I am not proving anything. Your own provided linked source to Donna W. Hurley's Suetonius: Diuus Claudius represents the documentation provided in the form of citations...What part of this do you not understand (?) LOL In the infobox and opening header, you should insert Mar. 28, 83 BC and in the Biography: Early Life section, go into details about the probable error in miscalculation by Hurley when she quoted Radke's 93 day addition to the pre-Julian Roman date of Jan. 14, 83 BC (which adjusts to Apr. 17, 83 BC)...That's all. And why do you keep stating that Sulla landed in Brundisium in "January of our calendar" when it is NOT in January of our calendar, but in Spring (i.e., April) of our calendar. What part of this do you also not seem to want to understand (?) LOL What you are engaging in is a bunch of "red tape" of WP policies and manipulating them to avoid the simple issue that your own provided source clearly cited the adjustment and correction of the discrepancy between Antony's pre-Julian birthdate of Jan. 14 and Drusus' traditional birthday in mid-April (i.e., Apr. 17, 38 BC), so it could corroborate Suetonius' documentation that Emperor Claudius proclaimed his father Drusus shared Antony's birthday. You yourself spotlighted this in the Biography: Early Life section of Antony WP article: That according to Suetonius, Antony shared the same birthday as Drusus. Now, because someone got caught falsely manipulating Drusus' birthday (between mid-March and mid-April) to Jan. 14, so it could corroborate Suetonius' historiographical assertion that Antony and Drusus shared the same birthday, you are ignoring this point which you yourself brought attention to (now that we all know that Drusus was never born on Jan. 14 in the first place). I am also a little curious as to why user Black Sword has not offered any comments to this discussion...You are not also Black Sword by any chance are you (?) LOL ... Just kidding. Flagrantedelicto (talk) 16:46, 22 January 2013 (UTC)
I am citing YOUR source (Donna W. Hurley's commentary of SUETONIUS: DIUUS CLAUDIUS Page 106). And what I suggested was to elaborate on Hurley's miscalculation (in the Biography: Early Life section or I would like to further add, even more appropriately in the footnotes section); this is common in WP articles. I am not basing any "argument", just stating what YOUR provided source documented. Which is plenty...And which you have so marginally quoted, omitting the full extent of Hurley's commentary regarding Antony's birthday. Again, you are carefully evading the fact that it was YOU who spotlighted Suetonius' Antony-Drusus shared birthday...Not I. All I did was tie in Weigall's biography on Antony, regarding his birthday occurring on the same day Sulla landed at Brundisium, with YOUR spotlighting Suetonius' historiographical account which records that Antony and Drusus shared the same birthday. You are running circles around the issue: Antony's birthday (whether it was on Jan. 14 or in mid-April). You started this whole section in Antony's talk page and invited me in my WP User Talk Page to a discussion, if you recall your invite to me...I was just kidding around when I frivolously asked if you were also by chance Black Sword...I did state that I was just kidding (to add a little lightheartedness to this discussion). Or did you miss that point as well (?) What is just about enough is your surprising lack of comprehension of your own provided source, and your persistence in not even attempting to understand or accept it. LOL Peace out. Flagrantedelicto (talk) 22:28, 22 January 2013 (UTC)
Is that all you are hung up on (?) ... Weigall's listing of the coinciding of Sulla's landing in Italy with Antony's birth..(?) Did you reference the link to Weigall's book The Life and Times of Marc Antony (?) It is right there in the secondary references section of Antony's WP article page. In that link, it falls on Page 39. If you go outside to other internet sources of Weigall's work, he quotes an earlier German historian. And again, you are evading the issue of YOUR spotlighting that Drusus and Antony shared the same birthday: And it is NOT Jan. 14 for Drusus. Donna W. Hurley does an above-and-beyond research to reconcile the discrepancy between Drusus' mid-March to mid-April birthday with Antony's (pre-Julian reform) Jan. 14 birthday...And you keep running circles about Drusus and Brundisium. It is Antony coinciding with a shared birthday with Drusus' & Sulla's landing at Brundisium (in Spring 83 BC) as per Weigall. So all you could comprehend is that Hurley's entry of "Antony was born on January 14..." And for some reason went no further than this (?) LOL So far, Suetonius is the most detailed source for Marc Antony's factual birthday...And in his Diuus Claudius, Suetonius states that Antony shared his birthday with Nero Claudius Drusus: And Hurley clarifies why it is really Mar. 28, 83 BC [which she seems to have miscalculated]. Even Hurley states that Drusus was born three (3) months from the date of Drusus' mother Livia's marriage to Octavian (Augustus Caesar). And that falls in mid-April. And yet you are hung up on Weigall's source for the coincidence of Sulla's Brundisium landing...LOL For some reason it eludes you that maybe all those other scholars are quoting Antony's pre-Julian reform birthday and are as hung up on Jan. 14 as you are. Also, for some inexplicable reason you even tried to convince yourself of the exact opposite of what Hurley actually stated: That the Mar. 28, 83 BC date is the pre-Julian birthday, while Jan. 14 is the Julian birthday (!) Which is exactly the opposite of what Donna W. Hurley wrote (!) LOL So it seems you invited me to this discussion to engage in a debate of attrition, running circles with conundrums and embarrassing yourself by not even fully researching your own sources that you provided ...Give it up. LOL Flagrantedelicto (talk) 00:30, 23 January 2013 (UTC)
You are really applying double standards here. Can you provide an ancient source (like Appian, Plutarch, Tacitus, Suetonius) that ACTUALLY STATES that January 14 is the birthday of Marc Antony (?) Where did all those modern scholars (including Donna W. Hurley) get the January 14 birthday for Marc Antony (?) Suetonius does NOT state January 14 for Antony or Drusus' birthday; neither does Appian in any of his works; neither does Plutarch in any of his works; neither does Tacitus in any of his works. SO FROM WHICH ANCIENT HISTORICAL SOURCE DID MARC ANTONY'S BIRTHDAY OF JANUARY 14 ACTUALLY COME FROM (?) Can you please provide this original ANCIENT historical source (?) By the same standard you are rejecting Drusus' mid-March to mid-April birthday (recorded by Donna W. Hurley), you are accepting Hurley's January 14 (pre-Julian reform birthday) for Antony. Don't quote a bunch of commentaries of modern scholars who all documented January 14 as Antony's birthday without providing any of their ANCIENT sources. Do you understand the concept of logic (?) Drusus' mother Livia is recorded to have wedded Octavian (Augustus Caesar) on 17 January 38 BC (while being 6 months pregnant with Drusus). Drusus has been recorded to have been born three (3) months from that marriage (pregnancies last 9 months for human females, and no mention by anyone of Drusus being born premature)...This brings Drusus' birth to mid-April (i.e., 17 April). Nowhere has it been recorded that Drusus was born on January 14, 38 BC, just three (3) days before his mother Livia married Octavian (Augustus Caesar) on January 17, 38 BC. Does this type of logic make any sense to you (?) Flagrantedelicto (talk) 14:50, 23 January 2013 (UTC)
LOL...Not really shouting, but emphasizing a point which you have completely EVADED. You did not answer my request: WHAT ANCIENT SOURCE SPECIFICALLY STATES THAT MARC ANTONY WAS BORN ON JANUARY 14 (?) Was it Tacitus (?) Was it Plutarch (?) Was it Suetonius (?) Was it Appian (?) Was it Julius Africanus (?) Was it Eusebius (?) Was it Pliny (?) Was it Livy (?) Who was this ancient source which specifically recorded January 14 as Marc Antony's birthday (???) ... Which Donna W. Hurley, Nikos Kokkino, Pat Southern, C. B. R. Pelling, and Adrian Goldsworthy ALL have cited as their ancient historiographical source which recorded that January 14 was Marc Antony's birthday (?) You have not provided (and probably cannot provide) an ANCIENT HISTORIAN who recorded that January 14 was indeed Marc Antony's birthday. That is why Suetonius' Antony-Drusus birthday correlation was so important to the person who falsely manipulated the WP articles when that person inserted January 14 as Nero (Decimus) Claudius Drusus' birthday (which is utterly false). You wouldn't know who that person would be, would you by chance (?) You are the one fervently fighting tooth-and-nail to uphold January 14 as Marc Antony's birthday by researching and citing about five (5) scholars none of whom cited their own ancient historical source. What we have here is a common case of a bunch of modern scholars citing each other as the source of Antony's birthday being January 14...And not a single one of them have provided an ancient historian as their source. And yet you fervently uphold January 14 as Marc Antony's birthday without being able to provide the ancient historical source which established January 14 as Antony's birthday. You advise me about adding stuff to the article without verification, and yet you yourself cannot provide an ancient source that states that January 14 was Marc Antony's birthday. You accept and reject information based upon your own DOUBLE STANDARD and hypocritically lecture others about integrity in citing sources...LOL You have no more reason to reject even Hurley's possibly miscalculated date of March 28 than you do to accept January 14 as Antony's birthday. First and foremost, you need to provide the ancient source of Antony's birthday before you insert January 14. Otherwise remove it from the infobox and leave it as just 83 BC. Weigall's page 39 was at onetime accessible from this very WP article page. It is still traceable at other sites on the internet. Your logic is evident in your running circles with conundrums regarding Antony's birthday issue. And the fact that had I not viewed the source YOU provided (Hurley's Page 106 commentary of Suetonius' Diuus Claudius) no one would have been aware of Hurley's recalculation of Antony's date, or that the (uncited) January 14 date was the pre-Julian Roman date. Please provide the original, ancient historical source of Antony's birthday as January 14...That is my challenge to you...And not a bunch of modern scholars quoting each other as cited sources for Antony's birthday being January 14. Flagrantedelicto (talk) 19:20, 23 January 2013 (UTC)
Now that is amusing that you state you are to trying to show how secondary sources base their calculations...LOL You have rejected Hurley's quote of Radke's secondary source calculation of 93 days added to the (supposed) Jan. 14. And I can only see one ancient evidence : Suetonius' Diuus Claudius. Weigall provided a citation from a German historian as I remember correctly when Page 39 was accessible from right here on the Antony WP page. And you still are EVADING my request (or challenge, if you will) to produce an ancient source other than Suetonius regarding Antony's birthday. You cannot find any material that Nero Claudius Drusus was born on Jan. 14, because he simply wasn't. Drusus' was born in mid-April (or a more broader timeframe of mid-March and mid-April). I will try and track down any ancient source which records Drusus to be born in mid-April (on or near 17 April) and then your almost irrational persistence upon the uncited (from ancient sources) date of Jan. 14 will then be erroneous. Flagrantedelicto (talk) 20:34, 23 January 2013 (UTC)
This isn't exactly a game. It is to you, maybe...But you are EVADING the issue altogether: PRESENT AN ANCIENT HISTORICAL SOURCE THAT RECORDS MARC ANTONY TO BE BORN ON JANUARY 14. I don't care about Pelling, Goldsworthy, and Southern. None of them have provided an ancient historical source, and neither have you. Earlier in this discussion, you mentioned a biography of Livia which also stated that Antony was born on Jan. 14...It's author Mary Mudd is a CPCS (Certified Provider Credentialing Specialist) in the medical profession, btw...Just the very title of her Livia biography I Livia, The Counterfeit Criminal sounds amateurish...LOL Also, as I said earlier that from this WP Antony article link, when it was accessible, the page was 39 of Weigall's The Life and Times of Marc Antony...When the excerpt to page 39 is accessible once again, anyone can view that it is page 39 from the link provided in the secondary sources section. In the internet archive you accessed it fell on page 35. This is common with different publications...So don't get cute over that. Also, if you recall, it was you who embellished the late April or early May bit in reference to Sulla's Brundisium landing which you now know is not at all what Weigall wrote...And I NEVER claimed that he specified late April to early May, either. In any of the footnotes about Sulla's landing in Italy (at Brundisium) from the classical sources to most all modern scholars, Sulla arrived in the SPRING of 83 BC...Not January. You are trying to divert attention to Weigall only. Once again, PROVIDE THE ANCIENT SOURCE(S) THAT RECORDS ANTONY'S BIRTHDAY TO BE JANUARY 14. You cannot explain the calendar business because you already displayed such obtuseness regarding it, that it is laughable. How can you explain something which you missed entirely the first time you quoted Hurley (?) LOL Don't offer Pelling, Goldsworthy, Southern, or anyone WHO CANNOT PROVIDE AN ANCIENT HISTORICAL SOURCE. The person who inserted Jan. 14 as Drusus' birthday (unsourced) when it most certainly is not, is the one whose game is up...Not me. You need to provide an ancient source for Antony's birthday. Flagrantedelicto (talk) 22:48, 23 January 2013 (UTC)
O btw, I just tried accessing Weigall's link in the secondary references section of his The Life and Times of Marc Antony just seconds ago and it is accessible once again. Try it and you will see that from this G. P. Putnam & Sons publication, the page in question about Antony's birth coinciding with Sulla's landing at Brundisium is ON PAGE 39. It might be inaccessible in a few days again, as different pages are accessible as excerpts to this book at different times. You tried to get fresh over this. Once again, there you go embellishing...You re-edited your entry that Antony was a newborn when Sulla arrived in Italy in EARLY (??) 83 BC...Weigall does not mention EARLY at all and clearly states that his mother Julia gave birth to a male child at just about the time that Sulla landed in Italy...You are really displaying some type of inability to comprehend what you read. LOL Flagrantedelicto (talk) 23:36, 23 January 2013 (UTC)
I just wanted to add that I found a source which specifies that Sulla landed at Brundisium in the spring of 83 BC. However, it does not discuss Marc Antony's birth coinciding with it. I didn't know how or where else to insert this cited source so I entered it following the Weigall citation. Flagrantedelicto (talk) 00:42, 24 January 2013 (UTC)
Well, I'm glad that you FINALLY did the proper & principled thing and included the correct information about Antony's birthday. What is most gratifying for me is to not only win over my point, but to have the person professing an opposing position PROVIDE the very evidence to prove my point. I thank you (profusely) for that. And thank you for inviting me to this discussion. Flagrantedelicto (talk) 13:43, 24 January 2013 (UTC)
I added Arthur C. Howland & Theodor Mommsen because you deleted the "spring" entry and were challenging it. That entry is key in connecting the dots of the spring birth of Antony in 83 BC. Also, who are you exactly (?) A WP administrator (?) You behave as if you own this Antony WP article page. If you are another frequent WP editor such as me, I have as much right to override your entries as you seem to do mine or probably anyone else. You finally got around to adding Hurley's clarification of the discrepancy of Drusus' spring birth in 38 BC and the (uncited from any ANCIENT source) phantom birthday of Jan. 14 attributed to Marc Antony. You have failed to provide an ancient source for all those biographers of Antony who have been essentially citing each other for the Jan. 14 birthday attributed to Antony. Not a single one of those biographers provided in any of their records their ancient source which attributes Jan. 14 as his birthday. Even without Hurley's clarifying quote of scholar Radke's corroborating recalculation of Antony's actual birthday, the only truly ancient source (Suetonius) provides a time frame for Marc Antony's actual birthday: That it coincided with Drusus. And Drusus was born three months from his biological mother Livia's marriage to Octavian (Augustus Caesar) which occurred on Jan. 17, 38 BC. And I don't care how many Marc Antony biographers are pulled out of the woodworks (Pelling, Goldsworthy, Southern, etc., etc.), if none of them can provide even a single ancient source, then they are essentially worthless. Antony was no more born on Jan. 14, then Jesus Christ was born in Dec. 25 of year 1 Anno Domini. Dec. 25 was Saturnalia at one point (citing Macrobius). In due time, I suspect that some real scholar will burst this Jan. 14 bubble and trace it to some 19th or 20th Century scholar who started this whole fallacy. Let it never be said that WP editors did not also attempt to burst that bubble at one point (LOL). Just to illustrate how an obtuse historical biographer's mind works, that CPCS by profession, Mary Mudd (in page 23 of her "biography" of Livia Drusilla), actually tries to convince herself and her readers (without providing any classical sources whatsoever) and subsequently writing the very opposite of well-documented history, that Drusus was not born in spring but somehow had to have been born three days before his mother Livia's wedding to Augustus (Octavian)...Which would make him born a 6-month, premature baby (LOL). This kind of irrational mental process is what causes all the confusion in historical research. You still have yet to provide an ANCIENT source for Jan. 14 being Antony's birthday. Whereas the spring (late March to mid April) birth period for Antony seems the only source from ancient times. Flagrantedelicto (talk) 20:19, 24 January 2013 (UTC)
Am I glad that you stated this because Cynwolfe was practically going around in circles, almost insisting on an ancient source for Antony's birth coinciding with Sulla's landing at Brundisium. Then Cynwolfe cannot provide an ancient source for the attributed birthday of Antony, which is supposedly Jan. 14 (LOL). Donna W. Hurley, so far, was the only scholar who resolved the discrepancy between Drusus' spring (i.e., April) birth and Antony's essentially uncited (from any ancient sources) birthday of Jan. 14...Which Cynwolfe seemingly fought tooth-and-nail to resist its inclusion in Antony's Biography: Early life section. Flagrantedelicto (talk) 20:56, 24 January 2013 (UTC)
That is interesting: Cynwolfe tracked down Radke's work...And found another source who concurs with Hurley: Marleen Boudreau Flory. I shall have to check this out. I don't really have too much faith in Cynwolfe's comprehension of what he/she reads (sorry to say). If I had not checked the Hurley reference, there would have been no adjusted birthday of Marc Antony to March 28, 83 BC. However, it is curious the way Cynwolfe puts two separate cited sources under the single citation (as if to downplay that there are really three concurring sources for the March 28, 83 BC birthday for Marc Antony: Donna W. Hurley, G. Radke, and Marleen B. Flory). And also the way the entry states in effect at the time of Claudius gives any reader the impression that it was March 28 during the time of Claudius (and maybe different dates at various other times). This is misleading, almost ambiguous. Why not just state what Hurley actually wrote without the Cynwolfe signature embellishment (?) Here is what Hurley actually states: for 83 BC, the year of Antony's birth, the correction has been calculated as an addition of 93 days, and this adjusts Antony's birthday to 28 March and within the time frame for Drusus [meaning Drusus' birth]. One point I would like to make is that Cynwolfe stated that WP does not record pre-Julian Roman dates, only Julian dates (for the Roman Republic). And yet the pre-Julian birthday of Jan. 14 (of Marc Antony) is the one cited as his primary birthday in the Antony WP article. This is a double standard. Flagrantedelicto (talk) 22:28, 24 January 2013 (UTC)
Neither Radke, nor Hurley (who also cites Radke), present the recalculated date in Julian chronology as a proposed date, but rather a recalculated adjustment. Flagrantedelicto (talk) 04:01, 25 January 2013 (UTC)
With all due respect, you have misunderstood what Hurley has stated rather clearly: The adjustment on the Julian calendar in year 83 BC comes to March 28. There is no way Drusus could have been born on Jan. 14 of the pre-Julian calendar, unless he was born in the very same year as Marc Antony (83 BC). With the pre-Julian Roman calendar (not a "new" Julian calendar as you have mis-stated), each year would have to be calculated differently. Not so with the Julian Calendar which followed a fixed or stationary cycle (not a mutable one). Drusus' March 28 birthday was in year 38 BC, not 83 BC. And despite of what Varro says about spring in February, the Roman new year of 1st March (in honour of their deity Mars) has generally been accepted to be spring. Furthermore, if you read either Appian's or Plutarch's account of Sulla's campaigns up to his landing at Brundisium, the footnotes clearly place Sulla in the Aegean during the month of February. You can reference this from Plutarch or Appian. So when all the scholars who record that Sulla landed in Italy in the spring of 83 BC, they are distinctly speaking about the traditional spring of the month of March and the vernal equinox, not February. One cannot help but get the impression that you are doing everything to resist establishing March 28, 83 BC as Antony's actual birthday. It was you who stated that WP does not list pre-Julian dates of the Roman Republic. Consequently, you should remove the Jan. 14 pre-Julian date and replace it with Mar. 28, 83 BC as Antony's primary birthday (which is what it really was in year 83 BC). If you are unwilling to do so, please allow me, since we both have established that Jan. 14 was Antony's pre-Julian Roman birthday. Flagrantedelicto (talk) 14:25, 25 January 2013 (UTC)
The comment(s) below were originally left at Talk:Mark Antony/Comments, and are posted here for posterity. Following several discussions in past years, these subpages are now deprecated. The comments may be irrelevant or outdated; if so, please feel free to remove this section.
needs inline citations and lead should conform to WP:LEAD --plange 20:52, 24 September 2006 (UTC) |
Last edited at 20:53, 24 September 2006 (UTC). Substituted at 19:59, 2 May 2016 (UTC)
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