Gaius Furnius (tribune)

Gaius Furnius was tribune of the plebs in 50 BCE,[1] and a friend and correspondent of Cicero.[2]

Cicero trusted to the exertions of Furnius, while tribune, to obtain for him his recall at the end of his first year as proconsul of Cilicia, and, after his return, a supplicatio ("thanksgiving").[3] A clause, however, which Furnius inserted in his plebiscite, making the recall dependent on the Parthians remaining quiet until the month of August, 50 BCE, was unsatisfactory to Cicero, since July was the usual season of their inroads.[4] Furnius, as tribune, was opposed to the unreasonable demands of the oligarchical party, that Julius Caesar should immediately and unconditionally resign his proconsulship of Gaul.[5] After the civil war broke out, he was sent by Caesar with letters to Cicero in March, 49 BC,[6] Cicero recommended Furnius to Lucius Munatius Plancus, proconsul in Transalpine Gaul for 43 BC,[7] and he was legatus to Plancus during the first war between Antony and Octavian, and until after the Battle of Philippi, 42 BC. During the Post-Caesarean Civil War of 44-42 BC, Furnius apprised Cicero of the movements and sentiments of the Roman legions and commanders in Gaul and Spain, but his letters have not been preserved.[8]

In the Perusine War, 41-40 BC, Furnius took part with Lucius Antonius. He defended Sentinum in Umbria against Augustus, and shared the sufferings of the Perusina Fames ("Perusine famine"). Furnius was one of three officers commissioned by Lucius Antonius to negotiate the surrender of Perusia, and his reception by Augustus was such as to awaken in the Antonian party suspicions of his fidelity.[9]

In 35 BC he was perfect of Asia Minor, under Mark Antony, where he took prisoner Sextus Pompeius, who had fled thither after his defeat by Agrippa in Naulochus (36 BC).[10] After the Battle of Actium, 31 BC, Furnius, through the mediation of his son Gaius Furnius, was reconciled to Augustus[11] and received from him the rank of a consular senator,[12] and was afterwards appointed one of the suffect consuls in 29 BC. This is the first time the name of Furnius appears on the consular Fasti. He was prefect of Hither Spain in 21 BC.[13]

Furnius is probably mentioned by Tacitus, De Oratoribus 21, among the speakers whose meagre and obsolete diction rendered their works impossible to read without an inclination to sleep or smile.

References

  1. Cicero ad Att. v. 2, 18
  2. Cicero, Ad Fam. x. 25, 26.
  3. Cicero, Ad Fam. viii. 10, ix. 24, xv. 14.
  4. Cicero, ad Att. vi. 1.
  5. Cicero, ad Fam. viii. 10
  6. Cicero, ad Att. ix. 6, 11, vii. 19
  7. Ad Fam. x. 1, 3, 4, 6, 8, 11, 12
  8. Cicero, Ad Fam. x
  9. Appian, Bellus Civilis v. 30, 40, 41; Dio Cassius xlviii. 13, 14.
  10. Appian, Bellus Civilis v. 137-42
  11. Seneca the Younger, De Benef. ii. 25
  12. Dio Cassius, lii. 42
  13. Dio Cassius, liv.5; Flor. iv. 12
  •  This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Smith, William, ed. (1870). "C. Furnius (2)". Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology. 2. p. 191.
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