Proscribed
by the triumvirs
de Orat.
de Orat.
William Smith - 1844 - Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities - a
p.
594, &c.
)
to him. There does not, however, appear to be
VI. Domilius Balbus,
sufficient grounds for the conjecture of some mo- a wealthy man of praetorian rank, whose will was
dern writers, that Balbus was the author of the forged in A. D. 61. (Tac. Ann. xiv. 40. )
History of the Spanish war. In the collection of
VII. Laclii Balli.
Cicero's letters we find four from Balbus. (Ad 1. D. Laelius D. F. D. N. BALBUS, one of the
Att. viii. 15, ix. 6, 13. )
quindecemviri who superintended the celebration
2. P. CORNELIUS BALBUS, brother of the pre- of the saecular games in B. c. 17 (Fast. Capitol. ),
ceding, received the Roman franchise at the same and consul in B. c. 6. (Dion Cass. lv. 9. )
time as his brother; but appears to have died soon 2. Laelius BALBUS, accused Acutia, formerly
afterwards, either in Gades or Rome.
the wife of P. Vitellius, of treason (majestas), but
3. L. CORNELIUS Balbus, P. F. , son of the pre- was unable to obtain the visual reward after her
ceding (No. 2], and frequently called Minor, to condemnation, in consequence of the intercession
distinguish him from his uncle [No. 1], was born of the tribune Junius Otho. He was condemned
at Gades, and received the Roman franchise along in A. D. 37 as one of the paramours of Albucilla,
with his father and uncle. On the breaking out deprived of his senatorial rank, and banished to an
of the civil war (B. C. 49) he served under Caesar, island : his condemnation gave general satisfaction,
and was sent by him to the consul L. Cornelius as he had been ever ready to accuse the innocent.
Lentulus, who was an old friend of his uncle's, to (Tac. Ann. vi. 47, 48. )
persuade him to return to Rome. Balbus under-
VIII. Lucilii Balbi.
took the same dangerous commission in the follow- 1. L. Lucilius Balbus, the jurist. See below.
ing year, and paid Lentulus a visit in the Pompeian 2. Q. LUCILIUS BALBUS, probably the brother
camp at Dyrrhachium, but he was not successful of the preceding, a Stoic philosopher, and a pupil
either time. Balbus served under Caesar in the of Panaetius, had made such progress in the Stoic
Alexandrian and Spanish wars, during which time philosophy, that he appeared io Cicero comparabile
he kept up a correspondence with Cicero, with whom to the best Greek philosophers. (De Nat. Deor. i. 6. )
he had become acquainted through his uncle. In He is introduced by Cicero in his dialogue “ On
return for his services in these wars, Caesar made the Nature of the Gods” as the expositor of the
him pontiff; and it is therefore probably this Cor- opinions of the Stoics on that subject, and his ar-
nelius Balbus who wrote a work on the Roman guments are represented as of considerable weight.
sacra, of which the eighteenth book is quoted by De Nat. Deor. iii. 40, de Divin. i. 5. ) He was
Macrobius. (Saturn. iii. 6. )
also the exponent of the Stoic opinions in Cicero's
In B. C. 44 and 43, Balbus was quaestor of the “Hortensius. ” (Fragm. p. 484, ed. Orelli. )
propraetor Asinius Pollio in Further Spain ; and IX. L. Naevius Balbus, plebeian,
while there, he added to his native town Gades a one of the quinqueviri appointed in B. c. 171 to
buburb, which was called the new city, and built a settle the dispute between the Pisani and Lunenses
dock-yard ; and the place received in consequence respecting the boundaries of their lands. (Liv. xiv.
the name of Didyma or double-city. (Strab. iii. p. 13. ) The annexed coin of the Naevia gens belongs
169. ) But his general conduct in Spain was of a to this family. The obverse represents a head of
most arbitrary and tyrannical kind; and at length, Venus, the reverse is C. NaE. BA(A)B. with Victory
after plundering the provincials and amassing large in a chariot.
treasures, he left Spain in B. C. 43, without even pay-
ing the soldiers, and crossed over to Bogud in Africa.
From that time, we hear nothing of Balbus for
upwards of twenty years.
We then find him go-
vernor of Africa, with the title of proconsul, al-
though he had been neither praetor nor consul.
While in Africa, he obtained a victory over the
Garamantes, and enjoyed a triumph in consequence
in March, B. c. 19, the first instance of this honour
having been conferred upon one who was not born
X. Nonius Balbus, plebeian,
a Roman citizen. (Plin. H. N. v. 5; Vell Pat. ii. tribune of the plebs, B. C. 32, put his veto upon the
51; Strab. iji. p. 169. ) Balbus, like his uncle, had decree which the senate would have passed against
amassed a large fortune; and, as Augustus was Octavianus at the instigation of the consul C. So-
anxious to adorn Rome with public buildings, Bal- sius, a partizan of Antony. (Dion Cass. l. 2. )
bus erected at his own expense a theatre in the
XI. Octavius Balbus. See below.
city, which was remarkable on account of its con-
XII. Thorü Balbi, plebeians.
taining four pillars of onyx. It was dedicated in 1. C. THORIUS BALBUS, of Lanuvium, is said
B. C. 13, with festive games, on the return of Au- by Cicero to have lived in such a manner, that
gustus to Rome; and as a compliment to Balbus there was not a single pleasure, however refined
for having built it, his opinion was asked first in and rare, which he did not enjoy. (De Fin. ii. 20. )
the senate by Tiberius, who was consul in that He must not be confounded, as he has been by
year. (Dion Cass. liv. 25; Plin. H. N. xxxvi. 7. Pighius, with L. Turius who is mentioned in Ci-
8. 12. ) After this we hear nothing further of Bal- cero's Brutus (c. 67). The annexed coin of L.
bus. He may have been the Cornelius Balbus Thorius Balbus contains on the obverse the head
whom L. Valerius made his heir, although he bad of Juno Sospita, whose worship was of great anti-
## p. 458 (#478) ############################################
458
BALBUS.
BALDUINUS.
COCOUSCOOTEXCOCO
CRIVS
w
coocea
quity at Lanuvium, with the letters I. S. M. R. remark, that in the time of Cicero n judex in a pri-
(that is, Junonis Sospitae maimae reginae); and on vate cause was appointed for the occasion merely,
the reverse L. Tuorivs Baabys, with a bull rush and that his functions rather resembled those of a
ing forward. Eckhel (v. p. 324, &c. ) thinks that modern English juryman than those of a judge. It
the bull has an allusion to the name of Thorius, was his duty to try a given question, and according
which the Romans might regard as the same as to his finding on that question, to pronounce the
the Greek Soúplos, impetuous.
sentence of condemnation or acquittal contained in
the formula directed to him by the praetor. It was
not his duty but the practor's to determine whether
the question was material, and whether the sen-
tence was made to depend upon it in a manner
consistent with justice. In the ordinary form of
Roman action for the recovery of a thing, as in the
CITRO
English action of detinuc, the judgment for the
SALBVS. plaintiff was not directly that the thing should be
restored, but the defendant was condemned, unless
it were restored, to pay damages. The remainder
of the chapter has been equally misinterpreted and
2. Sr. Thorius Balbus, tribune of the plebs corrupted. " It accuses Verres of so shaping the
about B. c. 111, was a popular speaker, and intro- formula of trial, that the judex was obliged to treat
duced in his tribuneship an agrarian law, of which a Roman as a Sicilian, or a Sicilian as a Roman.
considerable fragments have been discovered on The death of Octavius Balbus is related by Va-
bronze tablets, and of which an account is given in lerius Maximus (v. 7. $ 3) as a memorable example
the Dict. of Ant. s. v. Tloria Lex. (Cic. Brut. 36, of paternal affection.
Proscribed by the triumvirs
de Orat. ii. 70; Appian, B. C. i. 27. )
Augustus, Antony, and Lepidus, v. C. 42, he had
BAʼLBUS, JU'NIUS, a consular, husband of already made his escape from his house, when a
Metia Faustina, the daughter of the elder Gordian. false report reached his ears that the soldiers were
(Capitolin. c. 4. ) According to some historians, massacring his son. Thereupon he returned to his
the third Gordian, who succeeded Balbinus and house, and was consoled, by witnessing his son's
Pupienus Maximus, was the issue of this marriage, safety, for the violent death to which he thus of-
while others maintain that he was the son of Gor- fered himself.
dian the second. [GORDIANUS. ] [W. R. ] The praenomen of Balbus is doubtful. In Cic.
BALBUS, L. LUCILIUS, a Roman jurist, one pro Cluent. 38 most of the MSS. have P. ; in Cic. in
of the pupils of Q. Mucius Scaevola, and one of the Verr. ii. 12 the common reading is L. (J. T. G. ]
legal instructors of the eminent lawyer and distin- BALDUI'NUS I. (Baddovivos), BALDWIN,
guished friend of Cicero, Servius Sulpicius Rufus. the first Latin emperor of Constantinople, was the
He was probably the father of Lucilius, the com- son of Baldwin, count of Hainaut, and Marguerite,
panion of Appius Pulcher in Cilicia (Cic. ad Fam. countess of Flanders. He was born at Valenciennes
iii. 4), and the brother of Q. Lucilius Balbus, the in 1171, and after the death of his parents inherit-
Stoic philosopher. [Balbus, No. VIII. ] Cicero (de ed both the counties of Hainaut and Flanders.
Orat. iii. 21) speaks of the duo Balbi as Stoics. By He was one of the most powerful among those
Heineccius (Hist. Jur. Rom. $ 149) and others the warlike barons who took the cross in 1200, and
jurist Lucius has been confounded with Quintus arrived at Venice in 1202, whence they intended
the Stoic philosopher. The jurist was occasionally to sail to the Holy Land. They changed their
quoted in the works of Sulpicius ; and, in the time plan at the supplication of prince Alexis Angelus,
of Pomponius, his writings did not exist in a sepa- the son of the emperor Isaac II. Angelus, who
rate form, or, at least, were in the hands of few. was gone to Venice for the purpose of persuading
(Dig. i. tit. 2. s. 42. ) He was a man of much the crusaders to attack Constantinople and release
learning. In giving advice and pleading causes Isaac, who had been deposed, blinded, and im-
his manner was slow and deliberate. (Cic. Brut. prisoned by his brother Alexis Angelus, who
42, pro Quint. 16, 17. )
[J. T. G. ] reigned as Alexis III. from the year 1195. The
BALBUS, L. (qu. P. ) OCTA'VIUS, a Roman, crusaders listened to the promises of young Alexis,
contemporary with Cicero. He was remarkable who was chiefly supported by Baldwin of Flanders,
for his skill in law, and for his attention to the as he is generally called ; and they left Venice
duties of justice, morality, and religion. (Cic. pro with a powerful fleet, commanded by the doge of
Cluent. 38. ) For these reasons he bore a high Venice, Dandolo, who was also commander-in-chief
character as a judex public as well as private of the whole expedition. The various incidents
trials. There is a passage in Cicero (in Ver. ii. 12) and the final result of this bold undertaking are
in relation to L. Octavius Balbus, which has been given under Alexis III. , IV. , and V. The
misinterpreted and corrupted by commentators and usurper Alexis III. was driven out by the cru-
critics ignorant of the Roman forms of pleading. saders ; prince Alexis and his father Isaac suc-
Cicero accuses Verres of having directed an issue ceeded him on the throne ; both perished by the
of fact in such an improper form, that even L. Oc- usurper Alexis V. Ducas Murzuphlus; and Mur-
tavius, if he had been appointed to try it, would zuphlus in his turn was driven out and put to
have been obliged to adjudge the defendant in the death by the crusaders in 1204. During this
cause either to give up an estate of his own to the remarkable war Baldwin distinguished himself by
plaintiff, or to pay pecuniary damages. The per- his military skill as well as by his personal charac-
fect acquaintance with Roman law, and the know- ter, and the crusaders having resolved to choose
ledge of his duty which Balbus possessed, would one of their own body emperor of the East, their
have compelled him to pass an unjust sentence. choice fell upon Baldwin.
To understand the compliment, it is necessary to Baldwin was accordingly crowned emperor a:
## p. 459 (#479) ############################################
BALDUINUS.
459
BALSAMO.
a po-
<a
I: m
the
ci
br lo
d to be
ង
zbas et
La Coc
1. IG
Only
36
Tuentie,
Constantinople, on the 9th of May, 1204. But he | the unhappy emperor a large sum of money and
received only a very small part of the empire, namely other assistance, in return for which Baldwin per-
Constantinople and the greater part of Thrace ; the mitted the king to keep several most holy relics.
Venetians obtained a much greater part, consisting With the assistance of the Latins, Baldwin ob-
chiefly of the islands and some parts of Epeirus ; tained some advantages over Vatatzes, and in 1243
Boniface, marquis of Monteferrato, received Thes- concluded an alliance with the Turks Seljuks; but
salonich, that is Macedonia, as a kingdom ; and notwithstanding this, he was again compelled to
the rest of the empire, in Asia as well as in Europe, seek assistance among the western princes. He
was divided among the French, Flemish, and was present at the council of Lyon in 1245, and
Venetian chiefs of the expedition. The speedy returned to Grecce after obtaining some feeble
ruin of the new Latin empire in the East was not assistance, which was of no avail against the forces
doubtful under such divisions; it was hastened by of Michael Palaeolognis, who had made himself
the successful enterprises of Alexis Comnenus at master of the Nicaean empire. On the night of the
Trebizond, of Theodore Lascaris at Nicaea, and by 15th of July, 1261, Constantinople was taken by
the partial revolts of the Greek subjects of the con- surprise by Alexis Caesar Strategopulus, one of the
querors. Calo-loannes, king of Bulgaria, sup- generals of Michael Palaeologus. Baldwin fled to
ported the revolters, who succeeded in making Italy. In 1270 he nearly persuaded Charles, king
themselves masters of Adrianople. Baldwin laid of Naples, to fit out a new expedition against
siege to this town; but he was attacked by Calo Michael Palaeologus, and Louis IX. of France
Ioannes, entirely defeated on the 14th of April, promised to second him in the undertaking ; but
1205, and taken prisoner. He died in captivity the death of Louis in Tunis deterred the Latin
about a year afterwards. Many fables have been princes from any new expedition against the East.
invented with regard to the nature of his death : Baldwin II. died in 1275, leaving a son, Philip of
Nicetas (Urbs Capta, 16) says, that Calo-loannes Courtenay, by his wife Maria, the daughter of
ordered the limbs of his imperial prisoner to be cut John of Brienne. The Latin empire in the East
off, and the mutilated body to be thrown into a had lasted fifty-seven years. (Acropolita, 14, 27,
field, where it remained three days before life left 37, 78, 85, &c. ; Pachymeres, Michael Palaeologus,
it. But from the accounts of the Latin writers, iii. 31, &c. , iv. 29 ; Nicephorus Gregor. iv. 4, &c. ,
whose statements have been carefully examined viii. 2, &c. )
[W. P. )
by Gibbon and other eminent modern historians, BALEA’RICUS, an agnomen of Q. Caecilius
we must conclude, that although Baldwin died in Metellus, consul B. c. 123. [METELLUS. )
captivity, he was neither tortured nor put to death BALISTA, one of the thirty tyrants of Trebel-
by his victor. The successor of Baldwin I. was his lius Pollio. [AUREOLUS. ] He was prefect of the
brother Henry I. (Nicetas, Alexis Isaacius An- praetorians under Valerian, whom he accompanied
yelus Fr. iii. 9, Alexis Ducas Murzuphlus, i. 1, to the East. After the defeat and capture of that
Urbs Capta, 1-17; Acropolita, 8, 12; Nice emperor, when the Persians had penetrated into
phorus Gregor. ii. 3, &c. ; Villebardouin, De la Cilicia, a body of Roman troops rallied and placed
Conqueste de Constantinoble, ed. Paulin Paris, themselves under the command of Balista. Led
Paris, 1838. ).
[W. P. ] by him, they raised the siege of Pompeiopolis, cut
BALDUÍ'NUS II. (Baldovivos), the last Latin off numbers of the enemy who were straggling in
emperor of the east, was descended from the noble disorderly confidence over the face of the country,
family of Courtenay, and was the son of Peter I. of and retook a vast quantity of plunder. His career
Courtenay, emperor of Constantinople, and the after the destruction of Macrianus, whom he had
empress Yolanda, countess of Flanders. He was urged to rebel against Gallienus, is very obscure.
born in 1217, and succeeded his brother, Robert, According to one account, he retired to an estate
in 1228, but, on account of his youth, was put near Daphne ; according to another, he assumed
under the guardianship of John of Brienne, count the purple, and maintained a precarious dominion
De la Marche and king of Jerusalem. The empire over a portion of Syria and the adjacent provinces
was in a dangerous position, being attacked in the for three years. This assertion is however based
south by Vatatzes, the Greek emperor of Nicaea, on no good foundation, resting as it does on the
and in the north by Asan, king of Bulgaria, who in authority of certain medals now universally recog-
1234 concluded an alliance with Vatatzes and laid nised as spurious, and on the hesitating testimony
siege to Constantinople by sea and land. Until of Trebellius Pollio, who acknowledges that, even
then the regent had done very little for his ward at the time when he wrote, the statements regard-
and the realm, but when the enemy appeared under ing this matter were doubtful and contradictory.
the walls of the capital the danger roused him to Neither the time nor manner of Balista's death
energy, and he compelled the besiegers to withdraw can be ascertained with certainty, but it is believed
after having sustained severe losses. John of to have happened about 264, and to have been
Brienne died soon afterwards. In 1337 Vatatzes contrived by Odenathus. (Trebell. Pollio, Trig.
and Asan once more laid siege to Constantinople, Tyrann. xvii. , Gallien. 2, &c. ; see MACRIANUS,
which was defended by Geoffroy de Villehardouin, ODENATHUS, Quietus. )
[W. R. ]
prince of Achaia, while the emperor made a men- BALLO'NYMUS. [ABDOLONIMUS. )
dicant visit to Europe. Begging for assistance, he BA'LSAMO, THEODOʻRUS, a celebrated
appeared successively at the courts of France, Greek canonist, born at Constantinople, where,
England, and Italy, and was exposed to humilia under Manuel Comnenus, he filled the offices of
tions of every description ; he left his son Philip Magnae Ecclesiae (S. Sophiae) Diaconus, Noma
l
at Venice as a security for a debt. At last he phylax, and Charlophylux. Under Isaac Angelus
succeeded in gaining the friendship of Louis IX. , he was elevated to the dignity of patriarch of An-
king of France, of the emperor Frederic II. , and tioch, about 1185; but, on account of the invasion
of Pope Gregory IX. , among whom Louis IX. was of the Latins, he was never able to ascend the pa-
the most useful to him. The French king gave triarchal throne, and all the business of the patri-
una
Dende
ed their
izce'
sudy
anders
the
? Aleri
pie
cܐ ;
e den
inocer
za 2%
1. The
the c5
odbrane
od VAS
281, the
pers
## p. 460 (#480) ############################################
460
BALSAMO.
BARBATA.
archate was conducted at Constantinople. He died I though a small portion of it had been previously
about 1204. Of the works of this author there is printed under the name of Balsam). (Hugo, Ron.
no complete edition : they are scattered among va- R. R. 14. )
rious collections. Under the auspices of the em- The Glossa ordinaria of the Basilica, which was
peror Manuel Comnenus and of Michael Anchialus, formed in the 12th century from more ancient scho
the patriarch of Constantinople, he composed com- lia, is, without sufficient reason, attributed to Bal-
mentaries or scholia upon the Syntagma and the samo by Assemani. (Bibl. Jur. Orient, ii. p. 386. )
Nomocanon of Photius.
to him. There does not, however, appear to be
VI. Domilius Balbus,
sufficient grounds for the conjecture of some mo- a wealthy man of praetorian rank, whose will was
dern writers, that Balbus was the author of the forged in A. D. 61. (Tac. Ann. xiv. 40. )
History of the Spanish war. In the collection of
VII. Laclii Balli.
Cicero's letters we find four from Balbus. (Ad 1. D. Laelius D. F. D. N. BALBUS, one of the
Att. viii. 15, ix. 6, 13. )
quindecemviri who superintended the celebration
2. P. CORNELIUS BALBUS, brother of the pre- of the saecular games in B. c. 17 (Fast. Capitol. ),
ceding, received the Roman franchise at the same and consul in B. c. 6. (Dion Cass. lv. 9. )
time as his brother; but appears to have died soon 2. Laelius BALBUS, accused Acutia, formerly
afterwards, either in Gades or Rome.
the wife of P. Vitellius, of treason (majestas), but
3. L. CORNELIUS Balbus, P. F. , son of the pre- was unable to obtain the visual reward after her
ceding (No. 2], and frequently called Minor, to condemnation, in consequence of the intercession
distinguish him from his uncle [No. 1], was born of the tribune Junius Otho. He was condemned
at Gades, and received the Roman franchise along in A. D. 37 as one of the paramours of Albucilla,
with his father and uncle. On the breaking out deprived of his senatorial rank, and banished to an
of the civil war (B. C. 49) he served under Caesar, island : his condemnation gave general satisfaction,
and was sent by him to the consul L. Cornelius as he had been ever ready to accuse the innocent.
Lentulus, who was an old friend of his uncle's, to (Tac. Ann. vi. 47, 48. )
persuade him to return to Rome. Balbus under-
VIII. Lucilii Balbi.
took the same dangerous commission in the follow- 1. L. Lucilius Balbus, the jurist. See below.
ing year, and paid Lentulus a visit in the Pompeian 2. Q. LUCILIUS BALBUS, probably the brother
camp at Dyrrhachium, but he was not successful of the preceding, a Stoic philosopher, and a pupil
either time. Balbus served under Caesar in the of Panaetius, had made such progress in the Stoic
Alexandrian and Spanish wars, during which time philosophy, that he appeared io Cicero comparabile
he kept up a correspondence with Cicero, with whom to the best Greek philosophers. (De Nat. Deor. i. 6. )
he had become acquainted through his uncle. In He is introduced by Cicero in his dialogue “ On
return for his services in these wars, Caesar made the Nature of the Gods” as the expositor of the
him pontiff; and it is therefore probably this Cor- opinions of the Stoics on that subject, and his ar-
nelius Balbus who wrote a work on the Roman guments are represented as of considerable weight.
sacra, of which the eighteenth book is quoted by De Nat. Deor. iii. 40, de Divin. i. 5. ) He was
Macrobius. (Saturn. iii. 6. )
also the exponent of the Stoic opinions in Cicero's
In B. C. 44 and 43, Balbus was quaestor of the “Hortensius. ” (Fragm. p. 484, ed. Orelli. )
propraetor Asinius Pollio in Further Spain ; and IX. L. Naevius Balbus, plebeian,
while there, he added to his native town Gades a one of the quinqueviri appointed in B. c. 171 to
buburb, which was called the new city, and built a settle the dispute between the Pisani and Lunenses
dock-yard ; and the place received in consequence respecting the boundaries of their lands. (Liv. xiv.
the name of Didyma or double-city. (Strab. iii. p. 13. ) The annexed coin of the Naevia gens belongs
169. ) But his general conduct in Spain was of a to this family. The obverse represents a head of
most arbitrary and tyrannical kind; and at length, Venus, the reverse is C. NaE. BA(A)B. with Victory
after plundering the provincials and amassing large in a chariot.
treasures, he left Spain in B. C. 43, without even pay-
ing the soldiers, and crossed over to Bogud in Africa.
From that time, we hear nothing of Balbus for
upwards of twenty years.
We then find him go-
vernor of Africa, with the title of proconsul, al-
though he had been neither praetor nor consul.
While in Africa, he obtained a victory over the
Garamantes, and enjoyed a triumph in consequence
in March, B. c. 19, the first instance of this honour
having been conferred upon one who was not born
X. Nonius Balbus, plebeian,
a Roman citizen. (Plin. H. N. v. 5; Vell Pat. ii. tribune of the plebs, B. C. 32, put his veto upon the
51; Strab. iji. p. 169. ) Balbus, like his uncle, had decree which the senate would have passed against
amassed a large fortune; and, as Augustus was Octavianus at the instigation of the consul C. So-
anxious to adorn Rome with public buildings, Bal- sius, a partizan of Antony. (Dion Cass. l. 2. )
bus erected at his own expense a theatre in the
XI. Octavius Balbus. See below.
city, which was remarkable on account of its con-
XII. Thorü Balbi, plebeians.
taining four pillars of onyx. It was dedicated in 1. C. THORIUS BALBUS, of Lanuvium, is said
B. C. 13, with festive games, on the return of Au- by Cicero to have lived in such a manner, that
gustus to Rome; and as a compliment to Balbus there was not a single pleasure, however refined
for having built it, his opinion was asked first in and rare, which he did not enjoy. (De Fin. ii. 20. )
the senate by Tiberius, who was consul in that He must not be confounded, as he has been by
year. (Dion Cass. liv. 25; Plin. H. N. xxxvi. 7. Pighius, with L. Turius who is mentioned in Ci-
8. 12. ) After this we hear nothing further of Bal- cero's Brutus (c. 67). The annexed coin of L.
bus. He may have been the Cornelius Balbus Thorius Balbus contains on the obverse the head
whom L. Valerius made his heir, although he bad of Juno Sospita, whose worship was of great anti-
## p. 458 (#478) ############################################
458
BALBUS.
BALDUINUS.
COCOUSCOOTEXCOCO
CRIVS
w
coocea
quity at Lanuvium, with the letters I. S. M. R. remark, that in the time of Cicero n judex in a pri-
(that is, Junonis Sospitae maimae reginae); and on vate cause was appointed for the occasion merely,
the reverse L. Tuorivs Baabys, with a bull rush and that his functions rather resembled those of a
ing forward. Eckhel (v. p. 324, &c. ) thinks that modern English juryman than those of a judge. It
the bull has an allusion to the name of Thorius, was his duty to try a given question, and according
which the Romans might regard as the same as to his finding on that question, to pronounce the
the Greek Soúplos, impetuous.
sentence of condemnation or acquittal contained in
the formula directed to him by the praetor. It was
not his duty but the practor's to determine whether
the question was material, and whether the sen-
tence was made to depend upon it in a manner
consistent with justice. In the ordinary form of
Roman action for the recovery of a thing, as in the
CITRO
English action of detinuc, the judgment for the
SALBVS. plaintiff was not directly that the thing should be
restored, but the defendant was condemned, unless
it were restored, to pay damages. The remainder
of the chapter has been equally misinterpreted and
2. Sr. Thorius Balbus, tribune of the plebs corrupted. " It accuses Verres of so shaping the
about B. c. 111, was a popular speaker, and intro- formula of trial, that the judex was obliged to treat
duced in his tribuneship an agrarian law, of which a Roman as a Sicilian, or a Sicilian as a Roman.
considerable fragments have been discovered on The death of Octavius Balbus is related by Va-
bronze tablets, and of which an account is given in lerius Maximus (v. 7. $ 3) as a memorable example
the Dict. of Ant. s. v. Tloria Lex. (Cic. Brut. 36, of paternal affection.
Proscribed by the triumvirs
de Orat. ii. 70; Appian, B. C. i. 27. )
Augustus, Antony, and Lepidus, v. C. 42, he had
BAʼLBUS, JU'NIUS, a consular, husband of already made his escape from his house, when a
Metia Faustina, the daughter of the elder Gordian. false report reached his ears that the soldiers were
(Capitolin. c. 4. ) According to some historians, massacring his son. Thereupon he returned to his
the third Gordian, who succeeded Balbinus and house, and was consoled, by witnessing his son's
Pupienus Maximus, was the issue of this marriage, safety, for the violent death to which he thus of-
while others maintain that he was the son of Gor- fered himself.
dian the second. [GORDIANUS. ] [W. R. ] The praenomen of Balbus is doubtful. In Cic.
BALBUS, L. LUCILIUS, a Roman jurist, one pro Cluent. 38 most of the MSS. have P. ; in Cic. in
of the pupils of Q. Mucius Scaevola, and one of the Verr. ii. 12 the common reading is L. (J. T. G. ]
legal instructors of the eminent lawyer and distin- BALDUI'NUS I. (Baddovivos), BALDWIN,
guished friend of Cicero, Servius Sulpicius Rufus. the first Latin emperor of Constantinople, was the
He was probably the father of Lucilius, the com- son of Baldwin, count of Hainaut, and Marguerite,
panion of Appius Pulcher in Cilicia (Cic. ad Fam. countess of Flanders. He was born at Valenciennes
iii. 4), and the brother of Q. Lucilius Balbus, the in 1171, and after the death of his parents inherit-
Stoic philosopher. [Balbus, No. VIII. ] Cicero (de ed both the counties of Hainaut and Flanders.
Orat. iii. 21) speaks of the duo Balbi as Stoics. By He was one of the most powerful among those
Heineccius (Hist. Jur. Rom. $ 149) and others the warlike barons who took the cross in 1200, and
jurist Lucius has been confounded with Quintus arrived at Venice in 1202, whence they intended
the Stoic philosopher. The jurist was occasionally to sail to the Holy Land. They changed their
quoted in the works of Sulpicius ; and, in the time plan at the supplication of prince Alexis Angelus,
of Pomponius, his writings did not exist in a sepa- the son of the emperor Isaac II. Angelus, who
rate form, or, at least, were in the hands of few. was gone to Venice for the purpose of persuading
(Dig. i. tit. 2. s. 42. ) He was a man of much the crusaders to attack Constantinople and release
learning. In giving advice and pleading causes Isaac, who had been deposed, blinded, and im-
his manner was slow and deliberate. (Cic. Brut. prisoned by his brother Alexis Angelus, who
42, pro Quint. 16, 17. )
[J. T. G. ] reigned as Alexis III. from the year 1195. The
BALBUS, L. (qu. P. ) OCTA'VIUS, a Roman, crusaders listened to the promises of young Alexis,
contemporary with Cicero. He was remarkable who was chiefly supported by Baldwin of Flanders,
for his skill in law, and for his attention to the as he is generally called ; and they left Venice
duties of justice, morality, and religion. (Cic. pro with a powerful fleet, commanded by the doge of
Cluent. 38. ) For these reasons he bore a high Venice, Dandolo, who was also commander-in-chief
character as a judex public as well as private of the whole expedition. The various incidents
trials. There is a passage in Cicero (in Ver. ii. 12) and the final result of this bold undertaking are
in relation to L. Octavius Balbus, which has been given under Alexis III. , IV. , and V. The
misinterpreted and corrupted by commentators and usurper Alexis III. was driven out by the cru-
critics ignorant of the Roman forms of pleading. saders ; prince Alexis and his father Isaac suc-
Cicero accuses Verres of having directed an issue ceeded him on the throne ; both perished by the
of fact in such an improper form, that even L. Oc- usurper Alexis V. Ducas Murzuphlus; and Mur-
tavius, if he had been appointed to try it, would zuphlus in his turn was driven out and put to
have been obliged to adjudge the defendant in the death by the crusaders in 1204. During this
cause either to give up an estate of his own to the remarkable war Baldwin distinguished himself by
plaintiff, or to pay pecuniary damages. The per- his military skill as well as by his personal charac-
fect acquaintance with Roman law, and the know- ter, and the crusaders having resolved to choose
ledge of his duty which Balbus possessed, would one of their own body emperor of the East, their
have compelled him to pass an unjust sentence. choice fell upon Baldwin.
To understand the compliment, it is necessary to Baldwin was accordingly crowned emperor a:
## p. 459 (#479) ############################################
BALDUINUS.
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Constantinople, on the 9th of May, 1204. But he | the unhappy emperor a large sum of money and
received only a very small part of the empire, namely other assistance, in return for which Baldwin per-
Constantinople and the greater part of Thrace ; the mitted the king to keep several most holy relics.
Venetians obtained a much greater part, consisting With the assistance of the Latins, Baldwin ob-
chiefly of the islands and some parts of Epeirus ; tained some advantages over Vatatzes, and in 1243
Boniface, marquis of Monteferrato, received Thes- concluded an alliance with the Turks Seljuks; but
salonich, that is Macedonia, as a kingdom ; and notwithstanding this, he was again compelled to
the rest of the empire, in Asia as well as in Europe, seek assistance among the western princes. He
was divided among the French, Flemish, and was present at the council of Lyon in 1245, and
Venetian chiefs of the expedition. The speedy returned to Grecce after obtaining some feeble
ruin of the new Latin empire in the East was not assistance, which was of no avail against the forces
doubtful under such divisions; it was hastened by of Michael Palaeolognis, who had made himself
the successful enterprises of Alexis Comnenus at master of the Nicaean empire. On the night of the
Trebizond, of Theodore Lascaris at Nicaea, and by 15th of July, 1261, Constantinople was taken by
the partial revolts of the Greek subjects of the con- surprise by Alexis Caesar Strategopulus, one of the
querors. Calo-loannes, king of Bulgaria, sup- generals of Michael Palaeologus. Baldwin fled to
ported the revolters, who succeeded in making Italy. In 1270 he nearly persuaded Charles, king
themselves masters of Adrianople. Baldwin laid of Naples, to fit out a new expedition against
siege to this town; but he was attacked by Calo Michael Palaeologus, and Louis IX. of France
Ioannes, entirely defeated on the 14th of April, promised to second him in the undertaking ; but
1205, and taken prisoner. He died in captivity the death of Louis in Tunis deterred the Latin
about a year afterwards. Many fables have been princes from any new expedition against the East.
invented with regard to the nature of his death : Baldwin II. died in 1275, leaving a son, Philip of
Nicetas (Urbs Capta, 16) says, that Calo-loannes Courtenay, by his wife Maria, the daughter of
ordered the limbs of his imperial prisoner to be cut John of Brienne. The Latin empire in the East
off, and the mutilated body to be thrown into a had lasted fifty-seven years. (Acropolita, 14, 27,
field, where it remained three days before life left 37, 78, 85, &c. ; Pachymeres, Michael Palaeologus,
it. But from the accounts of the Latin writers, iii. 31, &c. , iv. 29 ; Nicephorus Gregor. iv. 4, &c. ,
whose statements have been carefully examined viii. 2, &c. )
[W. P. )
by Gibbon and other eminent modern historians, BALEA’RICUS, an agnomen of Q. Caecilius
we must conclude, that although Baldwin died in Metellus, consul B. c. 123. [METELLUS. )
captivity, he was neither tortured nor put to death BALISTA, one of the thirty tyrants of Trebel-
by his victor. The successor of Baldwin I. was his lius Pollio. [AUREOLUS. ] He was prefect of the
brother Henry I. (Nicetas, Alexis Isaacius An- praetorians under Valerian, whom he accompanied
yelus Fr. iii. 9, Alexis Ducas Murzuphlus, i. 1, to the East. After the defeat and capture of that
Urbs Capta, 1-17; Acropolita, 8, 12; Nice emperor, when the Persians had penetrated into
phorus Gregor. ii. 3, &c. ; Villebardouin, De la Cilicia, a body of Roman troops rallied and placed
Conqueste de Constantinoble, ed. Paulin Paris, themselves under the command of Balista. Led
Paris, 1838. ).
[W. P. ] by him, they raised the siege of Pompeiopolis, cut
BALDUÍ'NUS II. (Baldovivos), the last Latin off numbers of the enemy who were straggling in
emperor of the east, was descended from the noble disorderly confidence over the face of the country,
family of Courtenay, and was the son of Peter I. of and retook a vast quantity of plunder. His career
Courtenay, emperor of Constantinople, and the after the destruction of Macrianus, whom he had
empress Yolanda, countess of Flanders. He was urged to rebel against Gallienus, is very obscure.
born in 1217, and succeeded his brother, Robert, According to one account, he retired to an estate
in 1228, but, on account of his youth, was put near Daphne ; according to another, he assumed
under the guardianship of John of Brienne, count the purple, and maintained a precarious dominion
De la Marche and king of Jerusalem. The empire over a portion of Syria and the adjacent provinces
was in a dangerous position, being attacked in the for three years. This assertion is however based
south by Vatatzes, the Greek emperor of Nicaea, on no good foundation, resting as it does on the
and in the north by Asan, king of Bulgaria, who in authority of certain medals now universally recog-
1234 concluded an alliance with Vatatzes and laid nised as spurious, and on the hesitating testimony
siege to Constantinople by sea and land. Until of Trebellius Pollio, who acknowledges that, even
then the regent had done very little for his ward at the time when he wrote, the statements regard-
and the realm, but when the enemy appeared under ing this matter were doubtful and contradictory.
the walls of the capital the danger roused him to Neither the time nor manner of Balista's death
energy, and he compelled the besiegers to withdraw can be ascertained with certainty, but it is believed
after having sustained severe losses. John of to have happened about 264, and to have been
Brienne died soon afterwards. In 1337 Vatatzes contrived by Odenathus. (Trebell. Pollio, Trig.
and Asan once more laid siege to Constantinople, Tyrann. xvii. , Gallien. 2, &c. ; see MACRIANUS,
which was defended by Geoffroy de Villehardouin, ODENATHUS, Quietus. )
[W. R. ]
prince of Achaia, while the emperor made a men- BALLO'NYMUS. [ABDOLONIMUS. )
dicant visit to Europe. Begging for assistance, he BA'LSAMO, THEODOʻRUS, a celebrated
appeared successively at the courts of France, Greek canonist, born at Constantinople, where,
England, and Italy, and was exposed to humilia under Manuel Comnenus, he filled the offices of
tions of every description ; he left his son Philip Magnae Ecclesiae (S. Sophiae) Diaconus, Noma
l
at Venice as a security for a debt. At last he phylax, and Charlophylux. Under Isaac Angelus
succeeded in gaining the friendship of Louis IX. , he was elevated to the dignity of patriarch of An-
king of France, of the emperor Frederic II. , and tioch, about 1185; but, on account of the invasion
of Pope Gregory IX. , among whom Louis IX. was of the Latins, he was never able to ascend the pa-
the most useful to him. The French king gave triarchal throne, and all the business of the patri-
una
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## p. 460 (#480) ############################################
460
BALSAMO.
BARBATA.
archate was conducted at Constantinople. He died I though a small portion of it had been previously
about 1204. Of the works of this author there is printed under the name of Balsam). (Hugo, Ron.
no complete edition : they are scattered among va- R. R. 14. )
rious collections. Under the auspices of the em- The Glossa ordinaria of the Basilica, which was
peror Manuel Comnenus and of Michael Anchialus, formed in the 12th century from more ancient scho
the patriarch of Constantinople, he composed com- lia, is, without sufficient reason, attributed to Bal-
mentaries or scholia upon the Syntagma and the samo by Assemani. (Bibl. Jur. Orient, ii. p. 386. )
Nomocanon of Photius.