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Marcus Porcius Cato
Uticensis ("of Utica"; /ˈkeɪtoʊ/, KAY-toe; 95 BC –
April 46 BC), also
known as Cato the
Younger (Latin: Cato Minor), was an influential...
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lived in the 1st
century BC. She was the
daughter of
Marcus Porcius Cato
Uticensis (Cato the Younger) and his
first wife Atilia. She is best
known for being...
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Atilia (sometimes
spelt Attilia) was the
first wife of
Marcus Porcius Cato
Uticensis and
mother of his two
eldest children. It is not
known for
certain who...
- purposes.
Tigranes the
Great becomes king of
Armenia Clodia,
daughter of
Appius Claudius Pulcher Marcus Porcius Cato
Uticensis,
Roman politician (d. 46 BC)...
- the
Roman elite; more than a
century later, even the
conservative Cato
Uticensis (great-grandson of the
elder Cato)
espoused Gr**** philosophy.
Scipio did...
- or Martia; born c. 80 BC) was the
second wife of
Marcus Porcius Cato
Uticensis (Cato the Younger) and the
daughter of
Lucius Marcius Philippus. Marcia...
- the
Diocese of Nîmes (–Uzès and Alès) (Latin:
Dioecesis Nemausensis (–
Uticensis et Alesiensis); French: Diocèse de Nîmes (–Uzès et Alès)). Nîmes (Latin:...
- Saint-Evroul (French:
Abbaye de Saint-Évroult;
Medieval Latin:
Sanctus Ebrulphus Uticensis) is a
former Benedictine abbey in Normandy,
located in the
present commune...
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account of his tragic,
highly symbolic suicide, Cato is
often termed Uticensis ("of Utica"), in
order to
differentiate him from his
homonymous ancestor...
- 1713. It is
based on the
events of the last days of
Marcus Porcius Cato
Uticensis (better
known as Cato the Younger) (95–46 BC), a
Stoic whose deeds, rhetoric...