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  1. Clodia parece ser más que la domina cruel e infiel que nos presenta el poeta en sus versos. Al rescatar algunas de las apreciaciones de Cicerón sobre la vida pública y privada de Clodia, no solo en su famoso discurso Pro Caelio, sino en su correspondencia privada, podemos descubrir a una mujer diferente de aquella que la tradición ha dibujado.

  2. anamorillapalacios.wixsite.com › historiagrata › single-postClodia: la Medea del Palatino

    17 de mar. de 2016 · Y a Clodia la llamó además la Medea del Palatino, uno de los ricos barrios de las clases altas de Roma. La enemistad de Cicerón y Clodio era notoria y atacar a su hermana era una buena estrategia. La Medea del Palatino. Los poetas latinos como Catulo presentaron una imagen ociosa de la aristocracia romana de su tiempo, una clase social ...

  3. Clodia Metelli, also known simply Clodia, was one of The Damned which Dante must Punish or Absolve for "The Damned" Achievement/Trophy. She was encountered in The Circle of Gluttony. "A soul filled with grime and smut. This notorious gambler, seducer and drunkard of Rome, left a repulsive trail of rot in her wake." Clodia, born Claudia Pulchra ("Claudia the Beautiful"), was the wife of Quintus ...

  4. 12 de ene. de 2011 · Clodia Metelli: The Tribune's Sister is the first full-length biography of a Roman aristocrat whose colorful life, as described by her contemporaries, has inspired numerous modern works of popular fiction, art, and poetry. Clodia, widow of the consul Metellus Celer, was one of several prominent females who made a mark on history during the last decades of the Roman Republic.

  5. Vía Clodia. Vía Clodia (en latín Via Clodia) era el nombre de una calzada romana que tenía su inicio a unos 15 km de Roma. No se sabe cuándo se construyó, se estima que es del tiempo de la República y, como era costumbre, llevaba el nombre de su constructor, un personaje llamado Clodio. Era una bifurcación de la Vía Cassia.

  6. www.brooklynmuseum.org › eascfa › dinner_partyBrooklyn Museum: Clodia

    Born into an aristocratic family of Rome, Clodia was married as a young girl to a Roman official, divorced in 66 B.C.E., and then remarried to a first cousin. The marriage was known to be an unhappy one, and Clodia’s infidelity, drinking, and gambling were common knowledge. When her husband died mysteriously, she was suspected of having ...

  7. with the now disgraced Clodia, but in vain; she descended into utter promiscuity, and his nal message of farewell, poem, is securely dated to BC. It s a seductive story, and what makes it so is the apparent compatibility of the two portraits, that of Lesbia in Catullus poems and that of Clodia Metelli in Cicero s speech. Surely there couldn t ...