Letter 12.26

Marcus Tullius CiceroQuintus Cornificius|c. 43 BC|Cicero|From Rome|To Africa|AI-assisted

Quintus Turius, who did business as a banker in Africa, was a good and honorable man. He made men like himself his heirs: Gnaeus Saturninus, Sextus Aufidius, Gaius Anneius, Quintus Considius Gallus, Lucius Servilius Postumus, and Gaius Rubellius.

From what they said to me, I gathered that they needed a letter of thanks more than a recommendation. They spoke of having received such great kindness from you that I concluded you had already done more for them than I would have dared to ask.

Even so, I will dare to ask, because I know how much weight a recommendation from me carries with you. I therefore beg you to allow the generosity you have already shown without any letter from me to receive its fullest possible completion through this one.

The main point of my recommendation is this: do not allow Eros Turius, the freedman of Quintus Turius, to take possession of the property left by Turius, as he has so far been doing. In all other matters, please consider these men as warmly commended by me. You will take much pleasure in their standing and grateful attention. I ask you again and again to be kind enough to do this.

AI-assisted translation - This translation was produced with AI assistance and has not been peer-reviewed. See the 19th-century translation or original Latin/Greek below for scholarly use.

Latin / Greek Original

XXVI. Scr. mense incerto (post XIII. Kal. Ian.) a.u.c. 710. CICERO CORNIFICIO SAL.

Q. Turius, qui in Africa negotiatus est, vir bonus et honestus, heredes fecit similes sui, Cn. Saturninum, Sex. Aufidium, C. Anneium, Q. Considium Gallum, L. Servilium Postumum, C. Rubellium: ex eorum oratione intellexi gratiarum actione eos magis egere quam commendatione; tanta enim liberalitate se tua usos praedicabant, ut iis plus a te tributum intelligerem, quam ego te auderem rogare; audebo tamen, scio enim, quantum ponderis mea commendatio sit habitura. Quare a te peto, ut ad eam liberalitatem, qua sine meis litteris usus es, quam maximus his litteris cumulus accedat; caput autem est meae commendationis, ne patiare Erotem Turium, Q. Turii libertum, ut adhuc fecit, hereditatem Turianam avertere ceterisque omnibus rebus habeas eos a me commendatissimos. Magnam ex eorum splendore et observantia capies voluptatem: quod ut velis, te vehementer etiam atque enim rogo.

Revision history

  1. 2026-05-27v2.2.34-import

    Initial corpus import from modern cicero familiares book12 batch2 source aligned v1.

    Fields: letter text, metadata, source links. Source: https://www.thelatinlibrary.com/cicero/fam12.shtml

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