The popularity of Scipio Africanus Minor has …

Years: 129BCE - 129BCE

The popularity of Scipio Africanus Minor has waned in direct proportion to his increasing conservatism.

Although not in sympathy with the extreme conservative party, Scipio is decidedly opposed to the schemes of the Gracchi (whose sister Sempronia is his wife).

When he heard of the death of Tiberius Gracchus, he is said to have quoted the line from the Homer's Odyssey (i. 47), "So may all who engage in such lawless conspiracies perish"; after his return to Rome he was publicly asked by the tribune Gaius Papirius Carbo what he thought of the fate of Tiberius, and had replied that he was justly slain.

The crowd listening to this comment had responded with jeers, to which Scipio quickly replied: "I have never been scared by the shouts of the enemy in arms. Shall I be frightened by your outcries, you stepsons of Italy?" (Ward, Allen M., Heichelheim, Fritz M., and Yeo, Cedric A., A History of the Roman People, Prentice Hall, Upper Saddle River, New Jersey, 2003, 158).

This had given dire offense to the popular party, which was now led by his bitterest foes.

Soon afterwards, in 129 BCE, on the morning of the day on which he had intended to make a speech in reference to the agrarian proposals of the Gracchi, he is found dead in bed with marks "allegedly evident" on his body.

There have been three scenarios proposed for his death; murder, suicide, or suffocation.

The mystery of his death is never solved.

Quintus Fabius Maximus, a known orator and a man of letters, presents a banquet to the citizenry of Rome and pronounces the funeral oration of the deceased general, who is his blood uncle.

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