Page:Correspondence of Marcus Cornelius Fronto volume 1 Haines 1919.djvu/27

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INTRODUCTION

Mommsen considered that the letters were in the main arranged chronologically, but this can only be allowed with large deductions. For instance, some of the earliest letters come quite at the end of the book. The correspondence with Pius is put after that with his successors. But there is obviously some attempt at systematic arrangement. The letters that belong to the year of Fronto's consulship are grouped together and placed first. In more than one case several letters bearing on a single subject are found placed in juxtaposition in their proper order, as with the letters relating to Herodes.[1] In the separate books the letters are arranged, with obvious exceptions however, in some chionological order; but the letters of a second book, for instance, do not follow those of the first, but begin a new series. The various ailments, also, of Marcus and Fronto are a guide in some cases. Some letters can be dated by means of the speeches of Marcus alluded to in them. As for instance the mention of his Caesar speech by Marcus in Ep. Graec. 6 (p. 18) dates this letter as written in 139-140. The speech referred to in Ad M. Caes. iii. 7 (p. 34) is probably a speech of thanks for his first consulship in 140, and the one in v. 1, 2, that for his second consulship in 145 or for the Trib. Potestas in 147.[2]

  1. See pp. 58 f.
  2. For further discussion of this subject, see article by C. R. Haines, "On the Chronology of the Fronto Correspondence," in the Classical Quarterly for April, 1914, vol. viii., pp. 113 ff.
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