181:. Although he avoided mentioning military commanders by name, the work's surviving fragments suggest that he also focused a great deal of attention on his own campaigns as a general.
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The latter books include at least two of Cato's political orations verbatim, something thought to have been unique in ancient historiography. The first was his oration to the
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is a lost work, with no complete text surviving to the modern day. Its fragments in other works have been collected and translated.
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BC. The other was his oration to the Senate supporting legislation to establish a special court of inquiry regarding
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cites Cato's first three books in his history, calling Cato among the "most learned of the Roman historians".
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felt that the last four books on Rome's rising power "outweighed the rest", but
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The
Origines of Cato and the non-Roman historical tradition about ancient Italy
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Annales Pontificum Maximorum: The Origins of the Annalistic Tradition
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prose. The two poetic works closely tied the history of Rome to
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and highlighted his own political career so heavily. Though
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When Cato wrote, there had been four major works devoted to
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consisted of seven books. Book I was the history of the
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542:. Unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, University of London
483:(1966), "The early historians", in T. A. Dorey (ed.),
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