I find also, that statues were erected in honour of Pythagoras
and of Alcibiades, in the corners of the Comitium; in obedience
to the command of the Pythian Apollo, who, in the
Samnite War,[1] had directed that statues of the bravest and
the wisest of the Greeks should be erected in some conspicuous
spot: and here they remained until Sylla, the Dictator,
built the senate-house on the site. It is wonderful that the
senate should then have preferred Pythagoras to Socrates, who,
in consequence of his wisdom, had been preferred to all other
men[2] by the god himself; as, also, that they should have preferred
Alcibiades for valour to so many other heroes; or, indeed,
any one to Themistocles, who so greatly excelled in both qualities.
The reason of the statues being raised on columns, was,
that the persons represented might be elevated above other
mortals; the same thing being signified by the use of arches,
a new invention which had its origin among the Greeks. I
am of opinion that there is no one to whom more statues were
erected than to Demetrius Phalereus[3] at Athens: for there
were three hundred and sixty erected in his honour, there
being reckoned at that period no more days in the year: these,
however, were soon broken to pieces. The different tribes
erected statues, in all the quarters of Rome, in honour of
Marius Gratidianus, as already stated;[4] but they were all
thrown down by Sylla, when he entered Rome.
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