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  1   T-I|             favoured that House,~if Augustus’s statutory law was enough
  2  T-II|             cost of your own games, Augustus,~you’ll scan many pricey
  3 T-III|            pray, worship the divine Augustus,~and petition the god you’
  4  T-IV|           savage enemy:~and such is Augustus’s clemency, if someone~were
  5   T-V|           TV.II:45-79 His Prayer to Augustus~ ~A distant suppliant, I
  6  ExII|           When I think how merciful Augustus is, I believe~a kindlier
  7  ExII|             I pray, arouse mercy in Augustus’s ear,~since it often brings
  8 ExIII|             on peoplesfaces,~when Augustus’s house, to be revered as
  9 ExIII|          great gods.~Worship divine Augustus amongst them, above all,~
 10  ExIV|            s nearer to the Forum of Augustus.~If any in the crowd asks
 11  ExIV|       bearing familiar greetings to Augustus and his son,~and consulting
 12  ExIV|            VI:1-50 To Brutus: After Augustus’s Death~ ~Brutus, the letter
 13  ExIV|             supplication, to divine Augustus on my behalf.~He died before
 14  ExIV|            finished with his death.~Augustus was beginning to forgive
 15  ExIV|           to enjoy~such approval by Augustus for all time.~Still when
 16  ExIV|             the body of our father, Augustus, was mortal,~but his spirit
 17  ExIV|          house next to the Forum of Augustus,~like your Campanian estate,
 18   Ind|            is Hector, so presumably Augustus is Achilles. ~Book TV.I:
 19   Ind|           Julian family, especially Augustus.~ ~Aeneas~The Trojan son
 20   Ind|           Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa, Augustus’s general and friend, and
 21   Ind|             general and friend, and Augustus’s daughter Julia. She married
 22   Ind|          Alean Athene at Tegea that Augustus moved to Rome after the
 23   Ind|         brought to Rome from Cos by Augustus and dedicated to the deified
 24   Ind|           at Troy.~Book TIII.I:1-46 Augustus dedicated his victory at
 25   Ind|           temple of Apollo built by Augustus on the Palatine, in which
 26   Ind|           in winter.~ ~Atia (Minor)~Augustus’s maternal aunt, and the
 27   Ind|            hers. See Catullus:63.~ ~Augustus~The Emperor Augustus Caesar (
 28   Ind|                Augustus~The Emperor Augustus Caesar (63BC –14AD). (The
 29   Ind|          also granted to Tiberius). Augustus was Julius Caesar’s grand-nephew,
 30   Ind|      Octavian). (The honorary title Augustus was bestowed by the Senate
 31   Ind|             set (the younger Julia, Augustus’s grandaughter, was banished
 32   Ind|        fears further attention from Augustus. Once bitten, twice shy. ~
 33   Ind|         twice shy. ~Book TI.II:1-74 Augustus’s anger. Augustus did not
 34   Ind|           II:1-74 Augustus’s anger. Augustus did not judge Ovid’s fault (
 35   Ind|             1-28 Book TIV.III:49-84 Augustus identified with Jupiter (
 36   Ind|             V:1-44 Book TI. IX:1-66 Augustus noted for his admiration
 37   Ind|         Perhaps also a reference to Augustus’s re-dedication of the temple
 38   Ind|         after it burnt down in AD3. Augustus was granted the title pater
 39   Ind|      February 2BC.~Book TII:361-420 Augustus attached a library to the
 40   Ind|         Marcellus.~Book TII:421-470 Augustus’s accession was 26BC.~Book
 41   Ind|        celebrates Julius Caesar and Augustus.~Book TIII.I:1-46 The doorposts
 42   Ind|        others’ lives in battle, and Augustus was treated as the saviour
 43   Ind|         Ovid continually identifies Augustus with Jupiter in the convential
 44   Ind|           TIII.VI:1-38 ‘The man’ is Augustus.~Book EI.I:1-36 Augustus
 45   Ind|            Augustus.~Book EI.I:1-36 Augustus was said to be (spuriously)
 46   Ind|             in his works concerning Augustus is that one is inevitably
 47   Ind|          EII.I:68 Book EIII.VI:1-60 Augustus’s Justice was personified
 48   Ind|             AD13.~Book EII.II:39-74 Augustus is also Jupiter Capitolinus,
 49   Ind|        Thunderer.~Book EII.II:39-74 Augustus was embarrassed by the fragility
 50   Ind|      Maximus sent Ovid portraits of Augustus, Tiberius and Livia. The
 51   Ind|            to fight to the death in Augustus’s presence. (Suetonius Divus
 52   Ind|          presence. (Suetonius Divus Augustus:45)~Book EIII.III:1-108
 53   Ind|            EIV.XV:1-42 The Forum of Augustus was north-east of the Capitol
 54   Ind|          foot of the Quirinal Hill. Augustus dedicated it in May 2BC.
 55   Ind|            Romanum and dedicated by Augustus in 29BC. ~Book EIV.VI:1-
 56   Ind|             1-50 Book EIV.XIII:1-50 Augustus had died on 19th August
 57   Ind|          authority from the deified Augustus.~ ~Aurelia~Book EII.III:
 58   Ind|        house. ~Book EI.IV:1-58 Here Augustus and Tiberius the heir apparent.~
 59   Ind|      Jupiter there, identified with Augustus.~Book EIV.IX:1-54 The procession
 60   Ind|             uncle Rhescuporis, when Augustus divided the kingdom in 12AD.
 61   Ind|  Rhoemetalces had been supported by Augustus, Marcus Lollius providing
 62   Ind|           temple of Apollo built by Augustus on the Palatine, in which
 63   Ind|            father’, may be a dig at Augustus, since Livia was forced
 64   Ind|       divorce her husband and marry Augustus when six months pregnant
 65   Ind|             in any plotting against Augustus.~ ~Endymion~A beautiful
 66   Ind|           to her mother Atia Minor, Augustus’s maternal aunt.~Book EI.
 67   Ind|    Flaminius completed it in 220BC. Augustus himself paid for its repair
 68   Ind|       eclogue to him, and initially Augustus who appointed him first
 69   Ind|      However his behaviour incurred Augustus’s displeasure, he was recalled,
 70   Ind|           Agrippa, granddaughter of Augustus). He was consul in AD12 ,
 71   Ind| re-dedicated the Fasti to him after Augustus’s death.~Book TII:155-206
 72   Ind|        Tiberius, the adopted son of Augustus, himself the adopted son
 73   Ind|             a possible successor to Augustus, in early 14AD, and so mentioned
 74   Ind|       possible source of help after Augustus’s death.~Book EIV.IX:89-
 75   Ind|          farm. He was befriended by Augustus who failed to persuade him
 76   Ind|           receive State approval in Augustus’s time, due to his concern
 77   Ind|             daughter (39BC-14AD) of Augustus and Scribonia. She married
 78   Ind|          She then married Tiberius. Augustus banished her to the island
 79   Ind|         Fulvia, educated at Rome by Augustus’s sister Octavia. Julia
 80   Ind|         with Antonius as consort to Augustus. Iullus was allowed to commit
 81   Ind|         when his conspiracy against Augustus (aimed at Tiberius) was
 82   Ind|             of the plotting against Augustus. The date of his relegatio (
 83   Ind|            EI.VII:1-70 Equated with Augustus.~Book TII.I:1 Book TII:120-
 84   Ind|          TIV.IV:1-42 A reference to Augustus as Jupiter, and a dubious
 85   Ind|            his traditional jibes at Augustus’s supposed homosexuality
 86   Ind|             comment on divinity. Is Augustus seen to be a god or only
 87   Ind|            blasts.~Book TV.II:45-79 Augustus as Jupiter, the ruler of
 88   Ind|     rain-bringer.~Book EII.II:39-74 Augustus is also Jupiter Capitolinus,
 89   Ind|       Appendix II)~Book TIII.I:1-46 Augustus dedicated his victory at
 90   Ind|         Speculatively if Neptune is Augustus, and Juno is Livia, then
 91   Ind|        married Octavian, the future Augustus, in 38BC, while he was Triumvir,
 92   Ind|            relinquish her. She bore Augustus no children, but exercised
 93   Ind|           TII:155-206 Livia married Augustus (17 January 38BC) after
 94   Ind|        perhaps alluding to this and Augustus’s bachelor adventures. ~
 95   Ind|      Maximus sent Ovid portraits of Augustus, Tiberius and Livia.~Book
 96   Ind|         relations between Livia and Augustus are lightly touched on.~
 97   Ind|            IX:89-134 As the deified Augustus’s widow worshipped by Ovid
 98   Ind|            Gaius Caesar grandson of Augustus, and after his death her
 99   Ind|     Philippus and a first cousin of Augustus. She was a friend of Ovid100   Ind|             and a trusted friend of Augustus. He journeyed with Augustus
101   Ind|         Augustus. He journeyed with Augustus to the island of Planasia
102   Ind|           of Planasia at the end of Augustus’s life in the spring of
103   Ind|       Paullus to plead for him with Augustus.~Book EIII.III:1-108 This
104   Ind|          the Portico of Octavia for Augustus. He compiled jokebooks in
105   Ind|             his extreme flattery of Augustus, Cotta was his younger brother.
106   Ind|             close relationship with Augustus and Tiberius. He and his
107   Ind|           Father of the Country for Augustus. Noted for public works
108   Ind|           His sculptures of cattle. Augustus transferred a statue of
109   Ind|        shipwrecked. Identified with Augustus.~Ibis:251-310 Neptune caused
110   Ind|          and in his defence claimed Augustus had ordered it.~Book EI.
111   Ind|            crown. Ovid may refer to Augustus’s re-dedication of her temple
112   Ind|             never thought to attack Augustus.~Ibis:251-310 Thessalus
113   Ind|            52 His life is a gift of Augustus’s, the god, who has mitigated
114   Ind|            not ultimately judged by Augustus to merit death. He accepts
115   Ind|            is aware, and presumably Augustus may have indicated this
116   Ind|             any armed opposition to Augustus and claims his error involved
117   Ind|             that he was upbraded by Augustus personally, his life was
118   Ind|         would have been regarded by Augustus as a seal of approval, by
119   Ind|             something that offended Augustus rather than something against
120   Ind|     participation in a plot against Augustus or Tiberius. That is consistent
121   Ind|             sit sospes: if only he (Augustus) is safe/lives/is favourable
122   Ind|            that Ovid was hopeful of Augustus relenting, but not of Tiberius,
123   Ind|         successor, and therefore to Augustus’s wishes for that succession?~
124   Ind|            nature of his error, and Augustus’s reputation for being merciful
125   Ind|           of his offence, judged by Augustus not to merit the death penalty. ~
126   Ind|            instinctively sided with Augustus, but still gave Ovid some
127   Ind|       something even weightier, and Augustus was lenient. The implication
128   Ind|             criminal action against Augustus.~Book EIII.III:1-108 Ovid
129   Ind|             are in AD14, but before Augustusdeath in the August of
130   Ind|             1-50 Book EIV.XIII:1-50 Augustus died on the 19th August
131   Ind|             77-120 Book EIII.V:1-58 Augustus preserved the custom of
132   Ind|        though. Polite references to Augustus will be found in Metamorphoses
133   Ind|         Juno are a gentle parody of Augustus and Livia throughout the
134   Ind|             originally dedicated to Augustus, and partially revised in
135   Ind|       partially revised in AD14, at Augustus’s death, to re-dedicate
136   Ind|   fashionable residential area, and Augustus lived there in a house that
137   Ind|           EII.VIII:1-36 The site of Augustus’s palace, decked with garlands
138   Ind|            source of trouble during Augustus’s reign.~Book TII:207-252
139   Ind|             never thought to attack Augustus.~ ~Pelops~The son of Tantalus,
140   Ind|           the Great, was related to Augustus, and was consul in 14AD.
141   Ind|            Germanicus. The death of Augustus has occurred or is imminent.~
142   Ind|          place of exile, decreed by Augustus.~Book TV.II:1-44 His letters
143   Ind|       witness to his ‘gratitude’ to Augustus for being merciful.~Book
144   Ind|     achieved there.~Book TV.II:1-44 Augustus as the source of Rome’s
145   Ind|          games (17BC) celebrated by Augustus in honour of Apollo and
146   Ind|          triumph.~Book EII.II:39-74 Augustus is also Jupiter Capitolinus,
147   Ind|           at Troy.~Book TI.I:70-128 Augustus like Achilles might heal
148   Ind|         Livia by her first husband. Augustus adopted the boy and appointed
149   Ind|             candidates. He was also Augustus’s stepson through his marriage
150   Ind|        marriage to the elder Julia, Augustus’s daughter by Scribonia.
151   Ind|            of Germanicus’s war, and Augustus’s strategy.~Book EII.I:68
152   Ind|          goddessJustitia Augusta: Augustus’s Justice’.~Book EII.II:
153   Ind|            EII.VIII:37-76 Tiberius, Augustus’s adopted son and heir apparent.~
154   Ind|      Maximus sent Ovid portraits of Augustus, Tiberius and Livia. Even
155   Ind|           EIV.IX:89-134 Tiberius as Augustus’s adopted son worshipped
156   Ind|         Cremona and Rome. He became Augustus’s ‘offical’ poet, and supported
157   Ind|        offical’ poet, and supported Augustus’s ideas of national regeneration
158   Ind|             of Cleopatra, Octavian (Augustus) erected a statue of Victory
159   Ind|           it Augusta, which pleased Augustus. (Cassius Dio, The Roman
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