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[15] natum: if Catullus means that the custom of riding in a litter originated in Bithynia, he tells us what we learn from no other source, —for the grammarian Probus, in making a similar statement, probably borrowed it from him; but the custom was common there; cf. Cic. Verr. 2.5, Cic. Verr. 2.27Ut mos fuit Bithyniae regibus, lectica octaphoro ferebatur.” Cappadocians and Syrians, men of proverbially great stature and strength, are often mentioned as litter-bearers, as are less frequently Thracians, Liburnians and Moesians (Juv.), and in later days Gauls (Clem. Alex.) and Germans (Tertull.); cf. Mart. 6.77.4quid te Cappadocum sex onus esse iuvat ?Juv. 6.351quae longorum vehitur cervice Syrorum.


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