Category
page 1Cato the Younger
Cato the Younger
Roman statesman, general and writer (95–46 BC)
Porcia
daughter of Cato the Younger, wife of Brutus
Distichs of Cato
Latin collection of proverbial wisdom and morality
Marcus Porcius Cato
father of Cato the Younger

Marcus Porcius Cato
Roman soldier, son of Cato Uticensis (c. 73–42 BC)
Marcia
wife of Cato the Younger
Animus in consulendo liber
motto

Anticato
thumb|A bust of Julius Caesar|Caesar in the [[Altes Museum, Berlin.]]
The Anticato (sometimes Anti-Cato; Latin: Anticatones) is a lost polemic written by Julius Caesar in hostile reply to Cicero's pamphlet praising Cato the Younger. The text is lost and survives only in fragments. Brutus, dissatisfied with Cicero's work, wrote a second pamphlet in praise of Cato and called, simply, "Cato", which provoked a reply from Octavian. Octavian's work is not known to have been called "Anticato", but must have been modeled on Caesar's reply to Cicero.
Porcia
sister of Cato the Younger, half-sister of Servilia
Atilia
Atilia (sometimes spelt Attilia) was the first wife of Marcus Porcius Cato Uticensis and mother of his two eldest children.

Cato's Letters
essays by John Trenchard and Thomas Gordon