



Temple
of Seneca
Seneca (4? BC-AD 65), Roman philosopher, dramatist, and statesman, who
was one of the most eminent writers of the Silver Age of Latin literature.
He was born Lucius Annaeus Seneca in Córdoba, Spain, the son of
the Roman rhetorician Marcus (Lucius) Annaeus Seneca known as Seneca the
Elder. Receiving thorough training in rhetoric and philosophy in Rome,
Seneca the Younger, as he was known, was deeply influenced by the teachings
of the Stoics, whose doctrines he later developed. In AD 49 Seneca was
made a praetor and appointed tutor to Nero, the adopted son of the Emperor
Claudius. Upon the death of Claudius in 54, Nero became emperor. Much of
the decency and moderation of the first five years of his rule was the
result of the sane guidance of Seneca and Sextus Afranius Burrus (died
AD 62), Roman commander of the Praetorian Guard. By 62, however, Seneca
had lost all control over the emperor. The great wealth that Seneca had
amassed aroused the jealousy of Nero, who attempted unsuccessfully to have
him poisoned. Seneca, by this time in retirement, devoted himself to philosophical
study and writing. In 65, however, he was implicated in a conspiracy to
kill Nero, led by the plebeian Gaius Calpurnius Piso (died AD 65), and
he committed suicide by imperial order.
Seneca's artificial and epigrammatic style well represent the Silver
Age. His orations and several scientific works are lost, but his extant
writings are numerous and include the Apocolocyntosis Divi Claudi (The
Pumpkinification of the Divine Claudius, about AD 54), an amusing but unkind
satire on the deification of Claudius; seven books of Quaestiones Naturales,
dealing with meteorology and astronomy, but also drawing moral lessons
and attacking luxury and immorality; Epistulae ad Lucilium (63-64), 124
letters addressed to a friend; and several Stoic treatises on subjects
such as anger (41-44), tranquillity of mind, and philosophical retirement
(55-56). He also wrote nine tragic dramas in verse that are all free adaptations
of ancient Greek legends.
Seneca is considered one of the outstanding Stoic philosophers of Rome;
his interests were chiefly ethical, but his beliefs were more spiritual
than those of the earlier Stoics. His verse tragedies exerted a profound
influence upon the development of classical drama in Italy, France, and
England when they were revived during the Renaissance. Later dramatists
were attracted to Seneca by his ornate and rhetorical style, his regularity
of form, his sensational themes of crime, horror, and revenge, his reflective
and introspective qualities, and the Stoic fatalism of his characters.
"Seneca," Microsoft(R) Encarta(R) 97 Encyclopedia. (c) 1993-1996 Microsoft
Corporation. All rights reserved.