Seneca, L. Annæus

Seneca, L. Annæus, philosopher, son of the preceding, born at Cordova, and brought to Rome when a child; practised as a pleader at the bar, studied philosophy, and became the tutor of Nero; acquired great riches; was charged with conspiracy by Nero as a pretext, it is believed, to procure his wealth, and ordered to kill himself, which he did by opening his veins till he bled to death, a slow process and an agonising, owing to his age; he was of the Stoic school in philosophy, and wrote a number of treatises bearing chiefly on morals; d. A.D. 65.

Definition taken from The Nuttall Encyclopædia, edited by the Reverend James Wood (1907)

Seneca, Annæus * Senegal
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Seneca, Annæus
Seneca, L. Annæus
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