Letter 78

Quintus Aurelius SymmachusUnknown|c. 398 AD|symmachus

There's something in my daughter Galla's [the text says "Fusgania" — possibly a copyist error] complaints that I'll confess has actually worked in my favor: if she hadn't demanded a useful letter on her behalf, I'd have had no occasion to write at all.

So let me begin with the greeting that serves my own duty. The rest of the page concerns the case of this distinguished lady, who claims that some of your people have seized certain lands from her — I don't know exactly what.

Knowing your standing and your character, I assume this was done by your servants without your knowledge. That's why I've promised my daughter that the situation would be easy to correct, once a personal appeal reached you.

I ask, therefore, that you order the disputed property restored. If there's any genuine controversy, let the matter be deferred until our kinswoman [Galla] can be present — she's confident in your sense of justice and refuses any other judge.

Modern English rendering for readability. See the 19th-century translation or original Latin/Greek for scholarly use.

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