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Cato, Marcus Porcius 234-149 B.C.  

Cato, who was also called "The Censor," wrote De Re Rustica while the Roman army was waging the Punic wars. Columella stated that it was Cato who taught "agriculture to speak Latin."

Cato began life as a farmer but shortly became an outstanding leader of the metropolitan bar in Rome. He also became a distinguished military leader in Spain and Greece. He held many state offices and ended his life in the Roman Senate denouncing Carthage and the "degenerate" state of the times.

In his book he listed 120 plants including many cultivars but this list lacked organization. Our chief interest in his work consists in the picture it conveys of the manners and customs of the period.

Roman Farm Management. The Treatises of Cato and Varro by a Virginia Farmer, Macmillan Co., 1918.
Cato, Marcus Porcius, On Agriculture (De Re Rustica),
Harvard Univ. Press, 1934

Read portions on:

Grapes Insect pests
Pears Layering
Cabbage Nurseries
Olives Quinces
Crops for various soils Soils for various crops
Plant diseases Wines and vineyards
Equipment
Grafting

 

Additional information about Cato may be found on the Internet.

Biographical background

Artwork: The Death of Cato

 

 



 
 


Website Administrator: Dr. Tim Rhodus
Department of Horticulture and Crop Science
Email: rhodus.1@osu.edu
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