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Currently, there are separate pages for the historical Porcia Catonis (the wife of Brutus the assasin of Caesar) and her fictionalized version Portia (in Shakespeare's play Julius Caesar. This seems contrary to usual practice; ordinarily, this material would go in a "fictional representations" section (or something similar) in the article on the historical person. That's the practice followed with, e.g.,
Cæsar himself, a considerably larger character both in the play and in history.
I agree seeing as they are basically the same person, we could place it under a seperate title rather then have two seperate pages. --
82.34.129.6216:19, 19 October 2006 (UTC)reply
Deleted "However, this story is obviously apocryphal, and several historians believe that it was in fact Porcia who convinced Brutus to murder Caesar." Besides containing a dead citation, I feel several historians out of the hundreds of thousands and possibly millions is not very credible. If anyone finds a credible source citing credible historians, I'll reinstate it. I don't believe Wikipedia is an encyclopedia of opinions, only facts.
LikeHolyWater (
talk)
23:28, 3 March 2008 (UTC)reply
Quality rating
I don't entirely agree with the quality rating most projects give this article: the ancient sources are noted scrupulously, but there isn't much modern scholarship, or any recent scholarship.
Cynwolfe (
talk)
15:13, 7 July 2011 (UTC)reply
I agree. And since all WikiProjects now use a semi-standard scale (
WP:ASSESS), I've changed all the ratings to correspond with that. There are essentially no non-primary sources used, and those there are are very limited. --
Xover (
talk)
15:26, 7 July 2011 (UTC)reply
Some archaic or just nonsensical language needs rewriting
Under the heading "Marriage to Brutus", the last sentence of the second paragraph reads "She resolved not to inquire into Brutus' secrets before she had made a trial of herself and that she would bid defiance to pain." This is baffling. What does it mean in this context to "make a trial of oneself", or to "bid defiance to pain"? Are these figures of speech from Shakespeare or something? They're nonsensical to readers today. If someone could please rewrite this in plain English, it would be a service to all who read it. Thank you.
Bricology (
talk)
01:32, 11 October 2019 (UTC)reply