sooner had Tiberius been appointed tribune,* however, than he made a determined assault on the heart of the problem, at the urging, according to the majority of my sources, of Diophanes the orator and the philosopher Blossius. Diophanes was an exile from Mytilene, while Blossius was a native Italian, from Cumae, who had become a close friend of Antipater of Tarsus in Rome, and had received the signal honour of having Antipater address his philosophical writings to him.* Some people also claim that Cornelia was at least partly responsible, because she often told her sons off for the fact that she was known in Rome as Scipio’s mother-in-law, but not yet as the mother of the Gracchi.