Lucius Annaeus Seneca (born c. 55 bce, Corduba (now Córdoba), Spain—died 39 ce, Corduba?) was the author of a Latin work on declamation, a form of rhetorical exercise. Only about half of his book, Oratorum sententiae divisiones colores (“Sentences, Divisions, and Colors of the Orators and Rhetoricians”) survives; a 4th-century epitome preserves some of the rest, including two more prefaces, giving lively sketches of the persons whom he quotes. He was the father of the philosopher Lucius Annaeus Seneca, also called Seneca the Younger.
Seneca disapproved of the artificial cleverness, often degenerating into absurdity, of many declaimers. He preferred the firmly disciplined style of Cicero, but he preserved some 100 examples of the declaimers’ art. In the prefaces to the divisions of his work, he made valuable and amusing observations on the literary life of the early empire. He also preserved various accounts, such as Livy’s, of the death of Cicero. The romantic topics of many of the Suasoriae (“Exhortations”) became part of the collection of tales known as the Gesta Romanorum (Deeds of the Romans).