Maximus was a poet and orator whom Tacitus condemns for his extravagant life-style, his shameful behavior and servility.
Pliny the Elder describes him as an extravagant gourmet.
Juvenal represents him as a patron of the arts. One of Maximus' freedmen, Marcus Aurelius Zosimus, was buried on the
Appian Way outside of Rome with his wife, Aurelia Saturnia. His epitaph is one of the few Roman funeral inscriptions that expresses patron-freedman relations in poetic terms. Below is a copy of the
Latin inscription and an English translation: : M. Aurelius Cottae Maximi : Zosimus, accensus patroni. : Libertinus eram, fateor: sed facta legetur : patrono Cotta nobilis umbra mea. : Qui mihi saepe libens census donavit equestris : qui iussit natos tollere quos aleret : quique suas commisit opes mihi semper, et idem : dotavit natas ut pater ipse meas, : Cottanumque meum produxit honore tribuni : quem fortis castris Caesaris emeruit. : Quid non Cotta dedit? qui nune et carmina tristis : haec dedit in tumulo conspicienda meo. : Aurelia Saturnia, Zosimi. : I admit that I was a freedman; but now my shadow has been ennobled by my patron Cotta. Several times he was willing to grant me an equestrian fortune, he ordered me to let my children live so that he could provide for their upkeep. He was always ready to grant me his own wealth. He also gave my daughters the dowries a father provides. He promoted my son Cottanus to the rank of tribune in which he bravely served in Caesar’s army. What did Cotta not give us? Now, sadly, he provided these verses which can be read on my tomb. : Aurelia Saturnia, Zosimus’s [wife]. ==See also==