Cispius is the nomen of the Roman gens Cispia.
The Mons Cispius, or Cispian Hill, is one of several summits of the Esquiline Hill in Rome. The grammarian Festus says that it was named for a Cispius Laevus of Anagnia, of the Publilia voting tribe (tribus). This Cispius may be legendary.
Marcus Cispius was a tribune of the plebs in 57 BC, and was among those tribunes who actively supported Cicero in his efforts to overturn the legislation that brought about his exile. Earlier, however, Cicero had brought a civil suit in which he spoke against Cispius, his brother, and their father. Sometime after Cispius's tribunate, most likely in early 56, he was defended by Cicero on a charge of electoral corruption (ambitus) and convicted. Cicero calls him "a man of character and principle." The two men maintained their friendship in the 50s; in 55, Cicero wrote a letter of recommendation to the proconsul of Africa, Q. Valerius Orca, on behalf of men associated with Cispius. Cispius may have been a praetor sometime after 54.
Cispius may refer to:
by Costin Tuculescu
Scratches on the blackboard.
Laughing at the Pain.
Nothing is Eternal,
but the sun will shine and the moon will fall.
A bruise on your forehead,
imposes on your thoughts,
nothing is Eternal,
but the sun will shine and the moon will fall.
Take me down, so high,
and we'll embrace the sky.
Take me down, so hign,
and you will learn to fly.
If you can count your friends,
on your five fingers,