Marcus Tullius Cicero

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Marcus Tullius Cicero, generally regarded as one of the greatest orators of ancient Rome, was born at Arpinum in 106 BCE.  He quickly rose to prominence as an advocate and politician.  As Consul in 63 BCE, he is credited with suppressing the Catilinarian Conspiracy, although at the expense of Roman constitutional government; some modern sources question whether there actually was any plot.  Between periods of political activity, Cicero also wrote a number of works on Roman language, religion, and philosophy.  After a series of speeches in opposition to [[Marcus Antonius]], (the "Philippics") he was proscribed and killed in 43 BCE.
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Marcus Tullius Cicero, generally regarded as one of the greatest orators of ancient Rome, was born at Arpinum (modern [http://www.arpinoturismo.it/ Arpino]) in 106 BCE.  He quickly rose to prominence as an advocate and politician.  The high point of his political career was in 63 BCE when as Consul he is credited with suppressing the Catilinarian Conspiracy, although some modern sources question whether there actually was any plot.  Between periods of political activity, Cicero also wrote a number of works on the Latin language, religion, and philosophy.  After a series of speeches in opposition to [[Marcus Antonius]], (the "Philippics") he was proscribed and killed in 43 BCE.
 
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[[Life of Cicero (Plutarch) | Plutarch's "Life of Cicero"]]
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==Representative Works==
 
==Representative Works==
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==Family and Background==
 
==Family and Background==
  
Plutarch gives Cicero's mother's name as "Helvia" but based on an inscription from Samos, Enos (2005) asserts her name may have been "Cornelia". According to Everitt, in all the extant corpus Cicero never mentions his mother. This leads to the speculation that she died while he was young.
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Cicero was born in the ''municipium'' of ''Arpinum'', within the area of ''Latium'' in central Italy.
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Plutarch gives Cicero's mother's name as "Helvia" but based on an inscription from Samos, Enos (2005) asserts her name may have been "Cornelia". According to Everitt, in all the extant corpus Cicero never mentions his mother, leading to the speculation that she died while he was young.
  
 
==References==
 
==References==
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Everitt, Anthony, 2001. Cicero. The life and times of Rome's greatest politician. Random House ISBN 037575895x
 
Everitt, Anthony, 2001. Cicero. The life and times of Rome's greatest politician. Random House ISBN 037575895x
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[[Life of Cicero (Plutarch) | Plutarch's "Life of Cicero"]]
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[[Category:Roman authors]]
 
[[Category:Roman authors]]
 
[[Category:Consuls]]
 
[[Category:Consuls]]

Revision as of 07:45, 2 May 2007

Marcus Tullius Cicero, generally regarded as one of the greatest orators of ancient Rome, was born at Arpinum (modern Arpino) in 106 BCE. He quickly rose to prominence as an advocate and politician. The high point of his political career was in 63 BCE when as Consul he is credited with suppressing the Catilinarian Conspiracy, although some modern sources question whether there actually was any plot. Between periods of political activity, Cicero also wrote a number of works on the Latin language, religion, and philosophy. After a series of speeches in opposition to Marcus Antonius, (the "Philippics") he was proscribed and killed in 43 BCE.

Representative Works

Political:

  • Pro Caelio
  • Pro Milone
  • In Pisonem
  • Contra Verres
  • Catilinarian speeches
  • Phillippics

Rhetorical:

  • Rhetorica
  • De Oratore
  • Orator
  • Topica

Philosophical:

  • De Senectute (On Old Age)
  • De Amicitia (On Friendship)
  • De Re Publica (On the State)
  • De Legibus (On the Laws)
  • De Officiis (On Duties)
  • Tusculan Disputations

Religious:

  • De Divinatione (On Divination)
  • On Fate and Free Will
  • De Natura Deorum (On the Nature of the Gods)

Informal:

  • Epistolae ad Atticum (Letters to Atticus)
  • Epistolae ad Familiares (Letters to his Friends)
  • Epigramma (Epigrams)

Family and Background

Cicero was born in the municipium of Arpinum, within the area of Latium in central Italy.

Plutarch gives Cicero's mother's name as "Helvia" but based on an inscription from Samos, Enos (2005) asserts her name may have been "Cornelia". According to Everitt, in all the extant corpus Cicero never mentions his mother, leading to the speculation that she died while he was young.

References

Enos, Richard Leo, 2005. Speaking of Cicero . . . and His Mother: A Research Note on an Ancient Greek Inscription and the Study of Classical Rhetoric. Rhetoric Review; 2005, Vol. 24 Issue 4, p457-465, 9p [1]

Everitt, Anthony, 2001. Cicero. The life and times of Rome's greatest politician. Random House ISBN 037575895x

Plutarch's "Life of Cicero"

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