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Cicero

Marcus Tullius Cicero[a] (/ˈsɪsər/ SISS-ə-roh; Latin: [ˈmaːr.kʊs ˈtʊl.lʲi.jʊs ˈkɪ.kɛ.roː]; 3 January 106 BC – 7 December 43 BC) was a Roman statesman, lawyer, scholar, philosopher, and academic skeptic,[3] who tried to uphold optimate principles during the political crises that led to the establishment of the Roman Empire.[4] His extensive writings include treatises on rhetoric, philosophy and politics. He is considered one of Rome's greatest orators and prose stylists.[5][6] He came from a wealthy municipal family of the Roman equestrian order, and served as consul in 63 BC.

Cicero
First-century AD bust of Cicero at the Capitoline Museums, Rome
Consul of the Roman Republic
In office
63 BC – 63 BC
Governor of Cilicia
In office
51 BC – 50 BC
Personal details
Born3 January 106 BC
Arpinum, Italy, Roman Republic
Died7 December 43 BC (aged 63)
Formia, Italy, Roman Republic
Cause of deathBeheaded by order of Mark Antony
Spouses
  • Terentia (79–51 BC)
  • Publilia (46–45 BC)
ChildrenTullia and Cicero Minor
RelativesQuintus Tullius Cicero (brother)
OccupationStatesman, lawyer, writer, orator

Philosophy career
Notable work
EraHellenistic philosophy
RegionWestern philosophy
School
Main interests
Notable ideas
Influenced

His influence on the Latin language was immense. He wrote more than three-quarters of extant Latin literature that is known to have existed in his lifetime, and it has been said that subsequent prose was either a reaction against or a return to his style, not only in Latin but in European languages up to the 19th century.[7][8][9] Cicero introduced into Latin the arguments of the chief schools of Hellenistic philosophy and created a Latin philosophical vocabulary with neologisms such as evidentia,[10] humanitas, qualitas, quantitas, and essentia,[11] distinguishing himself as a translator and philosopher.

Though he was an accomplished orator and successful lawyer, Cicero believed his political career was his most important achievement. It was during his consulship that the Catiline conspiracy attempted to overthrow the government through an attack on the city by outside forces, and Cicero suppressed the revolt by summarily and controversially executing five conspirators without trial. During the chaotic middle period of the first century BC, marked by civil wars and the dictatorship of Julius Caesar, Cicero championed a return to the traditional republican government. Following Caesar's death, Cicero became an enemy of Mark Antony in the ensuing power struggle, attacking him in a series of speeches. He was proscribed as an enemy of the state by the Second Triumvirate and consequently executed by soldiers operating on their behalf in 43 BC having been intercepted during an attempted flight from the Italian peninsula. His severed hands and head were then, as a final revenge of Mark Antony, displayed on the Rostra.[12]

Petrarch's rediscovery of Cicero's letters is often credited for initiating the 14th-century Renaissance in public affairs, humanism, and classical Roman culture.[13] According to Polish historian Tadeusz Zieliński, "the Renaissance was above all things a revival of Cicero, and only after him and through him of the rest of Classical antiquity."[14] The peak of Cicero's authority and prestige came during the 18th-century Enlightenment,[15] and his impact on leading Enlightenment thinkers and political theorists such as John Locke, David Hume, Montesquieu, and Edmund Burke was substantial.[16] His works rank among the most influential in global culture, and today still constitute one of the most important bodies of primary material for the writing and revision of Roman history, especially the last days of the Roman Republic.[17]

Personal life

Early life

Marcus Tullius Cicero was born on 3 January 106 BC[18] in Arpinum, a hill town 100 kilometers (62 mi) southeast of Rome. He belonged to the tribus Cornelia.[19] His father was a well-to-do member of the equestrian order and possessed good connections in Rome. However, being a semi-invalid, he could not enter public life and studied extensively to compensate. Although little is known about Cicero's mother, Helvia, it was common for the wives of important Roman citizens to be responsible for the management of the household. Cicero's brother Quintus wrote in a letter that she was a thrifty housewife.[20]

Cicero's cognomen, or personal surname, comes from the Latin for chickpea, cicer. Plutarch explains that the name was originally given to one of Cicero's ancestors who had a cleft in the tip of his nose resembling a chickpea. However, it is more likely that Cicero's ancestors prospered through the cultivation and sale of chickpeas.[21] Romans often chose down-to-earth personal surnames. The famous family names of Fabius, Lentulus, and Piso come from the Latin names of beans, lentils, and peas, respectively. Plutarch writes that Cicero was urged to change this deprecatory name when he entered politics, but refused, saying that he would make Cicero more glorious than Scaurus ("Swollen-ankled") and Catulus ("Puppy").[22]

During this period in Roman history, "cultured" meant being able to speak both Latin and Greek. Cicero was therefore educated in the teachings of the ancient Greek philosophers, poets and historians; as he obtained much of his understanding of the theory and practice of rhetoric from the Greek poet Archias[23] and from the Greek rhetorician Apollonius.[24] Cicero used his knowledge of Greek to translate many of the theoretical concepts of Greek philosophy into Latin, thus translating Greek philosophical works for a larger audience. It was precisely his broad education that tied him to the traditional Roman elite.[25]

Cicero's interest in philosophy figured heavily in his later career and led to him providing a comprehensive account of Greek philosophy for a Roman audience,[26] including creating a philosophical vocabulary in Latin.[27] In 87 BC, Philo of Larissa, the head of the Platonic Academy that had been founded by Plato in Athens about 300 years earlier, arrived in Rome. Cicero, "inspired by an extraordinary zeal for philosophy",[28] sat enthusiastically at his feet and absorbed Carneades' Academic Skeptic philosophy.[29]

Cicero said of Plato's Dialogues, that if Zeus were to speak, he would use their language.[30] He would, in due course, honor them with his own convivial dialogues.[31]

According to Plutarch, Cicero was an extremely talented student, whose learning attracted attention from all over Rome,[32] affording him the opportunity to study Roman law under Quintus Mucius Scaevola.[33] Cicero's fellow students were Gaius Marius Minor, Servius Sulpicius Rufus (who became a famous lawyer, one of the few whom Cicero considered superior to himself in legal matters), and Titus Pomponius. The latter two became Cicero's friends for life, and Pomponius (who later received the nickname "Atticus", and whose sister married Cicero's brother) would become, in Cicero's own words, "as a second brother", with both maintaining a lifelong correspondence.[25]

In 79 BC, Cicero left for Greece, Asia Minor and Rhodes. This was perhaps to avoid the potential wrath of Sulla, as Plutarch claims,[34][35] though Cicero himself says it was to hone his skills and improve his physical fitness.[36] In Athens he studied philosophy with Antiochus of Ascalon, the 'Old Academic' and initiator of Middle Platonism.[37] In Asia Minor, he met the leading orators of the region and continued to study with them. Cicero then journeyed to Rhodes to meet his former teacher, Apollonius Molon, who had previously taught him in Rome. Molon helped Cicero hone the excesses in his style, as well as train his body and lungs for the demands of public speaking.[38] Charting a middle path between the competing Attic and Asiatic styles, Cicero would ultimately become considered second only to Demosthenes among history's orators.[39]

 
Arpino, Italy, birthplace of Cicero

Family

Cicero married Terentia probably at the age of 27, in 79 BC. According to the upper class mores of the day it was a marriage of convenience, but lasted harmoniously for nearly 30 years. Terentia's family was wealthy, probably the plebeian noble house of Terenti Varrones, thus meeting the needs of Cicero's political ambitions in both economic and social terms. She had a half-sister named Fabia, who as a child had become a Vestal Virgin, a great honour. Terentia was a strong willed woman and (citing Plutarch) "she took more interest in her husband's political career than she allowed him to take in household affairs."[40]

In the 50s BC, Cicero's letters to Terentia became shorter and colder. He complained to his friends that Terentia had betrayed him but did not specify in which sense. Perhaps the marriage could not outlast the strain of the political upheaval in Rome, Cicero's involvement in it, and various other disputes between the two. The divorce appears to have taken place in 51 BC or shortly before.[41] In 46 or 45 BC,[42] Cicero married a young girl, Publilia, who had been his ward. It is thought that Cicero needed her money, particularly after having to repay the dowry of Terentia, who came from a wealthy family.[43] This marriage did not last long.

Although his marriage to Terentia was one of convenience, it is commonly known that Cicero held great love for his daughter Tullia.[44] When she suddenly became ill in February 45 BC and died after having seemingly recovered from giving birth to a son in January, Cicero was stunned. "I have lost the one thing that bound me to life" he wrote to Atticus.[45] Atticus told him to come for a visit during the first weeks of his bereavement, so that he could comfort him when his pain was at its greatest. In Atticus's large library, Cicero read everything that the Greek philosophers had written about overcoming grief, "but my sorrow defeats all consolation."[46] Caesar and Brutus as well as Servius Sulpicius Rufus sent him letters of condolence.[47][48]

Cicero hoped that his son Marcus would become a philosopher like him, but Marcus himself wished for a military career. He joined the army of Pompey in 49 BC and after Pompey's defeat at Pharsalus 48 BC, he was pardoned by Caesar. Cicero sent him to Athens to study as a disciple of the peripatetic philosopher Kratippos in 48 BC, but he used this absence from "his father's vigilant eye" to "eat, drink and be merry."[49] After Cicero's death he joined the army of the Liberatores but was later pardoned by Augustus. Augustus's bad conscience for not having objected to Cicero's being put on the proscription list during the Second Triumvirate led him to aid considerably Marcus Minor's career. He became an augur, and was nominated consul in 30 BC together with Augustus. As such, he was responsible for revoking the honors of Mark Antony, who was responsible for the proscription, and could in this way take revenge. Later he was appointed proconsul of Syria and the province of Asia.[50]

Public career

Early legal activity

Cicero wanted to pursue a public career in politics along the steps of the cursus honorum. In 90–88 BC, he served both Pompeius Strabo and Lucius Cornelius Sulla as they campaigned in the Social War, though he had no taste for military life, being an intellectual first and foremost.

Cicero started his career as a lawyer around 83–81 BC. The first extant speech is a private case from 81 BC (the pro Quinctio), delivered when Cicero was aged 26, though he refers throughout to previous defenses he had already undertaken.[51] His first major public case, of which a written record is still extant, was his 80 BC defense of Sextus Roscius on the charge of patricide.[52] Taking this case was a courageous move for Cicero; patricide was considered an appalling crime, and the people whom Cicero accused of the murder, the most notorious being Chrysogonus, were favorites of Sulla. At this time it would have been easy for Sulla to have the unknown Cicero murdered. Cicero's defense was an indirect challenge to the dictator Sulla, and on the strength of his case, Roscius was acquitted.[53] Soon after, Cicero again challenged Sulla, by criticising his disenfranchisement of Italian towns in a lost speech on behalf of a woman from Arretium.[54]

Cicero's case in the Pro Roscio Amerino was divided into three parts. The first part detailed exactly the charge brought by Ericius. Cicero explained how a rustic son of a farmer, who lives off the pleasures of his own land, would not have gained anything from committing patricide because he would have eventually inherited his father's land anyway. The second part concerned the boldness and greed of two of the accusers, Magnus and Capito. Cicero told the jury that they were the more likely perpetrators of murder because the two were greedy, both for conspiring together against a fellow kinsman and, in particular, Magnus, for his boldness and for being unashamed to appear in court to support the false charges. The third part explained that Chrysogonus had immense political power, and the accusation was successfully made due to that power. Even though Chrysogonus may not have been what Cicero said he was, through rhetoric Cicero successfully made him appear to be a foreign freed man who prospered by devious means in the aftermath of the civil war. Cicero surmised that it showed what kind of a person he was and that something like murder was not beneath him.[55]

Early political career

His first office was as one of the twenty annual quaestors, a training post for serious public administration in a diversity of areas, but with a traditional emphasis on administration and rigorous accounting of public monies under the guidance of a senior magistrate or provincial commander. Cicero served as quaestor in western Sicily in 75 BC and demonstrated honesty and integrity in his dealings with the inhabitants. As a result, the grateful Sicilians asked Cicero to prosecute Gaius Verres, a governor of Sicily, who had plundered the province. His prosecution of Gaius Verres was a great forensic success[56] for Cicero. Governor Gaius Verres hired the prominent lawyer of a noble family Quintus Hortensius Hortalus. After a lengthy period in Sicily collecting testimonials and evidence and persuading witnesses to come forward, Cicero returned to Rome and won the case in a series of dramatic court battles. His unique style of oratory set him apart from the flamboyant Hortensius. On the conclusion of this case, Cicero came to be considered the greatest orator in Rome. The view that Cicero may have taken the case for reasons of his own is viable. Hortensius was, at this point, known as the best lawyer in Rome; to beat him would guarantee much success and the prestige that Cicero needed to start his career. Cicero's oratorical ability is shown in his character assassination of Verres and various other techniques of persuasion used on the jury. One such example is found in the speech Against Verres I, where he states "with you on this bench, gentlemen, with Marcus Acilius Glabrio as your president, I do not understand what Verres can hope to achieve".[57] Oratory was considered a great art in ancient Rome and an important tool for disseminating knowledge and promoting oneself in elections, in part because there were no regular newspapers or mass media. Cicero was neither a patrician nor a plebeian noble; his rise to political office despite his relatively humble origins has traditionally been attributed to his brilliance as an orator.[58]

Cicero grew up in a time of civil unrest and war. Sulla's victory in the first of a series of civil wars led to a new constitutional framework that undermined libertas (liberty), the fundamental value of the Roman Republic. Nonetheless, Sulla's reforms strengthened the position of the equestrian class, contributing to that class's growing political power. Cicero was both an Italian eques and a novus homo, but more importantly he was a Roman constitutionalist. His social class and loyalty to the Republic ensured that he would "command the support and confidence of the people as well as the Italian middle classes". The optimates faction never truly accepted Cicero, and this undermined his efforts to reform the Republic while preserving the constitution. Nevertheless, he successfully ascended the cursus honorum, holding each magistracy at or near the youngest possible age: quaestor in 75 BC (age 30), aedile in 69 BC (age 36), and praetor in 66 BC (age 39), when he served as president of the "Reclamation" (or extortion) Court. He was then elected consul at age 42.

Consulship

 
Cicero Denounces Catiline, fresco by Cesare Maccari, 1882–88

Cicero, seizing the opportunity offered by optimate fear of reform, was elected consul for the year 63 BC;[59][60] he was elected with the support of every unit of the centuriate assembly, rival members of the post-Sullan establishment, and the leaders of municipalities throughout post–Social War Italy.[60] His co-consul for the year, Gaius Antonius Hybrida, played a minor role.[61]

He began his consular year by opposing a land bill proposed by a plebeian tribune which would have appointed commissioners with semi-permanent authority over land reform.[62][59] Cicero was also active in the courts, defending Gaius Rabirius from accusations of participating in the unlawful killing of plebeian tribune Lucius Appuleius Saturninus in 100 BC.[63] The prosecution occurred before the comita centuriata and threatened to reopen conflict between the Marian and Sullan factions at Rome.[63] Cicero defended the use of force as being authorised by a senatus consultum ultimum, which would prove similar to his own use of force under such conditions.[63]

The Catilinarian Conspiracy

Cicero – First speech against Catilina in Latin (English subtitles)

Most famously – in part because of his own publicity[60] – he thwarted a conspiracy led by Lucius Sergius Catilina to overthrow the Roman Republic with the help of foreign armed forces. Cicero procured a senatus consultum ultimum (a recommendation from the senate attempting to legitimise the use of force)[60] and drove Catiline from the city with four vehement speeches (the Catiline Orations), which remain outstanding examples of his rhetorical style. The Orations listed Catiline and his followers' debaucheries, and denounced Catiline's senatorial sympathizers as roguish and dissolute debtors clinging to Catiline as a final and desperate hope. Cicero demanded that Catiline and his followers leave the city. At the conclusion of Cicero's first speech (which was made in the Temple of Jupiter Stator), Catiline hurriedly left the Senate. In his following speeches, Cicero did not directly address Catiline. He delivered the second and third orations before the people, and the last one again before the Senate. By these speeches, Cicero wanted to prepare the Senate for the worst possible case; he also delivered more evidence, against Catiline.[64]

Catiline fled and left behind his followers to start the revolution from within while he himself assaulted the city with an army of "moral and financial bankrupts, or of honest fanatics and adventurers".[65] It is alleged that Catiline had attempted to involve the Allobroges, a tribe of Transalpine Gaul, in their plot, but Cicero, working with the Gauls, was able to seize letters that incriminated the five conspirators and forced them to confess in front of the Senate.[66] The senate then deliberated upon the conspirators' punishment. As it was the dominant advisory body to the various legislative assemblies rather than a judicial body, there were limits to its power; however, martial law was in effect, and it was feared that simple house arrest or exile – the standard options – would not remove the threat to the state. At first Decimus Junius Silanus spoke for the "extreme penalty"; many were swayed by Julius Caesar, who decried the precedent it would set and argued in favor of life imprisonment in various Italian towns. Cato the Younger rose in defense of the death penalty and the entire Senate finally agreed on the matter. Cicero had the conspirators taken to the Tullianum, the notorious Roman prison, where they were strangled. Cicero himself accompanied the former consul Publius Cornelius Lentulus Sura, one of the conspirators, to the Tullianum.[citation needed]

Cicero received the honorific "pater patriae" for his efforts to suppress the conspiracy, but lived thereafter in fear of trial or exile for having put Roman citizens to death without trial.[citation needed] While the senatus consultum ultimum gave some legitimacy to the use of force against the conspirators,[b] Cicero also argued that Catiline's conspiracy, by virtue of its treason, made the conspirators enemies of the state and forfeited the protections intrinsically possessed by Roman citizens.[63] The consuls moved decisively. Antonius Hybrida was dispatched to defeat Catiline in battle that year, preventing Crassus or Pompey from exploiting the situation for their own political aims.[67]

After the suppression of the conspiracy, Cicero was proud of his accomplishment.[citation needed][68] Some of his political enemies argued that though the act gained Cicero popularity, he exaggerated the extent of his success. He overestimated his popularity again several years later after being exiled from Italy and then allowed back from exile. At this time, he claimed that the republic would be restored along with him.[69] Many Romans at the time, led by Populares politicians Gaius Julius Caesar and patrician turned plebeian Publius Clodius Pulcher believed that Cicero's evidence against Catiline was fabricated and the witnesses were bribed. Cicero, who had been elected consul with the support of the Optimates, promoted their position as advocates of the status quo resisting social changes, especially more privileges for the average inhabitants of Rome.[citation needed]

Shortly after completing his consulship, in late 62 BC, Cicero arranged the purchase of a large townhouse on the Palatine Hill previously owned by Rome's richest citizen, Marcus Licinius Crassus.[70] It cost an exorbitant sum, 3.5 million sesterces, which required Cicero to arrange for a loan from his co-consul Gaius Antonius Hybrida based on the expected profits from Antonius's proconsulship in Macedonia.[71][72] At the beginning of his consulship, Cicero had made an arrangement with Hybrida to grant Hybrida the profitable province of Macedonia that had been granted to Cicero by the Senate in exchange for Hybrida staying out of Cicero's way for the year and a quarter of the profits from the province.[72] In return Cicero gained a lavish house which he proudly boasted was "in conspectu prope totius urbis" (in sight of nearly the whole city), only a short walk from the Roman Forum.[73]

Exile and return

In 60 BC, Julius Caesar invited Cicero to be the fourth member of his existing partnership with Pompey and Marcus Licinius Crassus, an assembly that would eventually be called the First Triumvirate. Cicero refused the invitation because he suspected it would undermine the Republic.[74]

During Caesar's consulship of 59 BC, the triumvirate had achieved many of their goals of land reform, publicani debt forgiveness, ratification of Pompeian conquests, etc. With Caesar leaving for his provinces, they wished to maintain their hold on politics. They engineered the adoption of patrician Publius Clodius Pulcher into a plebeian family and had him elected as one of the ten tribunes of the plebs for 58 BC.[75] Clodius used the triumvirate's backing to push through legislation that benefited them. He introduced several laws (the leges Clodiae) that made him popular with the people, strengthening his power base, then he turned on Cicero by threatening exile to anyone who executed a Roman citizen without a trial. Cicero, having executed members of the Catiline conspiracy four years previously without formal trial, was clearly the intended target.[76] Furthermore, many believed that Clodius acted in concert with the triumvirate who feared that Cicero would seek to abolish many of Caesar's accomplishments while consul the year before. Cicero argued that the senatus consultum ultimum indemnified him from punishment, and he attempted to gain the support of the senators and consuls, especially of Pompey.[77]

Cicero grew out his hair, dressed in mourning and toured the streets. Clodius' gangs dogged him, hurling abuse, stones and even excrement. Hortensius, trying to rally to his old rival's support, was almost lynched. The Senate and the consuls were cowed. Caesar, who was still encamped near Rome, was apologetic but said he could do nothing when Cicero brought himself to grovel in the proconsul's tent. Everyone seemed to have abandoned Cicero.[78]

After Clodius passed a law to deny to Cicero fire and water (i.e. shelter) within four hundred miles of Rome, Cicero went into exile.[76] He arrived at Thessalonica, on 23 May 58 BC.[79][80][81] In his absence, Clodius, who lived next door to Cicero on the Palatine, arranged for Cicero's house to be confiscated by the state, and was even able to purchase a part of the property in order to extend his own house.[73] After demolishing Cicero's house, Clodius had the land consecrated and symbolically erected a temple of Liberty (aedes Libertatis) on the vacant land.[82]

Cicero's exile caused him to fall into depression. He wrote to Atticus: "Your pleas have prevented me from committing suicide. But what is there to live for? Don't blame me for complaining. My afflictions surpass any you ever heard of earlier".[83] After the intervention of recently elected tribune Titus Annius Milo, acting on the behalf of Pompey who wanted Cicero as a client,[76] the Senate voted in favor of recalling Cicero from exile. Clodius cast the single vote against the decree. Cicero returned to Italy on 5 August 57 BC, landing at Brundisium.[84] He was greeted by a cheering crowd, and, to his delight, his beloved daughter Tullia.[85] In his Oratio De Domo Sua Ad Pontifices, Cicero convinced the College of Pontiffs to rule that the consecration of his land was invalid, thereby allowing him to regain his property and rebuild his house on the Palatine.[86][87]

Cicero tried to re-enter politics as an independent operator,[76] but his attempts to attack portions of Caesar's legislation were unsuccessful[75] and encouraged Caesar to re-solidify his political alliance with Pompey and Crassus.[88] The conference at Luca in 56 BC left the three-man alliance in domination of the republic's politics; this forced Cicero to recant and support the triumvirate out of fear from being entirely excluded from public life.[89] After the conference Cicero lavishly praised Caesar's achievements, got the Senate to vote a thanksgiving for Caesar's victories and grant money to pay his troops.[citation needed] He also delivered a speech 'On the consular provinces' (Latin: de provinciis consularibus)[89] which checked an attempt by Caesar's enemies to strip him of his provinces in Gaul.[90] After this, a cowed Cicero concentrated on his literary works. It is uncertain whether he was directly involved in politics for the following few years.[91]

Governorship of Cilicia

In 51 BC he reluctantly accepted a promagistracy (as proconsul) in Cilicia for the year; there were few other former consuls eligible as a result of a legislative requirement enacted by Pompey in 52 BC specifying an interval of five years between a consulship or praetorship and a provincial command.[92][93] He served as proconsul of Cilicia from May 51 BC, arriving in the provinces three months later around August.[92] He was given instructions to keep nearby Cappadocia loyal to King Ariobarzanes III, which he achieved 'satisfactorily without war'.

In 53 BC Marcus Licinius Crassus had been defeated by the Parthians at the Battle of Carrhae. This opened the Roman East for a Parthian invasion, causing unrest in Syria and Cilicia. Cicero restored calm by his mild system of government. He discovered that a great amount of public property had been embezzled by corrupt previous governors and members of their staff, and did his utmost to restore it. Thus he greatly improved the condition of the cities.[94] He retained the civil rights of, and exempted from penalties, the men who gave the property back.[95] Besides this, he was extremely frugal in his outlays for staff and private expenses during his governorship, and this made him highly popular among the natives.[96] Previous governors had extorted enormous sums from the provincials in order to supply their households and bodyguards.

Besides his activity in ameliorating the hard pecuniary situation of the province, Cicero was also creditably active in the military sphere. Early in his governorship he received information that prince Pacorus, son of Orodes II the king of the Parthians, had crossed the Euphrates, and was ravaging the Syrian countryside and had even besieged Cassius (the interim Roman commander in Syria) in Antioch.[97] Cicero eventually marched with two understrength legions and a large contingent of auxiliary cavalry to Cassius's relief. Pacorus and his army had already given up on besieging Antioch and were heading south through Syria, ravaging the countryside again. Cassius and his legions followed them, harrying them wherever they went, eventually ambushing and defeating them near Antigonea.[98]

Another large troop of Parthian horsemen was defeated by Cicero's cavalry who happened to run into them while scouting ahead of the main army. Cicero next defeated some robbers who were based on Mount Amanus and was hailed as imperator by his troops. Afterwards he led his army against the independent Cilician mountain tribes, besieging their fortress of Pindenissum. It took him 47 days to reduce the place, which fell in December.[99] On 30 July 50 BC Cicero left the province[100] to his brother Quintus, who had accompanied him on his governorship as his legate.[101] On his way back to Rome he stopped in Rhodes and then went to Athens, where he caught up with his old friend Titus Pomponius Atticus and met men of great learning.[102]

Julius Caesar's civil war

Cicero arrived in Rome on 4 January 49 BC.[100] He stayed outside the pomerium, to retain his promagisterial powers: either in expectation of a triumph or to retain his independent command authority in the coming civil war.[100] The struggle between Pompey and Julius Caesar grew more intense in 50 BC. Cicero favored Pompey, seeing him as a defender of the senate and Republican tradition, but at that time avoided openly alienating Caesar.[103] When Caesar invaded Italy in 49 BC, Cicero fled Rome. Caesar, seeking an endorsement by a senior senator, courted Cicero's favor, but even so Cicero slipped out of Italy and traveled to Dyrrachium (Epidamnos), Illyria, where Pompey's staff was situated.[104] Cicero traveled with the Pompeian forces to Pharsalus in 48 BC,[105] though he was quickly losing faith in the competence and righteousness of the Pompeian side. Eventually, he provoked the hostility of his fellow senator Cato, who told him that he would have been of more use to the cause of the optimates if he had stayed in Rome. After Caesar's victory at the Battle of Pharsalus on 9 August, Cicero refused to take command of the Pompeian forces and continue the war.[106] He returned to Rome, still as a promagistrate with his lictors, in 47 BC, and dismissed them upon his crossing the pomerium and renouncing his command.[106] Caesar pardoned him and Cicero tried to adjust to the situation and maintain his political work, hoping that Caesar might revive the Republic and its institutions.

In a letter to Varro on c. 20 April 46 BC, Cicero outlined his strategy under Caesar's dictatorship. Cicero, however, was taken by surprise when the Liberatores assassinated Caesar on the ides of March, 44 BC. Cicero was not included in the conspiracy, even though the conspirators were sure of his sympathy. Marcus Junius Brutus called out Cicero's name, asking him to restore the republic when he lifted his bloodstained dagger after the assassination.[107] A letter Cicero wrote in February 43 BC to Trebonius, one of the conspirators, began, "How I could wish that you had invited me to that most glorious banquet on the Ides of March!"[108][109] Cicero became a popular leader during the period of instability following the assassination. He had no respect for Mark Antony, who was scheming to take revenge upon Caesar's murderers. In exchange for amnesty for the assassins, he arranged for the Senate to agree not to declare Caesar to have been a tyrant, which allowed the Caesarians to have lawful support and kept Caesar's reforms and policies intact.[110]

Opposition to Mark Antony and death

 
Marcus Tullius Cicero dragged from his litter and assassinated by soldiers under the command of Marc Antony 43 BC (1880 illustration)

Cicero and Antony now became the two leading men in Rome: Cicero as spokesman for the Senate; Antony as consul, leader of the Caesarian faction, and unofficial executor of Caesar's public will. Relations between the two were never friendly and worsened after Cicero claimed that Antony was taking liberties in interpreting Caesar's wishes and intentions. Octavian was Caesar's adopted son and heir. After he returned to Italy, Cicero began to play him against Antony. He praised Octavian, declaring he would not make the same mistakes as his father. He attacked Antony in a series of speeches he called the Philippics,[111] after Demosthenes's denunciations of Philip II of Macedon. At the time Cicero's popularity as a public figure was unrivalled.[112]

 
The Vengeance of Fulvia by Francisco Maura y Montaner, 1888 depicting Fulvia inspecting the severed head of Cicero

Cicero supported Decimus Junius Brutus Albinus as governor of Cisalpine Gaul (Gallia Cisalpina) and urged the Senate to name Antony an enemy of the state. The speech of Lucius Piso, Caesar's father-in-law, delayed proceedings against Antony. Antony was later declared an enemy of the state when he refused to lift the siege of Mutina, which was in the hands of Decimus Brutus. Cicero's plan to drive out Antony failed. Antony and Octavian reconciled and allied with Lepidus to form the Second Triumvirate after the successive battles of Forum Gallorum and Mutina. The Triumvirate began proscribing their enemies and potential rivals immediately after legislating the alliance into official existence for a term of five years with consular imperium. Cicero and all of his contacts and supporters were numbered among the enemies of the state, even though Octavian argued for two days against Cicero being added to the list.[113]

 
Cicero's death (France, 15th century)

Cicero was one of the most viciously and doggedly hunted among the proscribed. He was viewed with sympathy by a large segment of the public and many people refused to report that they had seen him. He was caught on 7 December 43 BC leaving his villa in Formiae in a litter heading to the seaside, where he hoped to embark on a ship destined for Macedonia.[114] When his killers – Herennius (a Centurion) and Popilius (a Tribune) – arrived, Cicero's own slaves said they had not seen him, but he was given away by Philologus, a freedman of his brother Quintus Cicero.[114]

 
Cicero about age 60, from a marble bust

As reported by Seneca the Elder, according to the historian Aufidius Bassus, Cicero's last words are said to have been:

Ego vero consisto. Accede, veterane, et, si hoc saltim potes recte facere, incide cervicem.
I go no further: approach, veteran soldier, and, if you can at least do so much properly, sever this neck.[115]

He bowed to his captors, leaning his head out of the litter in a gladiatorial gesture to ease the task. By baring his neck and throat to the soldiers, he was indicating that he would not resist. According to Plutarch, Herennius first slew him, then cut off his head. On Antony's instructions his hands, which had penned the Philippics against Antony, were cut off as well; these were nailed along with his head on the Rostra in the Forum Romanum according to the tradition of Marius and Sulla, both of whom had displayed the heads of their enemies in the Forum. Cicero was the only victim of the proscriptions who was displayed in that manner. According to Cassius Dio, in a story often mistakenly attributed to Plutarch,[116] Antony's wife Fulvia took Cicero's head, pulled out his tongue, and jabbed it repeatedly with her hairpin in final revenge against Cicero's power of speech.[117]

Cicero's son, Marcus Tullius Cicero Minor, during his year as a consul in 30 BC, avenged his father's death, to a certain extent, when he announced to the Senate Mark Antony's naval defeat at Actium in 31 BC by Octavian.[citation needed]

Octavian is reported to have praised Cicero as a patriot and a scholar of meaning in later times, within the circle of his family.[118] However, it was Octavian's acquiescence that had allowed Cicero to be killed, as Cicero was condemned by the new triumvirate.[119]

Cicero's career as a statesman was marked by inconsistencies and a tendency to shift his position in response to changes in the political climate. His indecision may be attributed to his sensitive and impressionable personality; he was prone to overreaction in the face of political and private change.[citation needed]

"Would that he had been able to endure prosperity with greater self-control, and adversity with more fortitude!" wrote C. Asinius Pollio, a contemporary Roman statesman and historian.[120][121]

Legacy

 
Henry VIII's childhood copy of De Officiis, bearing the inscription in his hand, "Thys boke is myne Prynce Henry"

Cicero has been traditionally considered the master of Latin prose, with Quintilian declaring that Cicero was "not the name of a man, but of eloquence itself."[122] The English words Ciceronian (meaning "eloquent") and cicerone (meaning "local guide") derive from his name.[123][124] He is credited with transforming Latin from a modest utilitarian language into a versatile literary medium capable of expressing abstract and complicated thoughts with clarity.[125] Julius Caesar praised Cicero's achievement by saying "it is more important to have greatly extended the frontiers of the Roman spirit than the frontiers of the Roman empire".[126] According to John William Mackail, "Cicero's unique and imperishable glory is that he created the language of the civilized world, and used that language to create a style which nineteen centuries have not replaced, and in some respects have hardly altered."[127]

Cicero was also an energetic writer with an interest in a wide variety of subjects, in keeping with the Hellenistic philosophical and rhetorical traditions in which he was trained. The quality and ready accessibility of Ciceronian texts favored very wide distribution and inclusion in teaching curricula, as suggested by a graffito at Pompeii, admonishing: "You will like Cicero, or you will be whipped".[128]

Cicero was greatly admired by influential Church Fathers such as Augustine of Hippo, who credited Cicero's lost Hortensius for his eventual conversion to Christianity,[129] and St. Jerome, who had a feverish vision in which he was accused of being "follower of Cicero and not of Christ" before the judgment seat.[130]

This influence further increased after the Early Middle Ages in Europe, which more of his writings survived than any other Latin author. Medieval philosophers were influenced by Cicero's writings on natural law and innate rights.[131][additional citation(s) needed]

Petrarch's rediscovery of Cicero's letters provided the impetus for searches for ancient Greek and Latin writings scattered throughout European monasteries, and the subsequent rediscovery of classical antiquity led to the Renaissance. Subsequently, Cicero became synonymous with classical Latin to such an extent that a number of humanist scholars began to assert that no Latin word or phrase should be used unless it appeared in Cicero's works, a stance criticised by Erasmus.[132]

His voluminous correspondence, much of it addressed to his friend Atticus, has been especially influential, introducing the art of refined letter writing to European culture. Cornelius Nepos, the first century BC biographer of Atticus, remarked that Cicero's letters contained such a wealth of detail "concerning the inclinations of leading men, the faults of the generals, and the revolutions in the government" that their reader had little need for a history of the period.[133]

Among Cicero's admirers were Desiderius Erasmus, Martin Luther, and John Locke.[134] Following the invention of Johannes Gutenberg's printing press, De Officiis was the second book printed in Europe, after the Gutenberg Bible. Scholars note Cicero's influence on the rebirth of religious toleration in the 17th century.[135]

Cicero was especially popular with the Philosophes of the 18th century, including Edward Gibbon, Diderot, David Hume, Montesquieu, and Voltaire.[136] Gibbon wrote of his first experience reading the author's collective works thus: "I tasted the beauty of the language; I breathed the spirit of freedom; and I imbibed from his precepts and examples the public and private sense of a man...after finishing the great author, a library of eloquence and reason, I formed a more extensive plan of reviewing the Latin classics..."[137]

Voltaire called Cicero "the greatest as well as the most elegant of Roman philosophers" and even staged a play based on Cicero's role in the Catilinarian conspiracy, called Rome Sauvée, ou Catilina, to "make young people who go to the theatre acquainted with Cicero."[138] Voltaire was spurred to pen the drama as a rebuff to his rival Claude Prosper Jolyot de Crébillon's own play Catilina, which had portrayed Cicero as a coward and villain who hypocritically married his own daughter to Catiline.[139]

Montesquieu produced his "Discourse on Cicero" in 1717, in which he heaped praise on the author because he rescued "philosophy from the hands of scholars, and freed it from the confusion of a foreign language".[140] Montesquieu went on to declare that Cicero was "of all the ancients, the one who had the most personal merit, and whom I would prefer to resemble."[139][141]

Internationally, Cicero the republican inspired the Founding Fathers of the United States and the revolutionaries of the French Revolution.[142] John Adams said, "As all the ages of the world have not produced a greater statesman and philosopher united than Cicero, his authority should have great weight."[143] Jefferson names Cicero as one of a handful of major figures who contributed to a tradition "of public right" that informed his draft of the Declaration of Independence and shaped American understandings of "the common sense" basis for the right of revolution.[144] Camille Desmoulins said of the French republicans in 1789 that they were "mostly young people who, nourished by the reading of Cicero at school, had become passionate enthusiasts for liberty".[145]

Jim Powell starts his book on the history of liberty with the sentence: "Marcus Tullius Cicero expressed principles that became the bedrock of liberty in the modern world."[146]

Likewise, no other ancient personality has inspired as much venomous dislike as Cicero, especially in more modern times.[147] His commitment to the values of the Republic accommodated a hatred of the poor and persistent opposition to the advocates and mechanisms of popular representation.[148] Friedrich Engels referred to him as "the most contemptible scoundrel in history" for upholding republican "democracy" while at the same time denouncing land and class reforms.[149] Cicero has faced criticism for exaggerating the democratic qualities of republican Rome, and for defending the Roman oligarchy against the popular reforms of Caesar.[150] Michael Parenti admits Cicero's abilities as an orator, but finds him a vain, pompous and hypocritical personality who, when it suited him, could show public support for popular causes that he privately despised. Parenti presents Cicero's prosecution of the Catiline conspiracy as legally flawed at least, and possibly unlawful.[151]

Cicero also had an influence on modern astronomy. Nicolaus Copernicus, searching for ancient views on earth motion, said that he "first ... found in Cicero that Hicetas supposed the earth to move."[152]

Notably, "Cicero" was the name attributed to size 12 font in typesetting table drawers. For ease of reference, type sizes 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 12, 14, 16, and 20 were all given different names.[153]

Works

 
Marci Tullii Ciceronis Opera Omnia (1566)

Cicero was declared a righteous pagan by the Early Church,[154] and therefore many of his works were deemed worthy of preservation. The Bogomils considered him a rare exception of a pagan saint.[155] Subsequent Roman and medieval Christian writers quoted liberally from his works De re publica (On the Commonwealth) and De Legibus (On the Laws), and much of his work has been recreated from these surviving fragments. Cicero also articulated an early, abstract conceptualization of rights, based on ancient law and custom. Of Cicero's books, six on rhetoric have survived, as well as parts of seven on philosophy.[156] Of his speeches, 88 were recorded, but only 52 survive.[c][157]

In archaeology

Cicero's great repute in Italy has led to numerous ruins being identified as having belonged to him, though none have been substantiated with absolute certainty. In Formia, two Roman-era ruins are popularly believed to be Cicero's mausoleum, the Tomba di Cicerone, and the villa where he was assassinated in 43 BC. The latter building is centered around a central hall with Doric columns and a coffered vault, with a separate nymphaeum, on five acres of land near Formia.[158] A modern villa was built on the site after the Rubino family purchased the land from Ferdinand II of the Two Sicilies in 1868. Cicero's supposed tomb is a 24-meter (79 feet) tall tower on an opus quadratum base on the ancient Via Appia outside of Formia. Some suggest that it is not in fact Cicero's tomb, but a monument built on the spot where Cicero was intercepted and assassinated while trying to reach the sea.[159]

In Pompeii, a large villa excavated in the mid 18th century just outside the Herculaneum Gate was widely believed to have been Cicero's, who was known to have owned a holiday villa in Pompeii he called his Pompeianum. The villa was stripped of its fine frescoes and mosaics and then re-buried after 1763 – it has yet to be re-excavated.[160] However, contemporaneous descriptions of the building from the excavators combined with Cicero's own references to his Pompeianum differ, making it unlikely that it is Cicero's villa.[161]

In Rome, the location of Cicero's house has been roughly identified from excavations of the Republican-era stratum on the northwestern slope of the Palatine Hill.[162][163] Cicero's domus has long been known to have stood in the area, according to his own descriptions and those of later authors, but there is some debate about whether it stood near the base of the hill, very close to the Roman Forum, or nearer to the summit.[162][164] During his life the area was the most desirable in Rome, densely occupied with Patrician houses including the Domus Publica of Julius Caesar and the home of Cicero's mortal enemy Clodius.[165]

Notable fictional portrayals

In Dante's 1320 poem the Divine Comedy, the author encounters Cicero, among other philosophers, in Limbo.[166] Ben Jonson dramatised the conspiracy of Catiline in his play Catiline His Conspiracy, featuring Cicero as a character.[167] Cicero also appears as a minor character in William Shakespeare's play Julius Caesar.[168]

Cicero was portrayed on the motion picture screen by British actor Alan Napier in the 1953 film Julius Caesar, based on Shakespeare's play.[169] He has also been played by such noted actors as Michael Hordern (in Cleopatra),[170] and André Morell (in the 1970 Julius Caesar).[171] Most recently, Cicero was portrayed by David Bamber in the HBO series Rome (2005–2007) and appeared in both seasons.[172]

In the historical novel series Masters of Rome, Colleen McCullough presents a not-so-flattering depiction of Cicero's career, showing him struggling with an inferiority complex and vanity, morally flexible and fatally indiscreet, while his rival Julius Caesar is shown in a more approving light.[173] Cicero is portrayed as a hero in the novel A Pillar of Iron by Taylor Caldwell (1965). Robert Harris' novels Imperium, Lustrum (published under the name Conspirata in the United States) and Dictator comprise a three-part series based on the life of Cicero. In these novels Cicero's character is depicted in a more favorable way than in those of McCullough, with his positive traits equaling or outweighing his weaknesses (while conversely Caesar is depicted as more sinister than in McCullough).[174] Cicero is a major recurring character in the Roma Sub Rosa series of mystery novels by Steven Saylor.[175] He also appears several times as a peripheral character in John Maddox Roberts' SPQR series.[176]

Samuel Barnett portrays Cicero in a 2017 audio drama series pilot produced by Big Finish Productions. A full series was released the following year.[177] All Episodes are written by David Llewellyn[178] and directed and produced by Scott Handcock.[179] Llewellyn, Handcock and Barnett re-teamed in the Doctor Who audio-drama Tartarus (also produced by Big Finish) starring Peter Davison as the 5th Doctor. It is not intended to be a part of the Cicero series; in Vortex (Big Finish's official free online magazine) Llewellyn revealed that he was "worried that if we had Cicero meeting aliens people might go back to the Cicero series and see it through a sci-fi lens. Then I remembered that Simon Callow still performs as Charles Dickens, and that he played Dickens before reprising him in the Doctor Who TV episode, The Unquiet Dead – so I got over myself!".[180]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ The name is infrequently anglicized as Tully[2] (/ˈtʌli/).
  2. ^ Wiedemann describes the senatus consultum ultimum by the late republic as "little more than a fig-leaf by those who could muster a majority in the senate ... to legitimate the use of force".[63]
  3. ^ Sources vary, but seem to indicate that 52 survived in whole and 6 more in part

References

Citations

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  2. ^ E.g., in Howard Jones, Master Tully: Cicero in Tudor England (Nieuwkoop: De Graaf, 1998).
  3. ^ Cicero, Academica Book II, Section 65
  4. ^ Ferguson & Balsdon.
  5. ^ Rawson, E.: Cicero, a portrait (1975) p. 303
  6. ^ Haskell, Henry Joseph (1964). This was Cicero. Fawcett Publications Incorporated. pp. 300–301.
  7. ^ Harrison, Stephen (2008). A Companion to Latin Literature. John Wiley & Sons. p. 31. ISBN 978-1405137379. Latin literature in the period 90–40 BC presents one feature that is unique in Classical, and perhaps even in the whole of Western, literature. Although it is a period from which a substantial amount of literature in a wide variety of genres survives, more than 75 per cent of that literature was written by a single man: Marcus Tullius Cicero. Cicero wrote speeches, philosophical and rhetorical trea- tises, letters and poetry, which in terms of quantity outweigh all other extant writings of the period.
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Sources

  • Badian, E: "Cicero and the Commission of 146 B.C.", Collection Latomus 101 (1969), 54–65.
  • Ferguson, John & Balsdon, J.P.V.D. "Marcus Tullius Cicero". Encyclopædia Britannica (online).
  • Caldwell, Taylor (1965). A Pillar of Iron. New York: Doubleday & Company. ISBN 978-0385053037.
  • Cicero, Marcus Tullius, Cicero's letters to Atticus, Vol, I, II, IV, VI, Cambridge University Press, Great Britain, 1965
  • Cicero, Marcus Tullius, Latin extracts of Cicero on Himself, translated by Charles Gordon Cooper, University of Queensland Press, Brisbane, 1963
  • Cicero, Marcus Tullius, Selected Political Speeches, Penguin Books Ltd, Great Britain, 1969
  • Cicero, Marcus Tullius, De Officiis (On Duties), translated by Walter Miller. Harvard University Press, 1913, ISBN 978-0674990333
  • Cicero, Marcus Tullius, Selected Works, Penguin Books Ltd, Great Britain, 1971
  • Cowell, F.R. (1948). Cicero and the Roman Republic. Penguin Books
  • Everitt, Anthony (2001). Cicero: the life and times of Rome's greatest politician. New York: Random House. ISBN 978-0375507465.
  • Gruen, Erich S. (1974). The Last Generation of the Roman Republic. University of California Press.
  • Haskell, H.J. (1942). This was Cicero. Alfred A. Knopf.
  • March, Duane A. (1989). "Cicero and the 'Gang of Five'". Classical World. 82 (4): 225–234. doi:10.2307/4350381. JSTOR 4350381.
  • Narducci, Emanuele (2009). Cicerone. La parola e la politica. Laterza. ISBN 978-8842076056.
  • Plutarch Penguins Classics English translation by Rex Warner, Fall of the Roman Republic, Six Lives by Plutarch: Marius, Sulla, Crassus, Pompey, Caesar, Cicero (Penguin Books, 1958; with Introduction and notes by Robin Seager, 1972)
  • Rawson, Beryl: The Politics of Friendship: Pompey and Cicero (Sydney University Press, 1978)
  • Rawson, Elizabeth (1972). "Cicero the Historian and Cicero the Antiquarian". Journal of Roman Studies. 62: 33–45. doi:10.2307/298924. JSTOR 298924. S2CID 161169064.
  • Rawson, Elizabeth. (1975). Cicero : a portrait. London: Allen Lane. ISBN 0713908645. OCLC 1531175.
  • Richards, Carl J. (2010). Why We're All Romans: The Roman Contribution to the Western World. Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 978-0742567788.
  • Scullard, H.H. From the Gracchi to Nero, University Paperbacks, Great Britain, 1968
  • Smith, R.E: Cicero the Statesman (Cambridge University Press, 1966)
  • Stockton, David: Cicero: A Political Biography (Oxford University Press, 1971)
  • Strachan-Davidson, James Leigh (1936). Cicero and the Fall of the Roman Republic. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Taylor, H. (1918). Cicero: A sketch of his life and works. Chicago: A.C. McClurg & Co.
  • Uttschenko, Sergej L. (1978): Cicero, translated from Russian by Rosemarie Pattloch, VEB Deutscher Verlag der Wissenschaften, Berlin, Germany.Cicero
  • Wistrand, M. (1979). Cicero Imperator: Studies in Cicero's Correspondence 51–47 B.C. Göteborg.
  • Wiedemann, Thomas E. J. (1994). Cicero and the end of the Roman Republic. London: Bristol Classical Press. ISBN 1853991937. OCLC 31494651.
  • Yates, Frances A. (1974). The Art of Memory. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0226950013.

Further reading

  • Boissier, Gaston, Cicéron et ses amis. Étude sur la société romaine du temps de César (1884)
  • Everitt, Anthony (2001). Cicero. A turbulent life. London: John Murray Publishers. ISBN 978-0719554933.
  • Fuhrmann, Manfred (1992). Cicero and the Roman Republic. Oxford: Blackwell. ISBN 978-0631178798.
  • Gildenhard, Ingo (2011). Creative Eloquence: The Construction of Reality in Cicero's Speeches. Oxford/New York: Oxford University Press.
  • Hamza, Gabor, L'optimus status civitatis di Cicerone e la sua tradizione nel pensiero politico. In: Tradizione romanistica e Costituzione. Cinquanta anni della Corte Costituzionale della Repubblica Italiana. vol. II. Napoli, 2006. 1455–1468.
  • Hamza, Gabor, Ciceros Verhältnis zu seinen Quellen, mit besonderer Berücksichtigung der Darstellung der Staatslehre in De re publica. KLIO – Beiträge zur alten Geschichte 67 (1985) 492–497.
  • Hamza, Gabor, Cicero und der Idealtypus des iurisconsultus. Helixon 22–27 (1982–1987) 281–296.
  • Hamza, Gabor, Il potere (lo Stato) nel pensiero di Cicerone e la sua attualità. Revista Internacional de Derecho Romano (RIDROM) 10 (2013) 1–25. Revista Internacional de Derecho Romano – Index
  • Hamza, Gabor, Zur Interpretation des Naturrechts in den Werken von Cicero. Pázmány Law Review 2 (2014) 5–15.Macdonald, C. (1986). De imperio (Nachdr. d. Ausg. Basingstoke 1966. ed.). Bristol: Bristol Classical Press. ISBN 978-0862921828.
  • Holiday, Ryan; Hanselman, Stephen (2020). "Cicero the Fellow Traveler". Lives of the Stoics. New York: Portfolio/Penguin. pp. 114–133. ISBN 978-0525541875.
  • Palmer, Tom G. (2008). "Cicero (106–43 B.C.)". In Hamowy, Ronald (ed.). The Encyclopedia of Libertarianism. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage; Cato Institute. p. 63. doi:10.4135/9781412965811.n42. ISBN 978-1412965804. LCCN 2008009151. OCLC 750831024.
  • Parenti, Michael (2004). The Assassination of Julius Caesar: A People's History of Ancient Rome. New York: The New Press. ISBN 978-1565849426.
  • Powell, J.G.F., ed. (1995). Cicero the philosopher : twelve papers. Oxford: Clarendon Press. ISBN 978-0198147510.
  • Shackleton Bailey, D. R. (1971). Cicero. London: Duckworth. ISBN 978-0715605745.
  • Sihler, Ernest G. (1914). Cicero of Arpinum: A Political and Literary Biography. New Haven: Yale University Press.
  • Treggiari, S. (2007). Terentia, Tullia and Publilia. The women of Cicero's family. London: Routledge.
  • {{Encyclopaedia Iranica | title = Cicero | last = Weiskopf | first = Michael | url = http://www.iranicaonline.org/articles/cicero-as-a-source-for-parthian-history | volume = 5 | fascicle = 5 | pages = 558–559

External links

Works by Cicero

  • Works by Cicero at Perseus Digital Library
  • Works by Cicero in eBook form at Standard Ebooks
  • Works by Cicero at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about Cicero at Internet Archive
  • Works by Cicero at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
  • Works by Cicero at the Stoic Therapy eLibrary
  • The Latin Library (Latin): Works of Cicero
  • Dickinson College Commentaries: Against Verres 2.1.53–86
  • Dickinson College Commentaries: On Pompey's Command (De Imperio) 27–49
  • Horace MS 1b Laelius de Amicitia at OPenn
  • Lewis E 66 Epistolae ad familiares (Letters to friends)

Biographies and descriptions of Cicero's time

Plutarch's biography of Cicero contained in the Parallel Lives

cicero, other, uses, disambiguation, marcus, tullius, siss, latin, ˈmaːr, kʊs, ˈtʊl, lʲi, jʊs, ˈkɪ, roː, january, december, roman, statesman, lawyer, scholar, philosopher, academic, skeptic, tried, uphold, optimate, principles, during, political, crises, that,. For other uses see Cicero disambiguation Marcus Tullius Cicero a ˈ s ɪ s e r oʊ SISS e roh Latin ˈmaːr kʊs ˈtʊl lʲi jʊs ˈkɪ kɛ roː 3 January 106 BC 7 December 43 BC was a Roman statesman lawyer scholar philosopher and academic skeptic 3 who tried to uphold optimate principles during the political crises that led to the establishment of the Roman Empire 4 His extensive writings include treatises on rhetoric philosophy and politics He is considered one of Rome s greatest orators and prose stylists 5 6 He came from a wealthy municipal family of the Roman equestrian order and served as consul in 63 BC CiceroFirst century AD bust of Cicero at the Capitoline Museums RomeConsul of the Roman RepublicIn office 63 BC 63 BCServing with Gaius Antonius HybridaGovernor of CiliciaIn office 51 BC 50 BCPersonal detailsBorn3 January 106 BCArpinum Italy Roman RepublicDied7 December 43 BC aged 63 Formia Italy Roman RepublicCause of deathBeheaded by order of Mark AntonySpousesTerentia 79 51 BC Publilia 46 45 BC ChildrenTullia and Cicero MinorRelativesQuintus Tullius Cicero brother OccupationStatesman lawyer writer oratorPhilosophy careerNotable workOrations In VerremIn Catilinam I IV Philosophical works AcademicaDe OratoreDe re publicaDe Natura DeorumDe OfficiisTusculanae QuaestionesDe DivinationeDe FatoEraHellenistic philosophyRegionWestern philosophySchoolAcademic skepticism 1 Classical republicanismEclecticismMain interestsEthicsepistemologytheologypoliticslawrhetoricNotable ideasExceptio probat regulam in casibus non exceptis Humanitas Inter arma enim silent leges Non nobis solum O tempora o mores Salus populi suprema lex esto Summum bonumInfluences Socrates Plato Aristotle Carneades Polybius Panaetius Scaevola Archias Molon Philo Antiochus LucretiusInfluenced Virtually all of subsequent Western philosophyHis influence on the Latin language was immense He wrote more than three quarters of extant Latin literature that is known to have existed in his lifetime and it has been said that subsequent prose was either a reaction against or a return to his style not only in Latin but in European languages up to the 19th century 7 8 9 Cicero introduced into Latin the arguments of the chief schools of Hellenistic philosophy and created a Latin philosophical vocabulary with neologisms such as evidentia 10 humanitas qualitas quantitas and essentia 11 distinguishing himself as a translator and philosopher Though he was an accomplished orator and successful lawyer Cicero believed his political career was his most important achievement It was during his consulship that the Catiline conspiracy attempted to overthrow the government through an attack on the city by outside forces and Cicero suppressed the revolt by summarily and controversially executing five conspirators without trial During the chaotic middle period of the first century BC marked by civil wars and the dictatorship of Julius Caesar Cicero championed a return to the traditional republican government Following Caesar s death Cicero became an enemy of Mark Antony in the ensuing power struggle attacking him in a series of speeches He was proscribed as an enemy of the state by the Second Triumvirate and consequently executed by soldiers operating on their behalf in 43 BC having been intercepted during an attempted flight from the Italian peninsula His severed hands and head were then as a final revenge of Mark Antony displayed on the Rostra 12 Petrarch s rediscovery of Cicero s letters is often credited for initiating the 14th century Renaissance in public affairs humanism and classical Roman culture 13 According to Polish historian Tadeusz Zielinski the Renaissance was above all things a revival of Cicero and only after him and through him of the rest of Classical antiquity 14 The peak of Cicero s authority and prestige came during the 18th century Enlightenment 15 and his impact on leading Enlightenment thinkers and political theorists such as John Locke David Hume Montesquieu and Edmund Burke was substantial 16 His works rank among the most influential in global culture and today still constitute one of the most important bodies of primary material for the writing and revision of Roman history especially the last days of the Roman Republic 17 Contents 1 Personal life 1 1 Early life 1 2 Family 2 Public career 2 1 Early legal activity 2 2 Early political career 3 Consulship 3 1 The Catilinarian Conspiracy 4 Exile and return 5 Governorship of Cilicia 6 Julius Caesar s civil war 7 Opposition to Mark Antony and death 8 Legacy 9 Works 10 In archaeology 11 Notable fictional portrayals 12 See also 13 Notes 14 References 14 1 Citations 14 2 Sources 15 Further reading 16 External linksPersonal life EditMain article Personal life of Cicero Early life Edit Marcus Tullius Cicero was born on 3 January 106 BC 18 in Arpinum a hill town 100 kilometers 62 mi southeast of Rome He belonged to the tribus Cornelia 19 His father was a well to do member of the equestrian order and possessed good connections in Rome However being a semi invalid he could not enter public life and studied extensively to compensate Although little is known about Cicero s mother Helvia it was common for the wives of important Roman citizens to be responsible for the management of the household Cicero s brother Quintus wrote in a letter that she was a thrifty housewife 20 Cicero s cognomen or personal surname comes from the Latin for chickpea cicer Plutarch explains that the name was originally given to one of Cicero s ancestors who had a cleft in the tip of his nose resembling a chickpea However it is more likely that Cicero s ancestors prospered through the cultivation and sale of chickpeas 21 Romans often chose down to earth personal surnames The famous family names of Fabius Lentulus and Piso come from the Latin names of beans lentils and peas respectively Plutarch writes that Cicero was urged to change this deprecatory name when he entered politics but refused saying that he would make Cicero more glorious than Scaurus Swollen ankled and Catulus Puppy 22 The Young Cicero Reading by Vincenzo Foppa fresco 1464 now at the Wallace Collection During this period in Roman history cultured meant being able to speak both Latin and Greek Cicero was therefore educated in the teachings of the ancient Greek philosophers poets and historians as he obtained much of his understanding of the theory and practice of rhetoric from the Greek poet Archias 23 and from the Greek rhetorician Apollonius 24 Cicero used his knowledge of Greek to translate many of the theoretical concepts of Greek philosophy into Latin thus translating Greek philosophical works for a larger audience It was precisely his broad education that tied him to the traditional Roman elite 25 Cicero s interest in philosophy figured heavily in his later career and led to him providing a comprehensive account of Greek philosophy for a Roman audience 26 including creating a philosophical vocabulary in Latin 27 In 87 BC Philo of Larissa the head of the Platonic Academy that had been founded by Plato in Athens about 300 years earlier arrived in Rome Cicero inspired by an extraordinary zeal for philosophy 28 sat enthusiastically at his feet and absorbed Carneades Academic Skeptic philosophy 29 Cicero said of Plato s Dialogues that if Zeus were to speak he would use their language 30 He would in due course honor them with his own convivial dialogues 31 According to Plutarch Cicero was an extremely talented student whose learning attracted attention from all over Rome 32 affording him the opportunity to study Roman law under Quintus Mucius Scaevola 33 Cicero s fellow students were Gaius Marius Minor Servius Sulpicius Rufus who became a famous lawyer one of the few whom Cicero considered superior to himself in legal matters and Titus Pomponius The latter two became Cicero s friends for life and Pomponius who later received the nickname Atticus and whose sister married Cicero s brother would become in Cicero s own words as a second brother with both maintaining a lifelong correspondence 25 In 79 BC Cicero left for Greece Asia Minor and Rhodes This was perhaps to avoid the potential wrath of Sulla as Plutarch claims 34 35 though Cicero himself says it was to hone his skills and improve his physical fitness 36 In Athens he studied philosophy with Antiochus of Ascalon the Old Academic and initiator of Middle Platonism 37 In Asia Minor he met the leading orators of the region and continued to study with them Cicero then journeyed to Rhodes to meet his former teacher Apollonius Molon who had previously taught him in Rome Molon helped Cicero hone the excesses in his style as well as train his body and lungs for the demands of public speaking 38 Charting a middle path between the competing Attic and Asiatic styles Cicero would ultimately become considered second only to Demosthenes among history s orators 39 Arpino Italy birthplace of Cicero Family Edit Cicero married Terentia probably at the age of 27 in 79 BC According to the upper class mores of the day it was a marriage of convenience but lasted harmoniously for nearly 30 years Terentia s family was wealthy probably the plebeian noble house of Terenti Varrones thus meeting the needs of Cicero s political ambitions in both economic and social terms She had a half sister named Fabia who as a child had become a Vestal Virgin a great honour Terentia was a strong willed woman and citing Plutarch she took more interest in her husband s political career than she allowed him to take in household affairs 40 In the 50s BC Cicero s letters to Terentia became shorter and colder He complained to his friends that Terentia had betrayed him but did not specify in which sense Perhaps the marriage could not outlast the strain of the political upheaval in Rome Cicero s involvement in it and various other disputes between the two The divorce appears to have taken place in 51 BC or shortly before 41 In 46 or 45 BC 42 Cicero married a young girl Publilia who had been his ward It is thought that Cicero needed her money particularly after having to repay the dowry of Terentia who came from a wealthy family 43 This marriage did not last long Although his marriage to Terentia was one of convenience it is commonly known that Cicero held great love for his daughter Tullia 44 When she suddenly became ill in February 45 BC and died after having seemingly recovered from giving birth to a son in January Cicero was stunned I have lost the one thing that bound me to life he wrote to Atticus 45 Atticus told him to come for a visit during the first weeks of his bereavement so that he could comfort him when his pain was at its greatest In Atticus s large library Cicero read everything that the Greek philosophers had written about overcoming grief but my sorrow defeats all consolation 46 Caesar and Brutus as well as Servius Sulpicius Rufus sent him letters of condolence 47 48 Cicero hoped that his son Marcus would become a philosopher like him but Marcus himself wished for a military career He joined the army of Pompey in 49 BC and after Pompey s defeat at Pharsalus 48 BC he was pardoned by Caesar Cicero sent him to Athens to study as a disciple of the peripatetic philosopher Kratippos in 48 BC but he used this absence from his father s vigilant eye to eat drink and be merry 49 After Cicero s death he joined the army of the Liberatores but was later pardoned by Augustus Augustus s bad conscience for not having objected to Cicero s being put on the proscription list during the Second Triumvirate led him to aid considerably Marcus Minor s career He became an augur and was nominated consul in 30 BC together with Augustus As such he was responsible for revoking the honors of Mark Antony who was responsible for the proscription and could in this way take revenge Later he was appointed proconsul of Syria and the province of Asia 50 Public career EditMain article Political career of Cicero Early legal activity Edit Cicero wanted to pursue a public career in politics along the steps of the cursus honorum In 90 88 BC he served both Pompeius Strabo and Lucius Cornelius Sulla as they campaigned in the Social War though he had no taste for military life being an intellectual first and foremost Cicero started his career as a lawyer around 83 81 BC The first extant speech is a private case from 81 BC the pro Quinctio delivered when Cicero was aged 26 though he refers throughout to previous defenses he had already undertaken 51 His first major public case of which a written record is still extant was his 80 BC defense of Sextus Roscius on the charge of patricide 52 Taking this case was a courageous move for Cicero patricide was considered an appalling crime and the people whom Cicero accused of the murder the most notorious being Chrysogonus were favorites of Sulla At this time it would have been easy for Sulla to have the unknown Cicero murdered Cicero s defense was an indirect challenge to the dictator Sulla and on the strength of his case Roscius was acquitted 53 Soon after Cicero again challenged Sulla by criticising his disenfranchisement of Italian towns in a lost speech on behalf of a woman from Arretium 54 Cicero s case in the Pro Roscio Amerino was divided into three parts The first part detailed exactly the charge brought by Ericius Cicero explained how a rustic son of a farmer who lives off the pleasures of his own land would not have gained anything from committing patricide because he would have eventually inherited his father s land anyway The second part concerned the boldness and greed of two of the accusers Magnus and Capito Cicero told the jury that they were the more likely perpetrators of murder because the two were greedy both for conspiring together against a fellow kinsman and in particular Magnus for his boldness and for being unashamed to appear in court to support the false charges The third part explained that Chrysogonus had immense political power and the accusation was successfully made due to that power Even though Chrysogonus may not have been what Cicero said he was through rhetoric Cicero successfully made him appear to be a foreign freed man who prospered by devious means in the aftermath of the civil war Cicero surmised that it showed what kind of a person he was and that something like murder was not beneath him 55 Early political career Edit His first office was as one of the twenty annual quaestors a training post for serious public administration in a diversity of areas but with a traditional emphasis on administration and rigorous accounting of public monies under the guidance of a senior magistrate or provincial commander Cicero served as quaestor in western Sicily in 75 BC and demonstrated honesty and integrity in his dealings with the inhabitants As a result the grateful Sicilians asked Cicero to prosecute Gaius Verres a governor of Sicily who had plundered the province His prosecution of Gaius Verres was a great forensic success 56 for Cicero Governor Gaius Verres hired the prominent lawyer of a noble family Quintus Hortensius Hortalus After a lengthy period in Sicily collecting testimonials and evidence and persuading witnesses to come forward Cicero returned to Rome and won the case in a series of dramatic court battles His unique style of oratory set him apart from the flamboyant Hortensius On the conclusion of this case Cicero came to be considered the greatest orator in Rome The view that Cicero may have taken the case for reasons of his own is viable Hortensius was at this point known as the best lawyer in Rome to beat him would guarantee much success and the prestige that Cicero needed to start his career Cicero s oratorical ability is shown in his character assassination of Verres and various other techniques of persuasion used on the jury One such example is found in the speech Against Verres I where he states with you on this bench gentlemen with Marcus Acilius Glabrio as your president I do not understand what Verres can hope to achieve 57 Oratory was considered a great art in ancient Rome and an important tool for disseminating knowledge and promoting oneself in elections in part because there were no regular newspapers or mass media Cicero was neither a patrician nor a plebeian noble his rise to political office despite his relatively humble origins has traditionally been attributed to his brilliance as an orator 58 Cicero grew up in a time of civil unrest and war Sulla s victory in the first of a series of civil wars led to a new constitutional framework that undermined libertas liberty the fundamental value of the Roman Republic Nonetheless Sulla s reforms strengthened the position of the equestrian class contributing to that class s growing political power Cicero was both an Italian eques and a novus homo but more importantly he was a Roman constitutionalist His social class and loyalty to the Republic ensured that he would command the support and confidence of the people as well as the Italian middle classes The optimates faction never truly accepted Cicero and this undermined his efforts to reform the Republic while preserving the constitution Nevertheless he successfully ascended the cursus honorum holding each magistracy at or near the youngest possible age quaestor in 75 BC age 30 aedile in 69 BC age 36 and praetor in 66 BC age 39 when he served as president of the Reclamation or extortion Court He was then elected consul at age 42 Consulship Edit Cicero Denounces Catiline fresco by Cesare Maccari 1882 88 Cicero seizing the opportunity offered by optimate fear of reform was elected consul for the year 63 BC 59 60 he was elected with the support of every unit of the centuriate assembly rival members of the post Sullan establishment and the leaders of municipalities throughout post Social War Italy 60 His co consul for the year Gaius Antonius Hybrida played a minor role 61 He began his consular year by opposing a land bill proposed by a plebeian tribune which would have appointed commissioners with semi permanent authority over land reform 62 59 Cicero was also active in the courts defending Gaius Rabirius from accusations of participating in the unlawful killing of plebeian tribune Lucius Appuleius Saturninus in 100 BC 63 The prosecution occurred before the comita centuriata and threatened to reopen conflict between the Marian and Sullan factions at Rome 63 Cicero defended the use of force as being authorised by a senatus consultum ultimum which would prove similar to his own use of force under such conditions 63 The Catilinarian Conspiracy Edit Main article Second Catilinarian conspiracy source source source source source source source source source source source source track track Cicero First speech against Catilina in Latin English subtitles Most famously in part because of his own publicity 60 he thwarted a conspiracy led by Lucius Sergius Catilina to overthrow the Roman Republic with the help of foreign armed forces Cicero procured a senatus consultum ultimum a recommendation from the senate attempting to legitimise the use of force 60 and drove Catiline from the city with four vehement speeches the Catiline Orations which remain outstanding examples of his rhetorical style The Orations listed Catiline and his followers debaucheries and denounced Catiline s senatorial sympathizers as roguish and dissolute debtors clinging to Catiline as a final and desperate hope Cicero demanded that Catiline and his followers leave the city At the conclusion of Cicero s first speech which was made in the Temple of Jupiter Stator Catiline hurriedly left the Senate In his following speeches Cicero did not directly address Catiline He delivered the second and third orations before the people and the last one again before the Senate By these speeches Cicero wanted to prepare the Senate for the worst possible case he also delivered more evidence against Catiline 64 Catiline fled and left behind his followers to start the revolution from within while he himself assaulted the city with an army of moral and financial bankrupts or of honest fanatics and adventurers 65 It is alleged that Catiline had attempted to involve the Allobroges a tribe of Transalpine Gaul in their plot but Cicero working with the Gauls was able to seize letters that incriminated the five conspirators and forced them to confess in front of the Senate 66 The senate then deliberated upon the conspirators punishment As it was the dominant advisory body to the various legislative assemblies rather than a judicial body there were limits to its power however martial law was in effect and it was feared that simple house arrest or exile the standard options would not remove the threat to the state At first Decimus Junius Silanus spoke for the extreme penalty many were swayed by Julius Caesar who decried the precedent it would set and argued in favor of life imprisonment in various Italian towns Cato the Younger rose in defense of the death penalty and the entire Senate finally agreed on the matter Cicero had the conspirators taken to the Tullianum the notorious Roman prison where they were strangled Cicero himself accompanied the former consul Publius Cornelius Lentulus Sura one of the conspirators to the Tullianum citation needed Cicero received the honorific pater patriae for his efforts to suppress the conspiracy but lived thereafter in fear of trial or exile for having put Roman citizens to death without trial citation needed While the senatus consultum ultimum gave some legitimacy to the use of force against the conspirators b Cicero also argued that Catiline s conspiracy by virtue of its treason made the conspirators enemies of the state and forfeited the protections intrinsically possessed by Roman citizens 63 The consuls moved decisively Antonius Hybrida was dispatched to defeat Catiline in battle that year preventing Crassus or Pompey from exploiting the situation for their own political aims 67 After the suppression of the conspiracy Cicero was proud of his accomplishment citation needed 68 Some of his political enemies argued that though the act gained Cicero popularity he exaggerated the extent of his success He overestimated his popularity again several years later after being exiled from Italy and then allowed back from exile At this time he claimed that the republic would be restored along with him 69 Many Romans at the time led by Populares politicians Gaius Julius Caesar and patrician turned plebeian Publius Clodius Pulcher believed that Cicero s evidence against Catiline was fabricated and the witnesses were bribed Cicero who had been elected consul with the support of the Optimates promoted their position as advocates of the status quo resisting social changes especially more privileges for the average inhabitants of Rome citation needed Shortly after completing his consulship in late 62 BC Cicero arranged the purchase of a large townhouse on the Palatine Hill previously owned by Rome s richest citizen Marcus Licinius Crassus 70 It cost an exorbitant sum 3 5 million sesterces which required Cicero to arrange for a loan from his co consul Gaius Antonius Hybrida based on the expected profits from Antonius s proconsulship in Macedonia 71 72 At the beginning of his consulship Cicero had made an arrangement with Hybrida to grant Hybrida the profitable province of Macedonia that had been granted to Cicero by the Senate in exchange for Hybrida staying out of Cicero s way for the year and a quarter of the profits from the province 72 In return Cicero gained a lavish house which he proudly boasted was in conspectu prope totius urbis in sight of nearly the whole city only a short walk from the Roman Forum 73 Exile and return EditIn 60 BC Julius Caesar invited Cicero to be the fourth member of his existing partnership with Pompey and Marcus Licinius Crassus an assembly that would eventually be called the First Triumvirate Cicero refused the invitation because he suspected it would undermine the Republic 74 During Caesar s consulship of 59 BC the triumvirate had achieved many of their goals of land reform publicani debt forgiveness ratification of Pompeian conquests etc With Caesar leaving for his provinces they wished to maintain their hold on politics They engineered the adoption of patrician Publius Clodius Pulcher into a plebeian family and had him elected as one of the ten tribunes of the plebs for 58 BC 75 Clodius used the triumvirate s backing to push through legislation that benefited them He introduced several laws the leges Clodiae that made him popular with the people strengthening his power base then he turned on Cicero by threatening exile to anyone who executed a Roman citizen without a trial Cicero having executed members of the Catiline conspiracy four years previously without formal trial was clearly the intended target 76 Furthermore many believed that Clodius acted in concert with the triumvirate who feared that Cicero would seek to abolish many of Caesar s accomplishments while consul the year before Cicero argued that the senatus consultum ultimum indemnified him from punishment and he attempted to gain the support of the senators and consuls especially of Pompey 77 Cicero grew out his hair dressed in mourning and toured the streets Clodius gangs dogged him hurling abuse stones and even excrement Hortensius trying to rally to his old rival s support was almost lynched The Senate and the consuls were cowed Caesar who was still encamped near Rome was apologetic but said he could do nothing when Cicero brought himself to grovel in the proconsul s tent Everyone seemed to have abandoned Cicero 78 After Clodius passed a law to deny to Cicero fire and water i e shelter within four hundred miles of Rome Cicero went into exile 76 He arrived at Thessalonica on 23 May 58 BC 79 80 81 In his absence Clodius who lived next door to Cicero on the Palatine arranged for Cicero s house to be confiscated by the state and was even able to purchase a part of the property in order to extend his own house 73 After demolishing Cicero s house Clodius had the land consecrated and symbolically erected a temple of Liberty aedes Libertatis on the vacant land 82 Cicero s exile caused him to fall into depression He wrote to Atticus Your pleas have prevented me from committing suicide But what is there to live for Don t blame me for complaining My afflictions surpass any you ever heard of earlier 83 After the intervention of recently elected tribune Titus Annius Milo acting on the behalf of Pompey who wanted Cicero as a client 76 the Senate voted in favor of recalling Cicero from exile Clodius cast the single vote against the decree Cicero returned to Italy on 5 August 57 BC landing at Brundisium 84 He was greeted by a cheering crowd and to his delight his beloved daughter Tullia 85 In his Oratio De Domo Sua Ad Pontifices Cicero convinced the College of Pontiffs to rule that the consecration of his land was invalid thereby allowing him to regain his property and rebuild his house on the Palatine 86 87 Cicero tried to re enter politics as an independent operator 76 but his attempts to attack portions of Caesar s legislation were unsuccessful 75 and encouraged Caesar to re solidify his political alliance with Pompey and Crassus 88 The conference at Luca in 56 BC left the three man alliance in domination of the republic s politics this forced Cicero to recant and support the triumvirate out of fear from being entirely excluded from public life 89 After the conference Cicero lavishly praised Caesar s achievements got the Senate to vote a thanksgiving for Caesar s victories and grant money to pay his troops citation needed He also delivered a speech On the consular provinces Latin de provinciis consularibus 89 which checked an attempt by Caesar s enemies to strip him of his provinces in Gaul 90 After this a cowed Cicero concentrated on his literary works It is uncertain whether he was directly involved in politics for the following few years 91 Governorship of Cilicia EditIn 51 BC he reluctantly accepted a promagistracy as proconsul in Cilicia for the year there were few other former consuls eligible as a result of a legislative requirement enacted by Pompey in 52 BC specifying an interval of five years between a consulship or praetorship and a provincial command 92 93 He served as proconsul of Cilicia from May 51 BC arriving in the provinces three months later around August 92 He was given instructions to keep nearby Cappadocia loyal to King Ariobarzanes III which he achieved satisfactorily without war In 53 BC Marcus Licinius Crassus had been defeated by the Parthians at the Battle of Carrhae This opened the Roman East for a Parthian invasion causing unrest in Syria and Cilicia Cicero restored calm by his mild system of government He discovered that a great amount of public property had been embezzled by corrupt previous governors and members of their staff and did his utmost to restore it Thus he greatly improved the condition of the cities 94 He retained the civil rights of and exempted from penalties the men who gave the property back 95 Besides this he was extremely frugal in his outlays for staff and private expenses during his governorship and this made him highly popular among the natives 96 Previous governors had extorted enormous sums from the provincials in order to supply their households and bodyguards Besides his activity in ameliorating the hard pecuniary situation of the province Cicero was also creditably active in the military sphere Early in his governorship he received information that prince Pacorus son of Orodes II the king of the Parthians had crossed the Euphrates and was ravaging the Syrian countryside and had even besieged Cassius the interim Roman commander in Syria in Antioch 97 Cicero eventually marched with two understrength legions and a large contingent of auxiliary cavalry to Cassius s relief Pacorus and his army had already given up on besieging Antioch and were heading south through Syria ravaging the countryside again Cassius and his legions followed them harrying them wherever they went eventually ambushing and defeating them near Antigonea 98 Another large troop of Parthian horsemen was defeated by Cicero s cavalry who happened to run into them while scouting ahead of the main army Cicero next defeated some robbers who were based on Mount Amanus and was hailed as imperator by his troops Afterwards he led his army against the independent Cilician mountain tribes besieging their fortress of Pindenissum It took him 47 days to reduce the place which fell in December 99 On 30 July 50 BC Cicero left the province 100 to his brother Quintus who had accompanied him on his governorship as his legate 101 On his way back to Rome he stopped in Rhodes and then went to Athens where he caught up with his old friend Titus Pomponius Atticus and met men of great learning 102 Julius Caesar s civil war EditCicero arrived in Rome on 4 January 49 BC 100 He stayed outside the pomerium to retain his promagisterial powers either in expectation of a triumph or to retain his independent command authority in the coming civil war 100 The struggle between Pompey and Julius Caesar grew more intense in 50 BC Cicero favored Pompey seeing him as a defender of the senate and Republican tradition but at that time avoided openly alienating Caesar 103 When Caesar invaded Italy in 49 BC Cicero fled Rome Caesar seeking an endorsement by a senior senator courted Cicero s favor but even so Cicero slipped out of Italy and traveled to Dyrrachium Epidamnos Illyria where Pompey s staff was situated 104 Cicero traveled with the Pompeian forces to Pharsalus in 48 BC 105 though he was quickly losing faith in the competence and righteousness of the Pompeian side Eventually he provoked the hostility of his fellow senator Cato who told him that he would have been of more use to the cause of the optimates if he had stayed in Rome After Caesar s victory at the Battle of Pharsalus on 9 August Cicero refused to take command of the Pompeian forces and continue the war 106 He returned to Rome still as a promagistrate with his lictors in 47 BC and dismissed them upon his crossing the pomerium and renouncing his command 106 Caesar pardoned him and Cicero tried to adjust to the situation and maintain his political work hoping that Caesar might revive the Republic and its institutions In a letter to Varro on c 20 April 46 BC Cicero outlined his strategy under Caesar s dictatorship Cicero however was taken by surprise when the Liberatores assassinated Caesar on the ides of March 44 BC Cicero was not included in the conspiracy even though the conspirators were sure of his sympathy Marcus Junius Brutus called out Cicero s name asking him to restore the republic when he lifted his bloodstained dagger after the assassination 107 A letter Cicero wrote in February 43 BC to Trebonius one of the conspirators began How I could wish that you had invited me to that most glorious banquet on the Ides of March 108 109 Cicero became a popular leader during the period of instability following the assassination He had no respect for Mark Antony who was scheming to take revenge upon Caesar s murderers In exchange for amnesty for the assassins he arranged for the Senate to agree not to declare Caesar to have been a tyrant which allowed the Caesarians to have lawful support and kept Caesar s reforms and policies intact 110 Opposition to Mark Antony and death Edit Marcus Tullius Cicero dragged from his litter and assassinated by soldiers under the command of Marc Antony 43 BC 1880 illustration Cicero and Antony now became the two leading men in Rome Cicero as spokesman for the Senate Antony as consul leader of the Caesarian faction and unofficial executor of Caesar s public will Relations between the two were never friendly and worsened after Cicero claimed that Antony was taking liberties in interpreting Caesar s wishes and intentions Octavian was Caesar s adopted son and heir After he returned to Italy Cicero began to play him against Antony He praised Octavian declaring he would not make the same mistakes as his father He attacked Antony in a series of speeches he called the Philippics 111 after Demosthenes s denunciations of Philip II of Macedon At the time Cicero s popularity as a public figure was unrivalled 112 The Vengeance of Fulvia by Francisco Maura y Montaner 1888 depicting Fulvia inspecting the severed head of Cicero Cicero supported Decimus Junius Brutus Albinus as governor of Cisalpine Gaul Gallia Cisalpina and urged the Senate to name Antony an enemy of the state The speech of Lucius Piso Caesar s father in law delayed proceedings against Antony Antony was later declared an enemy of the state when he refused to lift the siege of Mutina which was in the hands of Decimus Brutus Cicero s plan to drive out Antony failed Antony and Octavian reconciled and allied with Lepidus to form the Second Triumvirate after the successive battles of Forum Gallorum and Mutina The Triumvirate began proscribing their enemies and potential rivals immediately after legislating the alliance into official existence for a term of five years with consular imperium Cicero and all of his contacts and supporters were numbered among the enemies of the state even though Octavian argued for two days against Cicero being added to the list 113 Cicero s death France 15th century Cicero was one of the most viciously and doggedly hunted among the proscribed He was viewed with sympathy by a large segment of the public and many people refused to report that they had seen him He was caught on 7 December 43 BC leaving his villa in Formiae in a litter heading to the seaside where he hoped to embark on a ship destined for Macedonia 114 When his killers Herennius a Centurion and Popilius a Tribune arrived Cicero s own slaves said they had not seen him but he was given away by Philologus a freedman of his brother Quintus Cicero 114 Cicero about age 60 from a marble bust As reported by Seneca the Elder according to the historian Aufidius Bassus Cicero s last words are said to have been Ego vero consisto Accede veterane et si hoc saltim potes recte facere incide cervicem I go no further approach veteran soldier and if you can at least do so much properly sever this neck 115 He bowed to his captors leaning his head out of the litter in a gladiatorial gesture to ease the task By baring his neck and throat to the soldiers he was indicating that he would not resist According to Plutarch Herennius first slew him then cut off his head On Antony s instructions his hands which had penned the Philippics against Antony were cut off as well these were nailed along with his head on the Rostra in the Forum Romanum according to the tradition of Marius and Sulla both of whom had displayed the heads of their enemies in the Forum Cicero was the only victim of the proscriptions who was displayed in that manner According to Cassius Dio in a story often mistakenly attributed to Plutarch 116 Antony s wife Fulvia took Cicero s head pulled out his tongue and jabbed it repeatedly with her hairpin in final revenge against Cicero s power of speech 117 Cicero s son Marcus Tullius Cicero Minor during his year as a consul in 30 BC avenged his father s death to a certain extent when he announced to the Senate Mark Antony s naval defeat at Actium in 31 BC by Octavian citation needed Octavian is reported to have praised Cicero as a patriot and a scholar of meaning in later times within the circle of his family 118 However it was Octavian s acquiescence that had allowed Cicero to be killed as Cicero was condemned by the new triumvirate 119 Cicero s career as a statesman was marked by inconsistencies and a tendency to shift his position in response to changes in the political climate His indecision may be attributed to his sensitive and impressionable personality he was prone to overreaction in the face of political and private change citation needed Would that he had been able to endure prosperity with greater self control and adversity with more fortitude wrote C Asinius Pollio a contemporary Roman statesman and historian 120 121 Legacy Edit Henry VIII s childhood copy of De Officiis bearing the inscription in his hand Thys boke is myne Prynce Henry Cicero has been traditionally considered the master of Latin prose with Quintilian declaring that Cicero was not the name of a man but of eloquence itself 122 The English words Ciceronian meaning eloquent and cicerone meaning local guide derive from his name 123 124 He is credited with transforming Latin from a modest utilitarian language into a versatile literary medium capable of expressing abstract and complicated thoughts with clarity 125 Julius Caesar praised Cicero s achievement by saying it is more important to have greatly extended the frontiers of the Roman spirit than the frontiers of the Roman empire 126 According to John William Mackail Cicero s unique and imperishable glory is that he created the language of the civilized world and used that language to create a style which nineteen centuries have not replaced and in some respects have hardly altered 127 Cicero was also an energetic writer with an interest in a wide variety of subjects in keeping with the Hellenistic philosophical and rhetorical traditions in which he was trained The quality and ready accessibility of Ciceronian texts favored very wide distribution and inclusion in teaching curricula as suggested by a graffito at Pompeii admonishing You will like Cicero or you will be whipped 128 Cicero was greatly admired by influential Church Fathers such as Augustine of Hippo who credited Cicero s lost Hortensius for his eventual conversion to Christianity 129 and St Jerome who had a feverish vision in which he was accused of being follower of Cicero and not of Christ before the judgment seat 130 This influence further increased after the Early Middle Ages in Europe which more of his writings survived than any other Latin author Medieval philosophers were influenced by Cicero s writings on natural law and innate rights 131 additional citation s needed Petrarch s rediscovery of Cicero s letters provided the impetus for searches for ancient Greek and Latin writings scattered throughout European monasteries and the subsequent rediscovery of classical antiquity led to the Renaissance Subsequently Cicero became synonymous with classical Latin to such an extent that a number of humanist scholars began to assert that no Latin word or phrase should be used unless it appeared in Cicero s works a stance criticised by Erasmus 132 His voluminous correspondence much of it addressed to his friend Atticus has been especially influential introducing the art of refined letter writing to European culture Cornelius Nepos the first century BC biographer of Atticus remarked that Cicero s letters contained such a wealth of detail concerning the inclinations of leading men the faults of the generals and the revolutions in the government that their reader had little need for a history of the period 133 Among Cicero s admirers were Desiderius Erasmus Martin Luther and John Locke 134 Following the invention of Johannes Gutenberg s printing press De Officiis was the second book printed in Europe after the Gutenberg Bible Scholars note Cicero s influence on the rebirth of religious toleration in the 17th century 135 Cicero was especially popular with the Philosophes of the 18th century including Edward Gibbon Diderot David Hume Montesquieu and Voltaire 136 Gibbon wrote of his first experience reading the author s collective works thus I tasted the beauty of the language I breathed the spirit of freedom and I imbibed from his precepts and examples the public and private sense of a man after finishing the great author a library of eloquence and reason I formed a more extensive plan of reviewing the Latin classics 137 Voltaire called Cicero the greatest as well as the most elegant of Roman philosophers and even staged a play based on Cicero s role in the Catilinarian conspiracy called Rome Sauvee ou Catilina to make young people who go to the theatre acquainted with Cicero 138 Voltaire was spurred to pen the drama as a rebuff to his rival Claude Prosper Jolyot de Crebillon s own play Catilina which had portrayed Cicero as a coward and villain who hypocritically married his own daughter to Catiline 139 Montesquieu produced his Discourse on Cicero in 1717 in which he heaped praise on the author because he rescued philosophy from the hands of scholars and freed it from the confusion of a foreign language 140 Montesquieu went on to declare that Cicero was of all the ancients the one who had the most personal merit and whom I would prefer to resemble 139 141 Internationally Cicero the republican inspired the Founding Fathers of the United States and the revolutionaries of the French Revolution 142 John Adams said As all the ages of the world have not produced a greater statesman and philosopher united than Cicero his authority should have great weight 143 Jefferson names Cicero as one of a handful of major figures who contributed to a tradition of public right that informed his draft of the Declaration of Independence and shaped American understandings of the common sense basis for the right of revolution 144 Camille Desmoulins said of the French republicans in 1789 that they were mostly young people who nourished by the reading of Cicero at school had become passionate enthusiasts for liberty 145 Jim Powell starts his book on the history of liberty with the sentence Marcus Tullius Cicero expressed principles that became the bedrock of liberty in the modern world 146 Likewise no other ancient personality has inspired as much venomous dislike as Cicero especially in more modern times 147 His commitment to the values of the Republic accommodated a hatred of the poor and persistent opposition to the advocates and mechanisms of popular representation 148 Friedrich Engels referred to him as the most contemptible scoundrel in history for upholding republican democracy while at the same time denouncing land and class reforms 149 Cicero has faced criticism for exaggerating the democratic qualities of republican Rome and for defending the Roman oligarchy against the popular reforms of Caesar 150 Michael Parenti admits Cicero s abilities as an orator but finds him a vain pompous and hypocritical personality who when it suited him could show public support for popular causes that he privately despised Parenti presents Cicero s prosecution of the Catiline conspiracy as legally flawed at least and possibly unlawful 151 Cicero also had an influence on modern astronomy Nicolaus Copernicus searching for ancient views on earth motion said that he first found in Cicero that Hicetas supposed the earth to move 152 Notably Cicero was the name attributed to size 12 font in typesetting table drawers For ease of reference type sizes 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 12 14 16 and 20 were all given different names 153 Works Edit Marci Tullii Ciceronis Opera Omnia 1566 Main article Writings of Cicero Cicero was declared a righteous pagan by the Early Church 154 and therefore many of his works were deemed worthy of preservation The Bogomils considered him a rare exception of a pagan saint 155 Subsequent Roman and medieval Christian writers quoted liberally from his works De re publica On the Commonwealth and De Legibus On the Laws and much of his work has been recreated from these surviving fragments Cicero also articulated an early abstract conceptualization of rights based on ancient law and custom Of Cicero s books six on rhetoric have survived as well as parts of seven on philosophy 156 Of his speeches 88 were recorded but only 52 survive c 157 In archaeology EditCicero s great repute in Italy has led to numerous ruins being identified as having belonged to him though none have been substantiated with absolute certainty In Formia two Roman era ruins are popularly believed to be Cicero s mausoleum the Tomba di Cicerone and the villa where he was assassinated in 43 BC The latter building is centered around a central hall with Doric columns and a coffered vault with a separate nymphaeum on five acres of land near Formia 158 A modern villa was built on the site after the Rubino family purchased the land from Ferdinand II of the Two Sicilies in 1868 Cicero s supposed tomb is a 24 meter 79 feet tall tower on an opus quadratum base on the ancient Via Appia outside of Formia Some suggest that it is not in fact Cicero s tomb but a monument built on the spot where Cicero was intercepted and assassinated while trying to reach the sea 159 In Pompeii a large villa excavated in the mid 18th century just outside the Herculaneum Gate was widely believed to have been Cicero s who was known to have owned a holiday villa in Pompeii he called his Pompeianum The villa was stripped of its fine frescoes and mosaics and then re buried after 1763 it has yet to be re excavated 160 However contemporaneous descriptions of the building from the excavators combined with Cicero s own references to his Pompeianum differ making it unlikely that it is Cicero s villa 161 In Rome the location of Cicero s house has been roughly identified from excavations of the Republican era stratum on the northwestern slope of the Palatine Hill 162 163 Cicero s domus has long been known to have stood in the area according to his own descriptions and those of later authors but there is some debate about whether it stood near the base of the hill very close to the Roman Forum or nearer to the summit 162 164 During his life the area was the most desirable in Rome densely occupied with Patrician houses including the Domus Publica of Julius Caesar and the home of Cicero s mortal enemy Clodius 165 Notable fictional portrayals EditIn Dante s 1320 poem the Divine Comedy the author encounters Cicero among other philosophers in Limbo 166 Ben Jonson dramatised the conspiracy of Catiline in his play Catiline His Conspiracy featuring Cicero as a character 167 Cicero also appears as a minor character in William Shakespeare s play Julius Caesar 168 Cicero was portrayed on the motion picture screen by British actor Alan Napier in the 1953 film Julius Caesar based on Shakespeare s play 169 He has also been played by such noted actors as Michael Hordern in Cleopatra 170 and Andre Morell in the 1970 Julius Caesar 171 Most recently Cicero was portrayed by David Bamber in the HBO series Rome 2005 2007 and appeared in both seasons 172 In the historical novel series Masters of Rome Colleen McCullough presents a not so flattering depiction of Cicero s career showing him struggling with an inferiority complex and vanity morally flexible and fatally indiscreet while his rival Julius Caesar is shown in a more approving light 173 Cicero is portrayed as a hero in the novel A Pillar of Iron by Taylor Caldwell 1965 Robert Harris novels Imperium Lustrum published under the name Conspirata in the United States and Dictator comprise a three part series based on the life of Cicero In these novels Cicero s character is depicted in a more favorable way than in those of McCullough with his positive traits equaling or outweighing his weaknesses while conversely Caesar is depicted as more sinister than in McCullough 174 Cicero is a major recurring character in the Roma Sub Rosa series of mystery novels by Steven Saylor 175 He also appears several times as a peripheral character in John Maddox Roberts SPQR series 176 Samuel Barnett portrays Cicero in a 2017 audio drama series pilot produced by Big Finish Productions A full series was released the following year 177 All Episodes are written by David Llewellyn 178 and directed and produced by Scott Handcock 179 Llewellyn Handcock and Barnett re teamed in the Doctor Who audio drama Tartarus also produced by Big Finish starring Peter Davison as the 5th Doctor It is not intended to be a part of the Cicero series in Vortex Big Finish s official free online magazine Llewellyn revealed that he was worried that if we had Cicero meeting aliens people might go back to the Cicero series and see it through a sci fi lens Then I remembered that Simon Callow still performs as Charles Dickens and that he played Dickens before reprising him in the Doctor Who TV episode The Unquiet Dead so I got over myself 180 See also Edit Ancient Rome portalCaecilia Attica Caecilia Metella daughter of Metellus Celer Civis romanus sum Clausula rhetoric A Dialogue Concerning Oratorical Partitions E pluribus unum Esse quam videri Ipse dixit List of ancient Romans Lorem ipsum Marcantonius Majoragio Marcus Tullius Tiro Marius Nizolius O tempora o mores Otium Socratici viri Tempest in a teapot Translation Writings of CiceroNotes Edit The name is infrequently anglicized as Tully 2 ˈ t ʌ l i Wiedemann describes the senatus consultum ultimum by the late republic as little more than a fig leaf by those who could muster a majority in the senate to legitimate the use of force 63 Sources vary but seem to indicate that 52 survived in whole and 6 more in partReferences EditCitations Edit IEP Cicero Academic Skepticism E g in Howard Jones Master Tully Cicero in Tudor England Nieuwkoop De Graaf 1998 Cicero Academica Book II Section 65 Ferguson amp Balsdon Rawson E Cicero a portrait 1975 p 303 Haskell Henry Joseph 1964 This was Cicero Fawcett Publications Incorporated pp 300 301 Harrison Stephen 2008 A Companion to Latin Literature John Wiley amp Sons p 31 ISBN 978 1405137379 Latin literature in the period 90 40 BC presents one feature that is unique in Classical and perhaps even in the whole of Western literature Although it is a period from which a substantial amount of literature in a wide variety of genres survives more than 75 per cent of that literature was written by a single man Marcus Tullius Cicero Cicero wrote speeches philosophical and rhetorical trea tises letters and poetry which in terms of quantity outweigh all other extant writings of the period Merriam Webster Inc 1995 Ciceronian period Merriam Webster s Encyclopedia of Literature Merriam Webster p 244 ISBN 978 0877790426 Retrieved 27 August 2013 Cicero Selected Works 1971 p 24 Cicero Acad 2 17 18 Conte G B Latin Literature a history 1987 p 199 Severed Heads and Hands Photo Archive Retrieved 9 December 2022 Wootton David 1996 Modern Political Thought Readings from Machiavelli to Nietzsche Hackett Publishing p 1 ISBN 978 0872203419 Retrieved 27 August 2013 Zielinski Tadeusz Cicero Im Wandel Der Jahrhunderte Nabu Press Wood Neal 1991 Cicero s Social and Political Thought University of California Press ISBN 978 0520074279 Nicgorski Walter Cicero and the Natural Law Natural Law Natural Rights and American Constitutionalism Griffin Miriam Boardman John Griffin Jasper Murray Oswyn 2001 The Oxford Illustrated History of the Roman World Oxford University Press pp 76ff ISBN 978 0192854360 Retrieved 10 August 2011 Shackleton Bailey D R 1999 Introduction Letters to Atticus By Cicero Loeb Classical Library Vol 1 Translated by Shackleton Bailey D R Cambridge Harvard University Press p 3 Marcus Tullius Cicero was born on 3 January 106 BC at his family home near the hill town of Arpinum still Arpino about seventy miles to the east of Rome Sylloge Inscriptionum Graecarum 747 Rawson E Cicero a portrait 1975 pp 5 6 Cicero Ad Familiares 16 26 2 Quintus to Cicero Trollope Anthony The Life of Cicero Volume 1 p 42 Trollope here uses the term vetch or vetches to translate cicer Though neither Cicero s ancestors nor Trollope were practitioners of modern taxonomy it is safe to say that cicer refers to some nutritive member or members of the Fabaceae also known as Leguminosae family On the evidence here the identification of Trollope s vetch and the chickpea Cicer arietinum remains uncertain Plutarch Cicero 1 3 5 Everitt A Cicero The Life and Times of Rome s Greatest Politician 2001 p 34 Plutarch Life of Caesar University of Chicago p 447 After this Sulla s power being now on the wane and Caesar s friends at home inviting him to return Caesar sailed to Rhodes to study under Apollonius the son of Molon an illustrious rhetorician with the reputation of a worthy character of whom Cicero also was a pupil a b Everitt A Cicero The Life and Times of Rome s Greatest Politician 2001 p 35 De Officiis book 1 n 1 Everitt A Cicero The Life and Times of Rome s Greatest Politician 2001 pp 253 255 Rawson Cicero a portrait 1975 p 18 J P F Wynne Cicero s Skepticism in Skepticism From Antiquity to the Present Bloomsbury Academic 2018 p 93 Plato www ellopos net C B Krebs A seemingly artless conversation Classical Philology 104 2009 90 106 Plutarch Cicero 2 2 Plutarch Cicero 3 2 Haskell H J This was Cicero 1940 p 83 Plutarch Cicero 3 2 5 Cicero Brutus 313 314 Cicero Brutus 315 Cicero Brutus 316 Gesine Manuwald Cicero Philippics 3 9 vol 2 Berlin Walter de Gruyter 2007 pp 129ff Rawson E Cicero a portrait 1975 p 25 Susan Treggiari Terentia Tullia and Publilia the women of Cicero s family London Routledge 2007 pp 76ff Treggiari op cit p 133 Rawson E Cicero p 225 Haskell H J This was Cicero p 95 Haskell H J This was Cicero 1964 p 249 Cicero Letters to Atticus 12 14 Rawson E Cicero p 225 Rawson E Cicero p 226 Cicero Samtliga brev Collected letters Haskell H J 1964 This was Cicero pp 103 104 Paavo Castren amp L Pietila Castren Antiikin kasikirja Encyclopedia of the Ancient World E g Cicero pro Quinctio 4 Rawson E Cicero a portrait 1975 p 22 Everitt A Cicero The Life and Times of Rome s Greatest Politician 2001 p 61 Cicero pro Caecina 97 Vasaly Ann 1993 Representation Images of the World in a Ciceronian Territory Berkeley University of California Press pp 158 168 ISBN 978 0520077553 Archived from the original on 6 March 2014 Boardman John 2001 The Oxford illustrated history of the Roman world OUP Oxford pp 84ff ISBN 978 0192854360 Retrieved 10 August 2011 extortionate Trans Grant Michael Cicero Selected Works London Penguin Books 1960 III The First Oration Against Catiline by Cicero Rome 218 B C 84 A D Vol II Bryan William Jennings ed 1906 The World s Famous Orations www bartleby com a b John Leach Pompey the Great p 106 a b c d Wiedemann 1994 p 42 Reed Lawrence W 29 August 2014 How to Lose a Constitution Lessons from Roman History Lawrence W Reed fee org Retrieved 30 January 2023 Wiedemann 1994 p 43 a b c d e Wiedemann 1994 p 44 Cicero Marcus Tullius Selected Works Penguin Books Ltd Great Britain 1971 Abbott Frank Frost 1901 A History and Description of Roman Political Institutions United States Ginn p 110 Cicero In Catilinam 3 2 at the Perseus Project Sallust Bellum Catilinae 40 45 at Lacus Curtius Plutarch Cicero 18 4 at Lacus Curtius Wiedemann 1994 p 46 Gwatkin W E 1942 Catilinarian conspiracy the aftermath of the The Classical Bulletin 18 15 ProQuest 1296296031 Clayton Edward Cicero 106 43 BC Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Retrieved 21 October 2013 Wiedemann 1994 p 47 Anthony Everitt 2003 Cicero The Life and Times of Rome s Greatest Orator Random House pp 115 116 a b Dunstan William 2010 Ancient Rome Rowman and Littlefield Publishers pp 163 164 ISBN 0742568342 a b Steven M Cerutti 1997 The Location of the Houses of Cicero and Clodius and the Porticus Catuli on the Palatine Hill Vol 118 no 3 American Journal of Philology p 417 Rawson E Cicero 1984 106 a b Wiedemann 1994 p 51 a b c d Wiedemann 1994 p 50 Tom Holland Rubicon pp 237 239 Tom Holland Rubicon pp 238 239 Haskell H J This was Cicero 1964 p 200 Haskell H J This was Cicero 1964 p 201 Plutarch Cicero 32 Anthony Everitt 2003 Cicero Random House p 145 ISBN 978 0375758959 Haskell H J This was Cicero 1964 p 201 Cicero Samtliga brev Collected letters in a Swedish translation Haskell H J This was Cicero p 204 Anthony Everitt 2003 Cicero Random House p 165 ISBN 978 0375758959 Cicero De Domo Sua perseus tufts edu Wiedemann 1994 p 52 a b Wiedemann 1994 p 53 John Leach Pompey the Great p 144 Grant M Cicero Selected Works p 67 a b Wiedemann 1994 p 59 Everitt A Cicero The Life and Times of Rome s Greatest Politician 2001 pp 186 188 Alfred John Church Roman Life in the Days of Cicero Kindle edition ch XIII loc 1834 Church loc 1871 Church loc 1834 Church loc 1845 Gareth C Sampson The defeat of Rome Crassus Carrhae amp the invasion of the East pp 155 158 Cicero Letters to friends 15 3 1 Gareth C Sampson The defeat of Rome Crassus Carrhae amp the invasion of the East p 159 Cicero Letters to friends 2 10 2 Church loc 1855 a b c Wiedemann 1994 p 62 Church ibid Plutarch The Life of Cicero 36 Plutarch Life of Caesar University of Chicago p 575 It was Cicero who proposed the first honours for Caesar in the senate and their magnitude was after all not too great for a man but others added excessive honours and vied with one another in proposing them thus rendering Caesar odious and obnoxious even to the mildest citizens because of the pretension and extravagance of what was decreed for him Everitt Anthony Cicero p 215 Plutarch Cicero 38 1 a b Wiedemann 1994 p 63 Cicero Second Philippic Against Antony Cicero Ad Familiares 10 28 Matthew B Schwartz Finley Hooper Roman Letters History from a Personal Point of View p 48 Cecil W Wooten Cicero s Philippics and Their Demosthenic Model University of North Carolina Press World History in Context ic galegroup com Retrieved 3 January 2018 Appian Civil Wars 4 19 Plutarch Cicero 46 3 5 a b Haskell H J This was Cicero 1964 p 293 Seneca Suasoria 6 18 http www attalus org translate suasoria6 html Cassius Dio Roman History 47 8 4 Everitt A Cicero A turbulent life 2001 Plutarch Cicero 49 5 Banos Jose 26 February 2019 The brutal beheading of Cicero last defender of the Roman Republic National Geographic Archived from the original on 19 March 2021 Retrieved 15 March 2021 Haskell H J This was Cicero 1964 p 296 Castren and Pietila Castren Antiikin kasikirja Handbook of antiquity 2000 p 237 Quintilian Institutio Oratoria 10 1 112 Harper Douglas Ciceronian Online Etymology Dictionary Harper Douglas cicerone Online Etymology Dictionary Merriam Webster s Encyclopedia of Literature Ciceronian period 1995 p 244 Pliny Natural History 7 117 Cicero Seven orations 1912 Hasan Niyazi From Pompeii to Cyberspace Transcending barriers with Twitter Account Suspended Archived from the original on 14 November 2012 Retrieved 7 September 2012 Augustine of Hippo Confessions 3 4 Jerome Letter to Eustochium XXII 30 Goodey C F 2013 A History of Intelligence and Intellectual Disability The Shaping of Psychology in Early Modern Europe Ashgate Publishing ISBN 978 1409482352 page needed Erasmus Ciceronianus Cornelius Nepos Atticus 16 trans John Selby Watson Richards 2010 p 121 Gibson William 2006 John Marshall John Locke Toleration and Early Enlightenment Culture Religious Toleration and Arguments for Religious Toleration in Early Modern and Early Enlightenment Europe H Albion Retrieved 8 July 2012 Peter Gay 1966 The Enlightenment An Interpretation W W Norton p 105 Peter Gay 1966 The Enlightenment An Interpretation W W Norton p 56 Peter Gay 1966 The Enlightenment An Interpretation W W Norton p 106 a b Matthew Sharpe Cicero Voltaire and the philosophes in the French Enlightenment p 329 Montesquieu Discourse on Cicero Political Theory Vol 30 No 5 pp 733 737 Montesquieu Discourse on Cicero Political Theory Vol 30 No 5 p 734 De Burgh W G The legacy of the ancient world American republicanism Roman Ideology in the United States Mortimer N S Sellers NYU Press 1994 Thomas Jefferson Letter to Henry Lee 8 May 1825 in The Political Thought of American Statesmen eds Morton Frisch and Richard Stevens Itasca Ill F E Peacock Publishers 1973 12 Aulard Francois Alphonse 1901 Histoire politique de la Revolution francaise Origines et Developpement de la Democratie et de la Republique 1789 1804 Librairie Armand Colin p 5 Powell Jim 2000 The Triumph of Liberty A 2 000 Year History Told Through the Lives of Freedom s Greatest Champions Free Press pp 2 10 ISBN 978 0684859675 Bailey D R S Cicero s letters to Atticus 1978 p 16 Letters to Atticus I amp II Noted in Michael Parenti The Assassination of Julius Caesar A People s History of Ancient Rome 2003 86 ISBN 1565847970 Cicero On Duties PDF Archived from the original PDF on 19 January 2017 Michael Parenti The Assassination of Julius Caesar A People s History of Ancient Rome 2003 pp 93 107 111 ISBN 1565847970 Spielvogel Jackson 2011 Western Civilization since 1300 Cengage Learning p 492 ISBN 978 1111342197 Tomisa Mario The Impact of the Historical Development of Typography on Modern Classification of Typefaces Tehnicki Vjesnik Strojarski Fakultet Varazdin Croatia 906 ISSN 1330 3651 Everitt A Cicero The Life and Times of Rome s Greatest Politician 2003 p 259 De Burgh W G A Herrick James 2015 The History and Theory of Rhetoric An Introduction Routledge p 94 ISBN 978 1317347842 Retrieved 29 June 2021 Dueck Daniela 2020 Illiterate Geography in Classical Athens and Rome Routledge p 58 ISBN 978 1000225020 Retrieved 29 June 2021 L Richardson Jr 1976 The Princeton Encyclopedia of Classical Sites Princeton University Press Redazione ANSA 25 July 2015 Mayor launches appeal to save Cicero s villa from ruin ANSA English Retrieved 19 June 2018 Villa Cicero pompeiiinpictures com Retrieved 19 June 2018 Mary Beard 2010 The Fires of Vesuvius Pompeii Lost and Found Harvard University Press p 45 a b Bolchazy Carducci 2004 Rome Alive A Source Guide to the Ancient City p Vol 1 5 Palatine Hill archive1 village virginia edu Retrieved 20 June 2018 Filippo Coarelli 2014 Rome and Environs An Archaeological Guide p 93 Samuel Ball Platner amp Thomas Ashby 1929 Palatinus Mons Topographical Dictionary of Ancient Rome Oxford University Press Inf IV 141 Mansky Joseph March 2019 Look No More Jonson s Catiline and the Politics of Enargeia PMLA 134 2 332 350 doi 10 1632 pmla 2019 134 2 332 hdl 11244 325627 ISSN 0030 8129 S2CID 181501254 William Shakespeare Julius Caesar Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 21 February 2021 Julius Caesar at the TCM Movie Database Cleopatra at the TCM Movie Database Julius Caesar at the TCM Movie Database Rome Cast and Crew HBO Retrieved 5 December 2018 Faria Miguel A 14 August 2013 Caesar s Women McCullough s Idolatry and Politics in Ancient Rome Hacienda Publishing Archived from the original on 6 December 2018 Retrieved 5 December 2018 Higgins Charlotte 29 June 2018 Robert Harris I m not sure you can be the world s superpower and remain a democracy The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 5 December 2018 Roma Sub Rosa Mystery Series www stevensaylor com Retrieved 5 December 2018 Steel C E W 2013 The Cambridge Companion to Cicero Cambridge University Press p 356 ISBN 978 0521509930 1 Cicero Series 01 Big Finish Originals Big Finish www bigfinish com David Llewellyn Contributions Big Finish www bigfinish com Retrieved 7 September 2019 Scott Handcock Contributions Big Finish www bigfinish com Retrieved 7 September 2019 Issue 127 Vortex Big Finish www bigfinish com Retrieved 7 September 2019 Sources Edit Badian E Cicero and the Commission of 146 B C Collection Latomus 101 1969 54 65 Ferguson John amp Balsdon J P V D Marcus Tullius Cicero Encyclopaedia Britannica online Caldwell Taylor 1965 A Pillar of Iron New York Doubleday amp Company ISBN 978 0385053037 Cicero Marcus Tullius Cicero s letters to Atticus Vol I II IV VI Cambridge University Press Great Britain 1965 Cicero Marcus Tullius Latin extracts of Cicero on Himself translated by Charles Gordon Cooper University of Queensland Press Brisbane 1963 Cicero Marcus Tullius Selected Political Speeches Penguin Books Ltd Great Britain 1969 Cicero Marcus Tullius De Officiis On Duties translated by Walter Miller Harvard University Press 1913 ISBN 978 0674990333 Cicero Marcus Tullius Selected Works Penguin Books Ltd Great Britain 1971 Cowell F R 1948 Cicero and the Roman Republic Penguin Books Everitt Anthony 2001 Cicero the life and times of Rome s greatest politician New York Random House ISBN 978 0375507465 Gruen Erich S 1974 The Last Generation of the Roman Republic University of California Press Haskell H J 1942 This was Cicero Alfred A Knopf March Duane A 1989 Cicero and the Gang of Five Classical World 82 4 225 234 doi 10 2307 4350381 JSTOR 4350381 Narducci Emanuele 2009 Cicerone La parola e la politica Laterza ISBN 978 8842076056 Plutarch Penguins Classics English translation by Rex Warner Fall of the Roman Republic Six Lives by Plutarch Marius Sulla Crassus Pompey Caesar Cicero Penguin Books 1958 with Introduction and notes by Robin Seager 1972 Rawson Beryl The Politics of Friendship Pompey and Cicero Sydney University Press 1978 Rawson Elizabeth 1972 Cicero the Historian and Cicero the Antiquarian Journal of Roman Studies 62 33 45 doi 10 2307 298924 JSTOR 298924 S2CID 161169064 Rawson Elizabeth 1975 Cicero a portrait London Allen Lane ISBN 0713908645 OCLC 1531175 Richards Carl J 2010 Why We re All Romans The Roman Contribution to the Western World Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 978 0742567788 Scullard H H From the Gracchi to Nero University Paperbacks Great Britain 1968 Smith R E Cicero the Statesman Cambridge University Press 1966 Stockton David Cicero A Political Biography Oxford University Press 1971 Strachan Davidson James Leigh 1936 Cicero and the Fall of the Roman Republic Oxford Oxford University Press Taylor H 1918 Cicero A sketch of his life and works Chicago A C McClurg amp Co Uttschenko Sergej L 1978 Cicero translated from Russian by Rosemarie Pattloch VEB Deutscher Verlag der Wissenschaften Berlin Germany Cicero Wistrand M 1979 Cicero Imperator Studies in Cicero s Correspondence 51 47 B C Goteborg Wiedemann Thomas E J 1994 Cicero and the end of the Roman Republic London Bristol Classical Press ISBN 1853991937 OCLC 31494651 Yates Frances A 1974 The Art of Memory Chicago University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0226950013 Further reading EditBoissier Gaston Ciceron et ses amis Etude sur la societe romaine du temps de Cesar 1884 Everitt Anthony 2001 Cicero A turbulent life London John Murray Publishers ISBN 978 0719554933 Fuhrmann Manfred 1992 Cicero and the Roman Republic Oxford Blackwell ISBN 978 0631178798 Gildenhard Ingo 2011 Creative Eloquence The Construction of Reality in Cicero s Speeches Oxford New York Oxford University Press Hamza Gabor L optimus status civitatis di Cicerone e la sua tradizione nel pensiero politico In Tradizione romanistica e Costituzione Cinquanta anni della Corte Costituzionale della Repubblica Italiana vol II Napoli 2006 1455 1468 Hamza Gabor Ciceros Verhaltnis zu seinen Quellen mit besonderer Berucksichtigung der Darstellung der Staatslehre in De re publica KLIO Beitrage zur alten Geschichte 67 1985 492 497 Hamza Gabor Cicero und der Idealtypus des iurisconsultus Helixon 22 27 1982 1987 281 296 Hamza Gabor Il potere lo Stato nel pensiero di Cicerone e la sua attualita Revista Internacional de Derecho Romano RIDROM 10 2013 1 25 Revista Internacional de Derecho Romano Index Hamza Gabor Zur Interpretation des Naturrechts in den Werken von Cicero Pazmany Law Review 2 2014 5 15 Macdonald C 1986 De imperio Nachdr d Ausg Basingstoke 1966 ed Bristol Bristol Classical Press ISBN 978 0862921828 Holiday Ryan Hanselman Stephen 2020 Cicero the Fellow Traveler Lives of the Stoics New York Portfolio Penguin pp 114 133 ISBN 978 0525541875 Palmer Tom G 2008 Cicero 106 43 B C In Hamowy Ronald ed The Encyclopedia of Libertarianism Thousand Oaks CA Sage Cato Institute p 63 doi 10 4135 9781412965811 n42 ISBN 978 1412965804 LCCN 2008009151 OCLC 750831024 Parenti Michael 2004 The Assassination of Julius Caesar A People s History of Ancient Rome New York The New Press ISBN 978 1565849426 Powell J G F ed 1995 Cicero the philosopher twelve papers Oxford Clarendon Press ISBN 978 0198147510 Shackleton Bailey D R 1971 Cicero London Duckworth ISBN 978 0715605745 Sihler Ernest G 1914 Cicero of Arpinum A Political and Literary Biography New Haven Yale University Press Treggiari S 2007 Terentia Tullia and Publilia The women of Cicero s family London Routledge Encyclopaedia Iranica title Cicero last Weiskopf first Michael url http www iranicaonline org articles cicero as a source for parthian history volume 5 fascicle 5 pages 558 559External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Marcus Tullius Cicero Wikiquote has quotations related to Cicero Wikisource has original works by or about Cicero Latin Wikisource has original text related to this article Marcus Tullius Cicero Wikiversity has learning resources about Cicero Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Cicero Works by CiceroWorks by Cicero at Perseus Digital Library Works by Cicero in eBook form at Standard Ebooks Works by Cicero at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Cicero at Internet Archive Works by Cicero at LibriVox public domain audiobooks Works by Cicero at the Stoic Therapy eLibrary The Latin Library Latin Works of Cicero Dickinson College Commentaries Against Verres 2 1 53 86 Dickinson College Commentaries On Pompey s Command De Imperio 27 49 Horace MS 1b Laelius de Amicitia at OPenn Lewis E 66 Epistolae ad familiares Letters to friends Biographies and descriptions of Cicero s timePlutarch s biography of Cicero contained in the Parallel Lives Life of Cicero by Anthony Trollope Volume I amp Volume II Cicero by Rev W Lucas Collins Ancient Classics for English Readers Roman life in the days of Cicero by Rev Alfred J Church Social life at Rome in the Age of Cicero by W Warde Fowler At Heraklia website Archived from the original on 14 January 2006 Retrieved 31 March 2017 Dryden s translation of Cicero from Plutarch s Parallel Lives At Middlebury College website Raphael Woolf Cicero In Zalta Edward N ed Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Political officesPreceded byL Julius CaesarC Marcius Figulus Roman consul63 BC With C Antonius Hybrida Succeeded byD Junius SilanusL Licinius Murena 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