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         Cicero Marcus Tullius:     more detail
  1. M. T. CICERONIS. Quaedam Selectae, in USUM Delphini, cum Interpretatione et Variantibus Aliquot per Singulas Orationes Lectionibus. Quibus Praefigitur Vita Ciceronis per Annos Consulares Digesta. In this Edition are Introduced All the Valuable Notes of the Dauphin Edition Translated into English, Selections from Duncan and Other Commentators, and Original Observations; Also Translations of the Notes from Asconius, P. Manutius, & c, on Three of the Orations. By John G. Smart. by Marcus Tullius [106 BC - 43 BC]. Smart, John G. - Editor. Cicero, 1826-01-01

41. Cicero
Marcus Tullius Cicero. 10643 BC. _. Marble. 2001. 14 inch. Marcus TulliusCicero. 106-43 BC. _. Clay. 2001. 14 inch. Portrait Sculpture Commissions.
http://www.williamsburgsculpture.com/cicero portrait commission.htm
Cicero Original Portrait Sculpture/Bust of Cicero A portrait sculpture of the Roman Orator and Republican Marcus Tullius Cicero 106-43 BC Marble 14 inch Marcus Tullius Cicero 106-43 BC Clay 14 inch

42. Ancestry.com - Marcus Tullius Cicero, 106-43 B.C.
Marcus Tullius Cicero, 10643 BC To be ignorant of what occurred before you wereborn is to remain always a child. Marcus Tullius Cicero, 106-43 BC.
http://www.ancestry.com/library/view/news/thought/5770.asp
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Marcus Tullius Cicero, 106-43 B.C. To be ignorant of what occurred before you were born is to remain always a child. For what is the worth of human life, unless it is woven into the life of our ancestors by the records of history?
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43. The Late Republic: Marcus Tullius Cicero
BROOKLYN COLLEGE CLASSICS 16 ROME CITY OF EMPIRE. The Late Republic.The Revolution. Cicero (10643 BC). Cicero s political career
http://academic.brooklyn.cuny.edu/classics/dunkle/courses/cicero.htm
BROOKLYN COLLEGE
CLASSICS 16
ROME: CITY OF EMPIRE
The Late Republic
The Revolution
Cicero (106-43 BC)
Cicero's political career coincided with the turbulent years of revolution that led to the fall of the republic in the late first century BC. Cicero as consul in 63 BC had to deal with a conspiracy led by Lucius Sergius Catilina (generally called Catiline in English) (see paragraphs 10-22). Catiline, in the words of the Oxford Classical Dictionary , [championed] the cause of the poor and dispossessed: dissolute aristocrats, bankrupt Sullan veterans, and those they had driven from their lands." Through the untiring efforts of Cicero, the conspiracy was revealed and defeated. Many conspirators were put to death (Catiline died in battle). Twenty five years later, Roman was engulfed in a more serious struggle for power between Pomepy and Julius Caesar. Cicero took the side of Pompey, who was defeated by Caesar in the battle of Pharsalus in 48 BC. Caesar forgave Cicero (as he did with most of his political enemies), who became one of Caesar's flatterers. Cicero took no part in the assassination of Caesar, but sided with the assassins against Caesar's lieutenant, Marc Antony. Cicero tried to use Octavian, the grandnephew and adopted son of Julius (later to become Augustus), to destroy Antony, but Octavian joined with Antony in a triumvirate (with Lepidus). This triumvirate became the real government of Rome and moved against their enemies. Antony, angered by a set of speeches that Cicero had made denouncing him insisted that Cicero's name be included on a proscription list of enemies. Octavian reluctantly agreed and Cicero was put to death.

44. 96.09.24
Marcus Tullius Cicero (10643 BC). M. TULLI CiceroNIS. OPERA RobertStephanus (Estienne), Paris 1538-1539. Five works, each with
http://www.netrax.net/~rarebook/s960924.htm
Marcus Tullius Cicero (106-43 B.C.)
M. TULLI CICERONIS. OPERA...
Robert Stephanus (Estienne), Paris: 1538-1539. Five works, each with separate title pages, bound in two large folio volumes. [380 x 250 mm.]. pp. 416; 451; 158, (94); 288; 640, (6). Red ruled throughout. Large woodcut printer's devices appear several times. Name clipped from first leaves. All edges gilt. Wonderful contemporary binding of grained crimson morocco, with the gilt arms of the King Louis XIV in the center of each board. Spine with seven raised bands, and elaborately gilt. Overall, in fine condition, with only negligible defects. This copy was also owned by Charles Bruce, 4th Earl of Elgin, 3rd Earl of Ailesbury. Not in Schreiber.
Edited by the great French scholar - printer Robert Estienne (1503-1559) and Pietro Vettori (1499-1585) this magnificent edition of Cicero's works includes in separate books: [1] M. Tulii Ciceronis Rhetorica ... (1538); [2] M. Tvlii Ciceronis Orationes ... (1539); [3] M. Tvlii Ciceronis Epistolae ... (1538); [4] M. Tvlii Ciceronis Philosophica ... (1538); and [5] Petri Victorii Explicationes suarum in Ciceronem Castigationum ... [Index] (1538).
A noble copy of a scarce and significant work.

45. Classical Studies/Roman/Cicero - Fractured Atlas Links Directory
Marcus Tullius Cicero, 10643 BC Biography of the life of Cicero from a site aboutJulius Caesar. Help build the largest human-edited directory on the web.
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46. Cicero
Foundations of Business Thought. Marcus Tullius Cicero (10643 BC) wasa Roman writer, statesman, and orator. Although he had a remarkable
http://www.business.utah.edu/~fincmb/cice.html
Welcome Teaching Philosophy Syllabus Biographies ... University of Utah
Foundations of Business Thought Marcus Tullius Cicero (106-43 BC) was a Roman writer, statesman, and orator. Although he had a remarkable political career, he is best known as Rome's greatest public speaker. Cicero was born in Arpinum (now Arpino, Italy). As a youth he studied law, oratory, literature, and philosophy in Rome. After a brief military service and three years' experience as a lawyer defending private citizens, he traveled to Greece and Asia, where he continued his studies. He returned to Rome in 77 BC and began his political career by aligning himself with statesman Pompey the Great. In 74 BC Cicero entered the Senate. Although Cicero's family did not belong to the Roman aristocracy, he was supported in the competition for consulship in 64 BC by many rich and powerful Romans. Cicero was elected, but during his administration Catiline organized a plot to overthrow the government. Cicero suppressed the conspiracy and had several members of Catiline's group executed. Julius Caesar, Pompey's archrival, other Roman senators argued that Cicero had acted too hastily by not giving the conspirators due process of law. When Cicero refused to make peace with Caesar, in 58 BC, he was forced into exile. While in exile, Cicero occupied himself with reading and writing philosophy until 51 BC. Then he accepted an assignment to govern the Roman province of Cilicia as proconsul. He returned to Rome in 50 BC and rejoined Pompey. After Pompey was defeated by Caesar in 48 BC, Cicero accepted Caesar's offer of political friendship. However, Cicero lived as a private citizen and wrote extensively while Caesar was virtual dictator of Rome. After Caesar's assassination in 44 BC, Cicero returned to politics. He supported Caesar's adopted son, Octavian, in a power struggle with the Roman consul Mark Antony. However, Octavian and Antony reconciled and Cicero was murdered on December 7, 43 BC.

47. 3D Realms Forums: Ruby On R3X0 Is A Reality
Times are bad. Children no longer obey their parents, andeveryone is writing a book. Marcus Tullius Cicero (106-43 BC). Print Post,
http://forums.3drealms.com/ubbthreads/showflat.php?Cat=&Number=542045&Main=54010

48. Marcus Tullius Cicero
Biography and Genealogy, Home; Catalog; Tema; Search; About us; Comments?Cicero, Marcus Tullius, politician, 10643 BC, Italy. Links.
http://runeberg.org/authors/cicermar.html
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Cicero, Marcus Tullius
, politician, 106-43 B.C., Italy.
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49. Catiline
Cicero s Orations Third Oration Against Lucius Catilina, The (History of the World).Cicero, Marcus Tullius (10643 BC) (The Hutchinson Dictionary of the Arts).
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    Catiline I n] Pronunciation Key Catiline (Lucius Sergius Catilina), c. 108 B.C. B.C. , Roman politician and conspirator. At first a conservative and a partisan of Sulla, he was praetor in 68 B.C. and governor of Africa in 67 B.C. The next year he was barred from candidacy for the consulship by false accusations of misconduct in office. Feeling that he had been cheated, he concocted a wild plot to murder the consuls. He and the other conspirators were acquitted (65 B.C. ). In 63 B.C. he ran again for consul, but was defeated by the incumbent, Cicero , and the conservative party. He then attempted to take the consulship by force; he sent money for the troops in Etruria and spread lavish promises in Rome. Cicero became alarmed and on Nov. 8, with facts gained from Catiline's mistress, accused him in the senate ( First Oration against Catiline ). Catiline fled to Etruria. The remaining conspirators did not cease activities but even approached some ambassadors of the Allobroges, who reported the whole plot to Cicero. The conspirators were arrested and arraigned in the senate on Dec. 3. On Dec. 5 they were condemned to death and executed, in spite of a most eloquent appeal from Julius

50. Anecdote - Marcus Tullius Cicero - Roman Senate
be short of room, his new colleague tartly replied, since you make a habit of sittingon two seats at once. Cicero, Marcus Tullius (10643 BC) Roman orator
http://www.anecdotage.com/index.php?aid=2041

51. Anecdote - Marcus Tullius Cicero - Told In Vain?
Why, I am only 30 years old. It must be true, Cicero replied, for I have heardit these twenty years. Cicero, Marcus Tullius (10643 BC) Roman orator and
http://www.anecdotage.com/index.php?aid=7027

52. PhatNav Directory - Arts/Classical_Studies/Roman/Cicero
bibliography. Marcus Tullius Cicero, 10643 BC. Biography of the lifeof Cicero from a site about Julius Caesar. Top of this directory.
http://www.phatnav.com/directory/Arts/Classical_Studies/Roman/Cicero.cat
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Encyclopedia Atlas/Almanac Kids' Web Sites Classic Books Home Games Arcade Games Strategy Games ... Cicero NOTE: Entries below may contain matching catagories, paths to similar directories, and suggested Web sites.
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4Literature.net: Cicero
Unannotated collection of e-text essays and speeches.
Bartleby.com: Cicero
Short biography of the Roman orator, statesman, and philosopher (106 B.C.43 B.C.). Harvard Classics editions of the Treatises on Friendship and on Old Age, and the Letters, as well as selected quotations from Bartlett.
Cicero - Against Catiline [Perseus Project]
English translation by Yonge with link to Latin original text, notes and lexica.
Cicero - For Marcus Tullius [Perseus]
English translation by Yonge
Cicero - On His House [Perseus]
English translation by Yonge of De Domo Sua
Cicero - On the Consular Provinces [Perseus]
English translation by Yonge
Cicero - The Dream of Scipio [Washington State University]
An excerpt from Cicero's larger work, De re publica. English translation of Somnium Scipionis by Richard Hooker.

53. Roman Author Timeline
11627 BC, Varro (M. Terentius Varro). 106-43 BC, Cicero (Marcus Tullius Cicero).100-44 BC, Caesar (Gaius Julius Caesar). 99-24 BC, Nepos (Cornelius Nepos).
http://www.dl.ket.org/latinlit/historia/people/authortimeline.htm
Historia - Timeline Famous Romans Index Roman Authors DATE ROMAN AUTHOR ROMAN EVENTS 254-184 BC Plautus
(T. Maccius Plautus)
  • 280 - Pyrrhus invades Italy
    264-201 - Two Punic wars vs. Carthage
    241 - Rome expands beyond Italy
    218 - Hannibal crosses Alps
    167 - Direct tax on Italian lands abolished
    146 - End of 3rd Punic War
    111-106 - War with Jugurtha
    100 - Caesar born
    91-86 - Social War with Italian allies
    88-63 - Mithridatic Wars 86 - Sulla captures Athens 83-82 - Civil War of Marius vs. Sulla 73-71 - Revolt of Spartacus 63 - Catilinarian conspiracy 63 - Augustus born 62 - Catullus comes to Rome 60 - 1st Triumvirate formed 58-49 - Caesar conquers Gaul 55-54 - Caesar invades Britain 49 - Caesar crosses the Rubicon 48 - Battle of Pharsalus; Pompey defeated 48-44 - Caesar is Dictator 44 - Caesar killed 43 - 2nd Triumvirate formed 31 - Battle of Actium 30 - Augustus is de facto Emperor (end of Republic) 14 AD - Augustus dies; Tiberius is Emperor 37 AD - Caligula is Emperor 41 AD - Claudius is Emperor 42 AD - St. Peter in Rome 43 AD - Invasion of south Britain 54 AD - Nero is Emperor 64 AD - Great Fire/Christian persecution 69 AD - Year of 4 emperors: Galba, Otho, Vitellius, Vespasian

54. CICERO
When you have no basis for an argument, abuse the plaintiff. Where is theredignity unless there is honesty? (10643 BC). Marcus Tullius Cicero.
http://www.geocities.com/snoopythewriter/CICERO.html
If the soul has food for study and learning, nothing is more delightful than an old age of leisure... Leisure consists in all those virtuous activities by which a man grows morally, intellectually, and spiritually. It is that which makes a life worth living.
If we are not ashamed to think it, we should not be ashamed to say it.
Let us not go over the old ground, let us rather prepare for what is to come.
Natural ability without education has more often raised a man to glory and virtue than education without natural ability.
Not to know the events which happened before one was born, that is to remain always a boy.
When you have no basis for an argument, abuse the plaintiff.
Where is there dignity unless there is honesty? (106-43 B.C.) MARCUS TULLIUS CICERO

55. Political Theorists And Activists.
(Click on letter to go to index.) C- Cicero, Marcus Tullius (BC 106-43) Cicerowas a Roman orator and statesman. He was in power but for a brief time.
http://www.blupete.com/Literature/Biographies/Philosophy/BiosPol.htm
Political Theorists and Activists: Click
the letter and you will be brought to the beginning of the appropriate biography list. A B C D ... H I J K L M To Biographies
Jump-Off Page
... HOME N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z

(Click on letter to go to index.)
-A-

Acton, Lord
Acton was against "programmes of reaction" and thought that there could be great reliance on those institutions that came about as the result of slow evolution. That, ultimately, what was to be trusted were those "changes arising from special historical situations rather than from the minds of presumptuous men."

(Click on letter to go to index.)
-B-
Bastiat, Frédéric
Bastiat was of the view that those who subscribe to socialism subscribe to putting in place mechanisms, a philanthropic tyranny, which would but force the human race (a futile effort) to behave as the social engineers think the human race ought to behave as opposed to how it behaves by nature.
Bentham, Jeremy
In Bentham's writings, politicians, beginning with those of the early 19th century, found legitimization in their most favoured activity: the business of making laws; and, they have been doing it in great quantities ever since. Bentham the business Bentham figured that laws should be socially useful and not merely reflect the status quo; he thought it to be a "sacred truth" that "the greatest happiness of the greatest number is the foundation of morals and legislation."
Bright, John

56. Anthro.Net Directory
chronology, and bibliography. Marcus Tullius Cicero, 10643 BC - Biographyof the life of Cicero from a site about Julius Caesar.
http://www.anthro.net/cgi-anthro/xdirectory.cgi?dir=/Arts/Classical_Studies/Roma

57. Catiline Orations
In 63 BC Marcus Tullius Cicero (10643 BC), orator, statesman and patriot, attainedthe rank of consul and in that capacity exposed to the Roman senate the
http://www.fact-index.com/c/ca/catiline_orations.html
Main Page See live article Alphabetical index
Catiline Orations
In 63 BC Marcus Tullius Cicero (106-43 BC), orator statesman and patriot, attained the rank of consul and in that capacity exposed to the Roman senate the plot of Lucius Sergius Catilina (approx. 108-62 BC) and his friends to overthrow the government of Rome. It came about in this way. Catiline, who was running for consulship a second time after having lost the first time around, tried to ensure his victory by resorting to blatant and excessive bribery . Cicero in self-righteous indignation issued a law prohibiting shenanigans of this kind. It was obvious to all that the law was directed specifically at Catiline. Catiline, in turn, conspires with some of his cronies to murder Cicero and the key men of the senate on the day of the election. Cicero discovered the plan and postponed the election to give the senate time to discuss the attempted coup d'état The day after the election was supposed to be held, Cicero addressed the senate on the matter and Catiline's reaction was immediate and violent. In response to Catiline's behavior, the senate issued a senatus consultum ultimum , a kind of declaration of martial law invoked whenever the senate and the Roman Republic were in imminent danger from treason or sedition. Ordinary law was suspended and Cicero, as consul, was invested with absolute power.

58. AIM25: University College London: Cicero Manuscript
Personal names Cicero Marcus Tullius 10643 BC Roman statesman andrhetorician also known as Tully x Tully. Corporate names. Places.
http://www.aim25.ac.uk/cgi-bin/search2?coll_id=3615&inst_id=13

59. Timeline For Cicero With Etexts
10643 BC Cicero. 79-77 27yo Cicero studies rhetoric and philosophy in Athens,befriends the life and habits and character of Marcus Tullius, Fabius must
http://www.robotwisdom.com/science/classical/cicero.html
[Up: classical timelines] [Robot Wisdom home page]
Timeline for Cicero (with etexts)
Jorn Barger May 2002 [pic source] Greece
45,000 BC to 440 BC : Heracles : Argonauts : Theban cycle : Trojan cycle : Homer : Hesiod : 'Homeric' hymns : Sappho : Aesop : [map] : Aeschylus : Pindar : Herodotus
440 BC to 322 BC
: Sophocles : Euripides : Thucydides : Aristophanes : Xenophon
427 BC to 322 BC
: Plato and Aristotle
322 BC to present
: Plutarch Rome
200,000 BC to 44 BC : Plautus : Ennius : Cato : Terence : Varro : Julius Caesar
106 BC to 43 BC Cicero
44 BC to 17 AD
: Nepos : Lucretius : Sallust : Catullus : Vitruvius : Virgil : Horace : Augustus : Livy : Priapea : Tibullus : Sulpicia : Seneca the Elder : Propertius : Ovid
19 BC to present
: Velleius : Phaedrus : Valerius Maximus : Seneca the Younger : Petronius : Pliny the Elder : Silius Italicus : Frontinus : Persius : Lucan : Quintilian : Josephus : Martial : Valerius Flaccus : Statius : Rufus : Tacitus : Pliny the Younger : Suetonius : Juvenal : Marcus Aurelius : Apuleius : Gellius : Florus : Cassius Dio : Justin : Historia Augusta : Ammianus : Aurelius Victor : Eutropius : Augustine : Claudian 106-43 BC: Cicero "Well, I admit that I don't agree with the new pronunciation. I never did. A lot of nonsense, in my opinion. Making boys say 'Kickero' at school when for the rest of their lives they'll say 'Cicero' if they ever say it at all." 'Goodbye, Mr Chips'

60. Cicero - PublishIt.com
Cicero ,Society for Ancient Languages Cicero Cicero (106 BC 43 BC) ,Lawyer andAuthor opponent of Caesar Marcus Tullius Cicero (106-43 BCE.) ,Internet
http://www.publishit.com/History/TheRomanRepublic/Cicero.html
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