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  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

81. Creative Quotations From Ralph Waldo Emerson
Marcus Tullius Cicero is best known as Rome s greatest orator and as a Cicero, alsoknown as Tully, was born in Arpinum He returned to Rome in 77 BC and began
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Marcus Tullius Cicero is best known as Rome's greatest orator and as a man of letters. Cicero, also known as Tully, was born in Arpinum (now Arpino, Italy). As a youth he studied law, oratory, literature, and philosophy in Rome. After 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. In 74 BC he was elected to the Senate. Although Cicero's family did not belong to the Roman aristocracy, he was supported in the competition for the consulship in 64 BC by most rich and powerful Romans because of their distrust of his aristocratic but less respectable rival, Lucius Sergius Catilina, known as Catiline. 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 and other Roman senators argued that Cicero had acted too hastily, without giving the conspirators due process of law. As a result, in 58 BC, Cicero was forced into exile. After a year in Macedonia he was recalled by the Roman general Pompey the Great. Cicero occupied himself with literature until 51 BC, when he accepted an assignment to govern the Roman province of Cilicia as proconsul. He returned to Rome in 50 BC and joined Pompey, who had become Caesar's bitter enemy. After Pompey was defeated by Caesar in 48 BC, Cicero, realizing that further resistance was hopeless, accepted Caesar's overtures of amity. While Caesar was virtual dictator of Rome, Cicero lived as a private citizen and wrote extensively. After Caesar's assassination in 44 BC, Cicero returned to politics. Hoping to see a restoration of the Republic, he supported Caesar's adopted son Octavian, who later became the emperor Augustus, in a power struggle with the Roman consul Mark Antony. Octavian and Antony were reconciled, however, and Cicero was executed as an enemy of the state on Dec. 7, 43 BC.

82. Cicero - OnlinePageDirectory.com
Cicero Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Cicero (c. 10643 BC) Marcus TulliusCicero was born on January 3, 106 BC and was murdered on December 7, 43 BC.
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Marcus Tullius Cicero

arcus Tullius Cicero (106-43 B.C.) was both a Roman orator and statesman. His extensive philosophical interest led him to author several classic philosophical works like "De Oratore" (Hiz 113). Although he was often criticized for lack of originality, few could deny his superiority i
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Cicero By Plutarch Commentary: Several comments have been posted about Cicero . or . Reader Recommendations: you feel is appropriate to this work, , or . Download: A 95k text-only version is . Cicero (died 43 B.C.E.) By Plutarch Wr
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83. Tullius Cicero, Marcus
Marcus Tullius Cicero Consul BC 63 Author. 106 43 BC. Marcus Tullius Cicerois quoted as a reference in the ancient texts of Tacitus and Suetonius.
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Roman Numismatic Gallery: Marcus Tullius Cicero
Consul BC 63
Author 106 - 43 BC
Marcus Tullius Cicero is quoted as a reference in the ancient texts of Tacitus and Suetonius. This is remarkably unusual in ancient texts. Normally we aren't informed of the sources, since we are expected to have read the available texts of the times. Furthermore, unlike modern historical works, references just weren't in style for contemporary ancient historians. Thus, being named as a reference makes Cicero quite unusual and notable! Extensive writings of Cicero survive to this day, two of the surviving texts of Marcus Tullius Cicero are entitled "De Oratore" and "De Legibus". Tacitus mentions him once, in passing. He says "When Cicero praised Cato to the skies, the dictator Julius Caesar reacted by writing a speech against him - as in a lawsuit." Suetonius, in "The Twelve Caesars" quotes him extensively. Suetonius quotes Cicero in the Life of Julius Caesar "where Caesar is said to have 'established in his consulship the monarchy which he had planned while only an aedile'". Cicero had been giving 'doleful speeches in the courts' about the evil of the times (Julius Caesar!). Caesar then promotes Cicero's enemy Publius Claudius to attack him. The attack fails.

84. Cicero Fonder AB
Finanstidningen. Why Cicero? The name Cicero comes from the philosopherMarcus Tullius Cicero who lived in Rome 10643 BC. Please
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85. ±Ã¸®´åÄÄ> µ¶¼­ ¸í¾ð> Page1
Marcus Tullius Cicero (106~43 BC). ? ? ? ?, ? ? ?. Marcus Tullius Cicero (106~43 BC).
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86. Lecture Series On Justice Using Quoatations From The Ancient World To Today Expa
5. Twin Peaks . Marcus Tullius Cicero 106 -43 BC Martin Luther King 1929-1968.These are two distinct voices for justice that shaped the idea of justice.
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87. De Auctoribus - About The Authors
perhaps his most famous. Marcus Tullius Cicero (106 43 BC) Roman orator,writer and politician, consul in 63 BC. During his consulate
http://members.chello.se/hansdotter/auct.html

Iulius Caesar

Cato Sr.

Catullus

Cicero
...
Vergilius

Caius Iulius Caesar (100 - 44 BC)
Roman general and statesman. A brilliant general, Caesar conquered all of Gaul and was made governor of Gallia Cisalpina and Gallia Transalpina (Cisalpine and Transalpine Gaul), and started a civil war against the Senate and his former colleague Pompey (Pompeius) when they wanted him to relinquish command and give up his governorship. After defeating Pompey and gaining control over Rome, Caesar was elected dictator (a title not to be confused with our present-day use of the term; a Roman dictator ruled with absolute power for a brief period of time during a severe crisis), first yearly - which was almost unheard of - and later for ten years. His obvious striving for autocracy provoked and scared the old Senate nobility, and his being elected dictator for life in 44 BC was the final straw: about sixty senators conspired and stabbed him to death on March 15, Idibus Martiis.
Caesar's two great works are Commentarii de bello Gallico ("Commentaries on the Gallic War") and Commentarii de bello civili ("Commentaries on the Civil War"), both skillfully written propaganda for Caesar himself and his cause. Just as Cicero's, Caesar's prose is regarded as having been normative for the Latin language.

88. RepeatAfterUs.com
30339 visitors 4048 texts 507 recordings 424 authors, Contents Author Marcus Tullius Cicero, 106 43 BC. 2 Texts. Law. Mind. Search.
http://www.repeatafterus.com/author.php?f=Marcus Tullius&l=Cicero

89. Who's Who
Celsus. Cercidas of Megalopolis (C3 BC). Cicero, Marcus Tullius, of Arpinum (10643BC). Clement of Alexandria (c. 150-215 AD). Codex Constantinopolitanus.
http://www.swan.ac.uk/classics/staff/ter/grst/Who's who.htm
Who's who
Please note: Ancient Greek names may be transliterated into English letters in several different ways. If you do not find the name you seek first time, try changing 'c' to 'k', 'y' to 'u', 'e' to 'i', 'u' to 'o' and/or final 'm' to 'n'. This page is under development; all of the people mentioned will have their own page in due course. Some of the pages which exist are still under development. The mathematicians are well done at the University of St Andrews MacTutor site here . See also Siris' pages here DSB as a reference is the Dictionary of Scientific Biography
A
Aelian Aesop Aetius Aetius of Amida Agatharkhos Agatharkhides Agathinus Agrippa ... Aiskhulos al-Andalusi, Saïd (C11 AD) Alexander of Aphrodisias Alexander the Great Alexander of Myndos Alexander of Tralles ... Apollonios of Perga Apollonius Mys Aratus Archelaos Archimedes Archutas ... Asklepiades Asklepiads of Cos, Knidos, Rhodes Asklepiodotos Athenaeus Attalus III Augustine Augustus (Octavian) (63 BC-AD 14) Autolycos
B
Bede Boethus Bolos
C
Caelius Aurelianus Caesar, Gaius Julius (100-44 BC) Calcidius Capella Cato , Marcus Porcius, of Tusculum (234-149 BC) Celsus Cercidas of Megalopolis (C3 BC) Cicero, Marcus Tullius, of Arpinum (106-43 BC)

90. ResAnet Results Summary
Cicéron, 10643 av Death of a Republic; politics and political thought at Rome 59-44BC / edited and New York MacMillan, 1963; RecordCicero, Marcus Tullius.
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Sort By: Title Author Date Search Term(s): Subject=Cicero, Marcus Tullius matches found
  • Rawson, Beryl. The politics of friendship : Pompey and Cicero / [by] Beryl Rawson. Sydney : Sydney University Press, 1978.
  • Büchner, Karl, 1910-. Das neue Cicerobild / hrsg. von Karl Büchner. Darmstadt : Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft, 1971.
  • Eulenberg, Herbert, 1876-1949. Cicéron, 106-43 av. J.-C. / Herbert Eulenberg ; av.-pr. et traduction par Robert Bouvier. Paris : Payot, 1935.
  • Wilkin, Robert Nugen, 1886-. Eternal lawyer : a legal biography of Cicero. New York : Macmillan, 1947.
  • Dorey, Thomas Alan. Cicero. London, Routledge, 1965.
  • Smith, Richard Edwin. Cicero the statesman. [London] : Cambridge University Press, 1966.
  • Dickinson, John, 1894-1952. Death of a Republic; politics and political thought at Rome 59-44 B.C. / edited and with an introd. by George Lee Haskins. New York : MacMillan, [1963]
  • Cicero, Marcus Tullius. Cicero against Catiline [microform] : first oration / edited by J.E. Wetherell. Toronto : W.J. Gage, 1886.
  • Cicero, Marcus Tullius. Second oration of Cicero against Catiline [microform] : with notices, notes and complete vocabulary / by John Henderson. Toronto : Copp, Clark, 1889.
  • 91. Marcus Tullius Cicero
    of some of Cicero's works is uncertain. 106. Cicero born at De Officiis. Philippicae. 43. Cicero (and Quintus) proscribed and Pinkster. M. Tullius Cicero, De Oratore Libri III, Kommentar
    http://www.utexas.edu/depts/classics/documents/Cic.html
    The Cicero Homepage
    Cicero Texts
    Texts provided by Chris Mitchell, Emanuele Narducci, Lukacs Varga, and various contributors to the Wiretap archive (see invididual texts for attributions). De Amicitia
    Pro Archia

    In Catilinam I

    In Catilinam II
    ... Selections from the Rhetorica on genres of oratory (English).
    Cicero Chronology
    All dates are B.C. Chronology of writing and publication of some of Cicero's works is uncertain.
    Cicero born at Arpinum
    Brother Quintus born
    Cicero's military service in the Social War
    Pro P. Quinctio
    Pro Sex. Roscio Amerino

    Cicero travels to Athens and Rhodes to continue education (returns in 77)
    Cicero marries Terentia (?) Pro Q. Roscio Comoedo Cicero quaestor in Sicily Divinatio in Caecilium In Verrem Cicero aedile Pro A. Caecina Pro M. Fonteio Pro M. Tullio Cicero praetor Pro Cluentio Pro Lege Manilia Son Marcus born Cicero consul In Catilinam Pro Murena Pro C. Rabirio perduellionis De Lege Agraria Cicero testifies against Clodius in the Bona Dea trial Pro Archia Pro Sulla Pro Flacco Cicero exiled (goes to northern Greece) Cicero recalled from exile De Domo Sua Post Reditum ad Quirites Post Reditum ad Senatum Pro Balbo Pro Caelio Pro Sestio In Vatinium De Haruspicum Responsis De Provinciis Consularibus De Oratore In Pisonem Pro Plancio Pro C. Rabirio Postumo

    92. CICERO
    Search. Ancient / Classical History C -. Cicero (106-43 BC) About.com Poll. MarcusTullius Cicero was a Roman orator and statesman from Arpinum, in Italy.
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    (106-43 B.C.) About.com Poll The following four Classical philosophers were the most important in the Renaissance. Pick your favorite:
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    Marcus Tullius Cicero was a Roman orator and statesman from Arpinum, in Italy. He entered the Senate in 74 B.C. and became consul in 64, beating an aristocrat, Lucius Sergius Catilina, who was later implicated in a plot to overthrow the government. Cicero suppressed the conspiracy and had members of it executed. In the tumult over this, he went into exile. In 50 B.C. he returned to Rome and joined Caesar's rival, Pompey. When Caesar defeated Pompey in 48, Cicero accepted Caesar's friendship. After Caesar died, Cicero supported Octavian (Augustus), but was still proscribed and murdered on December 7, 43 B.C.

    93. Marcus Tullius Cicero Quotations
    BIOGRAPHY Marcus Tullius Cicero, a Roman statesman and orator lived from 10643BC For more information on Cicero, see Marcus Tullius Cicero Resources
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    Subscribe to the About Ancient / Classical History newsletter. Search Ancient / Classical History Marcus Tullius Cicero Quotations Other Quotations Aeschylus Quotations
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    "I am never less alone than when alone." "minus solum, quam cum solus esset" Cicero De Officiis_ 3.1 "For as lack of adornment is said to become some women, so this subtle oration, though without embellishment, gives delight." Cicero De Oratore "Thus in the beginning the world was so made that certain signs come before certain events." Cicero De Divinatione . i. 118. "He is never less at leisure than when at leisure." Cicero De Officiis . iii. 1. "While the sick man has life there is hope."

    94. Cicero Definition Of Cicero. What Is Cicero? Meaning Of Cicero. What Does Cicero
    unit a unit of measurement of length. 2. Cicero - a Roman statesmanand orator remembered for his mastery of Latin prose (106-43 BC)
    http://www.thefreedictionary.com/Cicero
    Dictionaries: General Computing Medical Legal Encyclopedia
    Cicero
    Word: Word Starts with Ends with Definition
    Noun cicero - a linear unit of the size of type slightly larger than an em linear unit - a unit of measurement of length Cicero - a Roman statesman and orator remembered for his mastery of Latin prose (106-43 BC) Marcus Tullius Cicero Tully orator public speaker ... speechmaker - a person who delivers a speech or oration national leader solon statesman - a man who is a respected leader in national or international affairs Legend: Synonyms Related Words Antonyms Examples from classic literature: More The mate of the Cicero was seeing his friend on board.
    The Mirror of the Sea
    by Conrad, Joseph View in context Of this state hear what Cicero saith: Quam volumus licet, patres conscripti, nos amemus, tamen nec numero Hispanos, nec robore Gallos, nec calliditate Poenos, nec artibus Graecos, nec denique hoc ipso hujus gentis et terrae domestico nativoque sensu Italos ipsos et Latinos; sed pietate, ac religione, atque hac una sapientia, quod deorum immortalium numine omnia regi gubernarique perspeximus, omnes gentes nationesque superavimus.
    The Essays
    by Bacon, Sir Francis

    95. Alexa Web Search - Subjects > Arts > Classical Studies > Roman > Cicero
    research/iep/c/Cicero.htm Site Info. Marcus Tullius Cicero, 106-43BC Biography of the life of Cicero from a site about Julius Caesar.
    http://www.alexa.com/browse/general?catid=142529&mode=general

    96. Cicero's On Friendship: Some Background
    It is also a celebration of the friendship between Marcus TulliusCicero (106–43 BC) and Titus Pomponius Atticus (109–32 BC).
    http://department.monm.edu/classics/Courses/CLAS210/CourseDocuments/cicerosonfri
    Cicero’s Laelius de Amicitia ("Laelius on Friendship") An Introduction Important Elements Participants Outline Study Questions ... Summary Important Elements Platonic Dialogue
    Roman History
    Immortality of the Soul
    Roman Concept of Friendship
    Philosophical views: Stoicism (Virtue) vs. Epicureanism (Pleasure) Participants in the Dialogue: Gaius Laelius Sapiens
    Quintus Mucius Scaevola the Augur
    Gaius Fannius Strabo This essay is about the friendship between Gaius Laelius Sapiens and Publius Cornelius Scipio Aemilianus Africanus Minor (185/4–129 BC). It is also a celebration of the friendship between Marcus Tullius Cicero (106–43 BC) and Titus Pomponius Atticus (109–32 BC). Cicero is recounting a conversation between Gaius Laelius and his sons-in-law (Fannius and Scaevola) which Cicero says he heard about from his mentor Scaevola. This conversation took place shortly after the death of Scipio in 129 BC. Outline 1–5 Dedication to Atticus 6–104 The Dialogue 8-15 Laelius reflects on Scipio’s death 17–24 Laelius’ definition of friendship Laelius speaks on the origin of friendship 33–104 Laelius’ friendship with Scipio Cicero Homepage Cicero's "On Friendship"

    97. BPL - Booklists - Classics Of Latin Literature
    Apuleius (123 AD?) The Golden Ass PA6209.M3 W35 1995x. Cicero, MarcusTullius (106-43 BC) The Nature of the Gods PA6156.C5 A2. Horace
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    98. Cicero From HistoryCenter.net
    Timeline 106 43 BC. Nickname n/a. Nationality Roman. Occupation Statesman. MarcusTullius Cicero studied in Rome and Greece and won his first fame as a
    http://www.historycenter.net/politics-detail1.asp?ID=335&TimeZone=5

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