Extractions: Resource URI: http://www4.wiwiss.fu-berlin.de/gutendata/resource/people/Cicero_Marcus_Tullius_106_BC-43_BC Home Example files Example creators Example contributors Property Value is dc: creator of db:etext11080 is dc: creator of db:etext14945 is dc: creator of db:etext14970 is dc: creator of db:etext14988 is dc: creator of db:etext21200 is dc: creator of db:etext226 is dc: creator of db:etext2808 is dc: creator of db:etext2812 is dc: creator of db:etext7491 is dc: creator of db:etext9776 rdfs: label Cicero, Marcus Tullius, 106 BC-43 BC foaf: name Cicero, Marcus Tullius, 106 BC-43 BC rdf: type foaf:Person Generated by D2R Server
Cicero - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia Marcus Tullius Cicero; Marcus Tullius Cicero Born January 3, 106 BC Arpinum, Italy Died December 7, 43 BC (aged 63) Formia, Italy Occupation Politician, lawyer, orator and philosopher http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cicero
Extractions: Has had an immense influence on European culture for over 2000 years These articles cover Ancient Rome and the fall of the Republic Roman Republic Mark Antony Assassination of Julius Caesar ... Theatre of Pompey , Cicero, First Triumvirate Comitium These articles cover the Ancient Roman Comitium of the Republican era Structures Rostra Curia Hostilia Curia Julia ... Politicians Cicero Gaius Gracchus Julius Caesar Assemblies Roman Senate ... comitia curiata Marcus Tullius Cicero (pronounced /ˈsɪsɨroʊ/ Classical Latin [ˈkikeroː] ; January 3, 106 BCE – December 7, 43 BCE; sometimes anglicized as "Tully"), was a Roman philosopher statesman lawyer ... political theorist , and Roman constitutionalist . He came from a wealthy municipal family of the equestrian order , and is widely considered one of Rome's greatest orators and prose stylists.
Extractions: Acknowledgements These Cicero quotes and sayings are from our famous and inspiring collection. Nothing is so swift as calumny; nothing is more easily uttered; nothing more readily received; nothing more widely dispersed. [La., Nihil est autem tam voluere, quam maledictum; nihil facilius emittitur; nihil citius excipitur, latius dissipatur] - Cicero [Marcus Tullius Cicero]
Wer War Cicero? Cicero war nicht nur Anwalt, Redner und Politker, sondern ebenso - und nicht weniger wichtig - Philosoph. http://www.bernhard-koch.de/cicero.htm
Extractions: Wer war eigentlich dieser Cicero, nach dem sogar Zeitschriften benannt werden? Marcus Tullius Cicero wurde 106 vor Christus in Arpinum bei Rom geboren. Sein Vater, der in der Rmischen Republik dem Ritterstand angehrte, lies den Sohn zum Anwalt und Redner ausbilden. Mit 25 Jahren tritt Cicero zum ersten Mal als Anwalt vor Gericht auf. Nach diesem ersten erfolgreichen Prozess gegen einen Gnstling Sullas (Pro Roscio Amerino) verlsst er Rom von 79 - 77 v. Chr. und bereist Griechenland und Kleinasien. In Athen und Rhodos trifft er die berhmtesten Philosophen seiner Zeit und schliet eine lebenslange Freundschaft zu seinem spteren Verleger Pomponius Atticus. Nach seiner Rckkehr heiratet er Terentia, die die gemeinsamen Kinder Tullia und im Jahre 65 Marcus gebiert. Cicero beschreitet als sogenannter "homo novus", d. h. als erster seiner Familie berhaupt, die mterlaufbahn bis zum Konsulat und dies im jeweils frhesten Alter. Den Anfang macht die Qustur in Sizilien im Jahre 75 v. Chr., wobei er sich so beliebt machte, dass ihm die Sizilianer die Anklage gegen den berchtigten Proprtor Verres bertrugen. Den Prozess gegen Verres gewann Cicero, obwohl sein Gegner der berhmteste Gerichtsanwalt jener Zeit, Hortensius, war. 69 ist Cicero kurulischer dil, 66 Prtor. Zusammen mit C. Antonius hat Cicero das Konsulat im Jahre 63 inne. Als Konsul schlgt Cicero die Verschwrung des Catilina nieder, wofr er sich als Retter der Republik sieht. Cicero steht an der Spitze seines politischen Lebens, als man ihn mit dem Titel "pater patriae" ehrt.
Cicero [Internet Encyclopedia Of Philosophy] Cicero (106—43 BCE) Marcus Tullius Cicero was born on January 3, 106 BC and was murdered on December 7, 43 BC. His life coincided with the decline and fall of the Roman http://www.iep.utm.edu/cicero/
Extractions: Marcus Tullius Cicero was born on January 3, 106 BC and was murdered on December 7, 43 BC. His life coincided with the decline and fall of the Roman Republic, and he was an important actor in many of the significant political events of his time (and his writings are now a valuable source of information to us about those events). He was, among other things, an orator, lawyer, politician, and philosopher. Making sense of his writings and understanding his philosophy requires us to keep that in mind. He placed politics above philosophical study; the latter was valuable in its own right but was even more valuable as the means to more effective political action. The only periods of his life in which he wrote philosophical works were the times he was forcibly prevented from taking part in politics. Cicero and the Academic Skeptics Cicero and Stoicism and Peripateticism Cicero and Epicureanism On Invention ... Texts about Cicero Cicero owed a debt to the triumvirate for ending his exile (and for not killing him), and for the next eight years he repaid that debt as a lawyer. Because he still could not engage in politics, he also had time to continue his studies of philosophy, and between 55 and 51 he wrote On the Orator On the Republic , and On the Laws However, Antony, Lepidus, and Octavian were able to come to terms and agreed to share power. Each of them had enemies that he wanted eliminated, and as part of the power-sharing deal each got to eliminate those enemies. Antony put not only Cicero but also his son, his brother, and his nephew on the list of those to be killed (the
Cicero Und Der R Mische Humanismus Eine Antrittsvorlesung von Johannes Christes. http://dochost.rz.hu-berlin.de/humboldt-vl/christes-johannes/PDF/Christes.pdf
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Extractions: Marcus Tullius Cicero was born on January 3, 106 BC and was murdered on December 7, 43 BC. His life coincided with the decline and fall of the Roman Republic, and he was an important actor in many of the significant political events of his time (and his writings are now a valuable source of information to us about those events). He was, among other things, an orator, lawyer, politician, and philosopher. Making sense of his writings and understanding his philosophy requires us to keep that in mind. He placed politics above philosophical study; the latter was valuable in its own right but was even more valuable as the means to more effective political action. The only periods of his life in which he wrote philosophical works were the times he was forcibly prevented from taking part in politics. Cicero and the Academic Skeptics Cicero and Stoicism and Peripateticism Cicero and Epicureanism On Invention ... Texts about Cicero Cicero owed a debt to the triumvirate for ending his exile (and for not killing him), and for the next eight years he repaid that debt as a lawyer. Because he still could not engage in politics, he also had time to continue his studies of philosophy, and between 55 and 51 he wrote On the Orator On the Republic , and On the Laws However, Antony, Lepidus, and Octavian were able to come to terms and agreed to share power. Each of them had enemies that he wanted eliminated, and as part of the power-sharing deal each got to eliminate those enemies. Antony put not only Cicero but also his son, his brother, and his nephew on the list of those to be killed (the
Marcus Tullius Cicero A site devoted to Cicero at the University of Texas at Austin, including images, texts, chronology, and bibliography. http://www.utexas.edu/depts/classics/documents/Cic.html
Cicero, Marcus Tullius - Hutchinson Encyclopedia Article About Roman orator, writer, and politician. His speeches and philosophical and rhetorical works are models of Latin prose, and his letters provide a picture of contemporary Roman life. http://encyclopedia.farlex.com/Cicero, Marcus Tullius
Cicero, Marcus Tullius - Brutus A description of the Roman tradition of public and judiciary speeches along with an autobiographical sketch. http://www.utexas.edu/depts/classics/documents/brut.html
Extractions: 1 Cum e Cilicia decedens Rhodum venissem et eo mihi de Q. Hortensi morte esset adlatum, opinione omnium maiorem animo cepi dolorem. nam et amico amisso cum consuetudine iucunda tum multorum officiorum coniunctione me privatum videbam et interitu talis aug uris dignitatem nostri conlegi deminutam dolebam; qua in cogitatione et cooptatum me ab eo in conlegium recordabar, in quo iuratus iudicium dignitatis meae fecerat, et inauguratum ab eodem; ex quo augurum institutis in parentis eum loco colere debebam. 2 augebat etiam molestiam, quod magna sapientium civium bonorumque penuria vir egregius coniunctissimusque mecum consiliorum omnium societate alienissimo rei publicae tempore exstinctus et auctoritatis et prudentiae suae triste nobis desiderium reliquerat ; dolebamque quod non, ut plerique putabant, adversarium aut obtrectatorem laudum mearum sed socium potius et consortem gloriosi laboris amiseram. 3 etenim si in leviorum artium studio memoriae proditum est poetas nobilis poetarum aequalium morte doluisse, quo tandem animo eius interitum ferre debui, cum quo certare erat gloriosius quam omnino adversarium non habere? cum praesertim non modo numquam sit aut illius a me cursus impeditus aut ab illo meus, sed contra semper alter ab altero adiutus et communicando et monendo et favendo. 4 sed quoniam perpetua quadam felicitate usus ille cessit e vita suo magis quam suorum civium tempore et tum occidit, cum lugere facilius rem publicam posset, si viveret, quam iuvare, vixitque tam diu quam licuit in civitate bene beateque vivere, nostro i ncommodo detrimentoque, si est ita necesse, doleamus, illius vero mortis opportunitatem benevolentia potius quam misericordia prosequamur, ut, quotienscumque de clarissumo et beatissumo viro cogitemus, illum potius quam nosmet ipsos diligere videamur.
Extractions: document.write(''); Search Site: With all of these words With the exact phrase With any of these words Without these words Home My Britannica CREATE MY Marcus Tulli... NEW ARTICLE ... SAVE Table of Contents: Marcus Tullius Cicero Article Article Major Works Major Works - Speeches Speeches - Critical Critical - Letters Letters - Translations Translations Additional Reading Additional Reading Related Articles Related Articles External Web sites External Web sites Citations Primary Contributors: John P.V. Dacre Balsdon John Ferguson ARTICLE from the Marcus Tullius Cicero English byname Tully (b. 106
"Scipio's Dream. " By Cicero, Marcus Tullius, 106 BC-43 BC 28/34 For me indeed, Scipio, though suddenly snatched away, still lives and will always live; for I loved the virtue of the man, which is not extinguished. http://de-amicitia-scipio-s-dream.t.ebooks2ebooks.com/28.html
De Amicitia On Friendship or Laelius . http://www.ipa.net/~magreyn/laelius.htm
Extractions: [White Trash Scriptorium] [This version of the De Amicitia is a conflation of two texts: M. Tulli Ciceronis Laelius De Amicitia , ed. Clifton Price, 1902; and M. Tulli Ciceronis Scripta Quae Manserunt Omnia , Part 4, Vol. 3, ed. C.F.W. Mueller, 1890.] Q. Mucius augur multa narrare de C. Laelio socero suo memoriter et iucunde solebat nec dubitare illum in omni sermone appellare sapientem; ego autem a patre ita eram deductus ad Scaevolam sumpta virili toga, ut, quoad possem et liceret, a senis latere numquam discederem; itaque multa ab eo prudenter disputata, multa etiam breviter et commode dicta memoriae mandabam fierique studebam eius prudentia doctior. Quo mortuo me ad pontificem Scaevolam contuli, quem unum nostrae civitatis et ingenio et iustitia praestantissimum audeo dicere. Sed de hoc alias; nunc redeo ad augurem. Cum saepe multa, tum memini domi in hemicyclio sedentem, ut solebat, cum et ego essem una et pauci admodum familiares, in eum sermonem illum incidere qui tum forte multis erat in ore. Meministi enim profecto, Attice, et eo magis, quod P. Sulpicio utebare multum, cum is tribunus plebis capitali odio a Q. Pompeio, qui tum erat consul, dissideret, quocum coniunctissime et amantissime vixerat, quanta esset hominum vel admiratio vel querella. Itaque tum Scaevola cum in eam ipsam mentionem incidisset, exposuit nobis sermonem Laeli de amicitia habitum ab illo secum et cum altero genero, C. Fannio Marci filio, paucis diebus post mortem Africani. Eius disputationis sententias memoriae mandavi, quas hoc libro exposui arbitratu meo; quasi enim ipsos induxi loquentes, ne 'inquam' et 'inquit' saepius interponeretur, atque ut tamquam a praesentibus coram haberi sermo videretur.