Cicero and the Roman Republic

Bibliographic Information

Cicero and the Roman Republic

Manfred Fuhrmann ; translated by W.E. Yuill

Blackwell, 1992

Other Title

Cicero und die römische Republik

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Note

Translation of: Cicero und die römische Republik

Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Designed for a general readership, this book provides an account of Cicero's personality and career and portrays the political and cultural background of his age. The book examines the reasons for Cicero's eminence as a statesman, philosopher and publicist, and for his massive influence on the literature and oratory of succeeding ages. It charts his rise from obscure provincial origins to the high offices of state in the Roman republic. It describes Cicero's tragically vain attempt to defend the republican constitutions against the war-lords by argument and rhetoric. The author sees this struggle as the epitome of the recurring conflict between reason and repression, and argues that Cicero's career illustrates only too well the limitations of intellectual commitment in the field of Realpolitik.

Table of Contents

  • Cicero's antecedents and youth
  • the apprentice years
  • first cases, a crisis and a grand tour
  • quaestor - the first appointment
  • the prosecution of Verres
  • from aedile to praetor
  • the battle for the consulship
  • the consulship
  • the turning-point
  • on the defensive
  • exile and return
  • under the sway of the triumvirate
  • the governorship of Cilicia
  • the civil war
  • the philosopher under Caesar's dictatorship
  • the Ides of March
  • the final battle for the republic
  • defeat and death.

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