Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. People also ask

  2. noun. a person who is an expert on or specializes in the study of the works of Cicero. a person who admires or imitates the style of Cicero. Ciceronian. / ˌsɪsəˈrəʊnɪən / adjective. of or resembling Cicero or his rhetorical style; eloquent. (of literary style) characterized by the use of antithesis and long periods.

    • Cicatrize

      Cicatrize definition: to heal by inducing the formation of a...

    • Ciceronianism

      Ciceronianism definition: imitation of the style of Cicero,...

    • Cicely

      Cicely definition: a plant, Myrrhis odorata, of the parsley...

    • Cichlid

      Cichlid definition: any of the spiny-rayed, freshwater...

    • Cicerone

      Cicerone definition: a person who conducts sightseers;...

    • Ciclosporin

      Ciclosporin definition: a drug extracted from a fungus and...

    • Ian

      Ian definition: a male given name, Scottish form of John. ....

  3. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › CiceroCicero - Wikipedia

    Marcus Tullius Cicero[a] (/ ˈsɪsəroʊ / SISS-ə-roh; Latin: [ˈmaːrkʊs ˈtʊlli.ʊs ˈkɪkɛroː]; 3 January 106 BC – 7 December 43 BC) was a Roman statesman, lawyer, scholar, philosopher, writer and Academic skeptic, [4] who tried to uphold optimate principles during the political crises that led to the establishment of the Roman Empire ...

  4. 1. of or pertaining to Cicero or his writings. the Ciceronian orations. 2. in the style of Cicero: characterized by melodious language, clarity, and forcefulness of presentation. Ciceronian invective. noun. 3. a person who is an expert on or specializes in the study of the works of Cicero. 4. a person who admires or imitates the style of Cicero.

  5. Belonging to or characteristic of the Roman statesman, orator, and prose writer Cicero (Marcus Tullius Cicero, 106–43bce), especially in relation to prose style; or, as a noun, a follower of Cicero.

    • Overview
    • Early life and career
    • Alliance with the First Triumvirate

    Marcus Tullius Cicero was a masterful orator known for his ability to evoke a wide range of emotions in plebeians and patricians alike. Cicero’s political career saw him as quaestor, praetor, consul, and proconsul, providing him with several opportunities to influence the trajectory of Rome and the Senate in the waning days of the republic.

    What was Marcus Tullius Cicero’s greatest achievement?

    In 63 BCE Marcus Tullius Cicero gave an impassioned oration to his fellow senators that charged Catiline with plotting to stage a violent coup. This so moved the Senate that they voted to implement martial law and execute the conspirators. Cicero was named pater patriae—“father of the country”—for his service to the republic.

    What was Marcus Tullius Cicero’s relationship with the First Triumvirate?

    Marcus Tullius Cicero resented the political machinations of Julius Caesar, Pompey, and Marcus Licinius Crassus and initially refused to ally himself with them, even attempting to isolate Pompey from Caesar. However, he later committed himself publicly—if not personally—to their advancement before diminishing his political involvement during the civil war between Caesar and Pompey.

    What was Marcus Tullius Cicero’s oratory style?

    Cicero was the son of a wealthy family of Arpinum. Admirably educated in Rome and in Greece, he did military service in 89 under Pompeius Strabo (the father of the statesman and general Pompey) and made his first appearance in the courts defending Publius Quinctius in 81. His brilliant defense, in 80 or early 79, of Sextus Roscius against a fabricated charge of parricide established his reputation at the bar, and he started his public career as quaestor (an office of financial administration) in western Sicily in 75.

    As praetor, a judicial officer of great power at this time, in 66 he made his first important political speech, when, against Quintus Lutatius Catulus and leading Optimates (the conservative element in the Roman Senate), he spoke in favour of conferring on Pompey command of the campaign against Mithradates VI, king of Pontus (in northeastern Anatolia). His relationship with Pompey, whose hatred of Marcus Licinius Crassus he shared, was to be the focal point of his career in politics. His election as consul for 63 was achieved through Optimates who feared the revolutionary ideas of his rival, Catiline.

    In the first of his consular speeches, he opposed the agrarian bill of Servilius Rullus, in the interest of the absent Pompey; but his chief concern was to discover and make public the seditious intentions of Catiline, who, defeated in 64, appeared again at the consular elections in 63 (over which Cicero presided, wearing armour beneath his toga). Catiline lost and planned to carry out armed uprisings in Italy and arson in Rome. Cicero had difficulty in persuading the Senate of the danger, but the “last decree” (Senatus consultum ultimum), something like a proclamation of martial law, was passed on October 22. On November 8, after escaping an attempt on his life, Cicero delivered the first speech against Catiline in the Senate, and Catiline left Rome that night. Evidence incriminating the conspirators was secured and, after a senatorial debate in which Cato the Younger spoke for execution and Julius Caesar against, they were executed on Cicero’s responsibility. Cicero, announcing their death to the crowd with the single word vixerunt (“they are dead”), received a tremendous ovation from all classes, which inspired his subsequent appeal in politics to concordia ordinum, “concord between the classes.” He was hailed by Catulus as “father of his country.” This was the climax of his career.

    Britannica Quiz

    At the end of 60, Cicero declined Caesar’s invitation to join the political alliance of Caesar, Crassus, and Pompey, the so-called First Triumvirate, which he considered unconstitutional, and also Caesar’s offer in 59 of a place on his staff in Gaul. When Publius Clodius, whom Cicero had antagonized by speaking and giving evidence against him when he was tried for profanity early in 61, became tribune in 58, Cicero was in danger, and in March, disappointed by Pompey’s refusal to help him, he fled Rome. On the following day Clodius carried a bill forbidding the execution of a Roman citizen without trial. Clodius then carried through a second law, of doubtful legality, declaring Cicero an exile. Cicero went first to Thessalonica, in Macedonia, and then to Illyricum. In 57, thanks to the activity of Pompey and particularly the tribune Titus Annius Milo, he was recalled on August 4. Cicero landed at Brundisium (Brindisi) on that day and was acclaimed all along his route to Rome, where he arrived a month later.

    In winter 57–56 Cicero attempted unsuccessfully to estrange Pompey from Caesar. Pompey disregarded Cicero’s advice and renewed his compact with Caesar and Crassus at Luca in April 56. Cicero then agreed, under pressure from Pompey, to align himself with the three in politics, and he committed himself in writing to this effect (the “palinode”). The speech De provinciis consularibus (On the Consular Provinces) marked his new alliance. He was obliged to accept a number of distasteful defenses, and he abandoned public life. In the next few years he completed the De oratore (55; On the Orator) and De republica (52; On the Republic) and began the De legibus (52; On Laws). In 52 he was delighted when Milo killed Clodius but failed disastrously in his defense of Milo (later written for publication, the Pro Milone, or For Milo).

    Special offer for students! Check out our special academic rate and excel this spring semester!

    Learn More

    In 51 he was persuaded to leave Rome to govern the province of Cilicia, in southern Anatolia, for a year. The province had been expecting a Parthian invasion, but it never materialized, although Cicero did suppress some brigands on Mt. Amanus. The Senate granted a supplicatio (a period of public thanksgiving), although Cicero had hoped for a triumph, a processional return through the city, on his return to Rome. All admitted that he governed Cilicia with integrity.

    By the time Cicero returned to Rome, Pompey and Caesar were struggling against each other for complete power. He was on the outskirts of Rome when Caesar crossed the Rubicon and invaded Italy in January 49. Cicero met Pompey outside Rome on January 17 and accepted a commission to supervise recruiting in Campania. He did not leave Italy with Pompey on March 17, however. His indecision was not discreditable, though his criticism of Pompey’s strategy was inexpert. In an interview with Caesar on March 28, Cicero showed great courage in stating his own terms—his intention of proposing in the Senate that Caesar should not pursue the war against Pompey any further—though they were terms that Caesar could not possibly accept. Cicero disapproved of Caesar’s dictatorship; yet he realized that in the succession of battles (which continued until 45) he would have been one of the first victims of Caesar’s enemies, had they triumphed. This was his second period of intensive literary production, works of this period including the Brutus, Paradoxa Stoicorum (Paradoxes of the Stoics), and Orator (The Orator) in 46; De finibus (On the Supreme Good) in 45; and Tusculanae disputationes (Tusculan Disputations), De natura deorum (On the Nature of the Gods), and De officiis (On Duties), finished after Caesar’s murder, in 44.

  6. Ciceronian period, first great age of Latin literature, from approximately 70 to 43 bc; together with the following Augustan Age (q.v.), it forms the Golden Age (q.v.) of Latin literature.

  7. Definition. Ciceronian style refers to a distinct and eloquent method of writing that emphasizes clarity, balance, and rhetorical effectiveness, largely influenced by the Roman orator and statesman Cicero. This style is characterized by the careful arrangement of words and clauses, which enhances both the meaning and aesthetic appeal of the text.

  1. People also search for