The Life of Cicero  
Lessons for Today from the Greatest Orator of the Roman Republic
Author(s): Philip Kay-Bujak
Published by Pen and Sword
Publication Date:  Available in all formats
ISBN: 9781399097420
Pages: 0

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Fresh new look at the life of Cicero, Rome’s greatest orator and one of the key figures of the 1st century.

Cicero was Rome's greatest orator and one of the key statesmen of the late Roman Republic. He championed traditional Republican values against populist demagogues like Julius Caesar during a tumultuous period of civil war and unrest. During his term as consul (63 BCE), his decisive actions thwarted a plot to overthrow the Senate, controversially having the ringleaders executed.  He outlived Caesar but then mounted a virulent opposition to Mark Antony, which led to Cicero's proscription and execution as an enemy of the state.

The legacy of his speeches, letters and treatises on politics, law, oratory and other subjects endured, however, and was massively influential on Latin literature and, when rediscovered in the Middle Ages, formed one of the cornerstones of the Renaissance. 

The period in which Cicero flourished and died was one in which democracy was under attack from radical demagoguery and Philip Kay-Bujak believes his career holds important parallels and lessons for our own times. Written in a clear and accessible style, this fresh look at Cicero's life demonstrates his relevance to a modern audience.
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Fresh new look at the life of Cicero, Rome’s greatest orator and one of the key figures of the 1st century.

Cicero was Rome's greatest orator and one of the key statesmen of the late Roman Republic. He championed traditional Republican values against populist demagogues like Julius Caesar during a tumultuous period of civil war and unrest. During his term as consul (63 BCE), his decisive actions thwarted a plot to overthrow the Senate, controversially having the ringleaders executed.  He outlived Caesar but then mounted a virulent opposition to Mark Antony, which led to Cicero's proscription and execution as an enemy of the state.

The legacy of his speeches, letters and treatises on politics, law, oratory and other subjects endured, however, and was massively influential on Latin literature and, when rediscovered in the Middle Ages, formed one of the cornerstones of the Renaissance. 

The period in which Cicero flourished and died was one in which democracy was under attack from radical demagoguery and Philip Kay-Bujak believes his career holds important parallels and lessons for our own times. Written in a clear and accessible style, this fresh look at Cicero's life demonstrates his relevance to a modern audience.
Table of contents
  • Cover
  • Title
  • Copyright
  • Contents
  • A Note on Sources
  • Acknowledgements
  • Part I: Early Life and Influences
    • Chapter 1 Home, Heritage and Patriotism
    • Chapter 2 From Arpinum to Rome
  • Part II: The Law, Forum and the Republic
    • Chapter 3 The Innate Instability of the Republic
    • Chapter 4 The Legal Profession in Republican Rome
    • Chapter 5 All the World is a Stage – The Forum Romanum
  • Part III: Changing Times
    • Chapter 6 First Cases First Risks
    • Chapter 7 Political Aspirations and The Trial of Verres
    • Chapter 8 Domestic Life and the Tides Change
  • Part IV: The Battle for Democracy
    • Chapter 9 Was Democracy in the Roman Republic Doomed to Fail?
    • Chapter 10 The Erosion of Morality
    • Chapter 11 Troubled Times – Mithridates
    • Chapter 12 Consul at Last
    • Chapter 13 Cicero’s Finest Hour?
  • Part V: Plots, Power and Pompey
    • Chapter 14 Plots and Power 62–58
    • Chapter 15 The Return of Pompey
    • Chapter 16 Finding his Way in the Wilderness
    • Chapter 17 The First Triumvirate
    • Chapter 18 The Return of Pretty Boy
    • Chapter 19 Into Exile
  • Part VI: Readjustments
    • Chapter 20 Time to Reflect
    • Chapter 21 Back to the Courts 56
    • Chapter 22 Prelude to Collapse
    • Chapter 23 Pivotal Moments 53–52
    • Chapter 24 Cilicia 51–50
    • Chapter 25 Rubicon 49
  • Part VII: The Beginning of History
    • Chapter 26 A House Divided
    • Chapter 27 Pharsalus 9 August 48
    • Chapter 28 How to Survive
    • Chapter 29 The Final Flurry
    • Chapter 30 The Philippics 44
    • Chapter 31 The Beginning of History
  • Bibliography
  • Plates
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