Letters to Friends, Volume III

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A01=Cicero
Author_Cicero
Category=DNBH1
Category=DND
Category=NHC
Category=NHD
Cicero
Cicero correspondence
Cicero letters
Cicero speeches
classical literature
classical Rome
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eq_biography-true-stories
eq_history
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Italian humanists
Julius Caesar
juridical speeches
Latin literature
Loeb Classical Library
Marcus Tullius Cicero
Petrarch
philosophical works
political intrigue
political speeches
Roman history
Roman lawyer
Roman orator
Roman philosopher
Roman poetry
Roman politician
Roman politics
Roman Republic
Roman Senate

Product details

  • ISBN 9780674995901
  • Weight: 318g
  • Dimensions: 108 x 162mm
  • Publication Date: 30 Jul 2001
  • Publisher: Harvard University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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The private correspondence of Rome’s most prolific public figure.

Cicero (Marcus Tullius, 106–43 BC), Roman lawyer, orator, politician, and philosopher, of whom we know more than of any other Roman, lived through the stirring era that saw the rise, dictatorship, and death of Julius Caesar in a tottering republic. In his political speeches especially and in his correspondence we see the excitement, tension and intrigue of politics and the part he played in the turmoil of the time. Of about 106 speeches, delivered before the Roman people or the Senate if they were political, before jurors if judicial, fifty-eight survive (a few of them incompletely). In the fourteenth century Petrarch and other Italian humanists discovered manuscripts containing more than 900 letters of which more than 800 were written by Cicero and nearly 100 by others to him. These afford a revelation of the man all the more striking because most were not written for publication. Six rhetorical works survive and another in fragments. Philosophical works include seven extant major compositions and a number of others; and some lost. There is also poetry, some original, some as translations from the Greek.

The Loeb Classical Library edition of Cicero is in twenty-nine volumes.

D. R. Shackleton Bailey was Pope Professor of Latin Language and Literature at Harvard University.

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