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Cicero and the Roman Republic

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Cicero and the Roman Republic The Early Life Cicero was born January 3, 106 B.C. According to Plutarch, he was an extremely adept student Cicero also had a love for ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Cicero and the Roman Republic


1
Cicero and the Roman Republic
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The Early Life
  • Cicero was born January 3, 106 B.C.
  • According to Plutarch, he was an extremely adept
    student
  • Cicero also had a love for almost everything
    Greek. He found the ancient philosophers such as
    Plato very thought provoking.
  • Cicero served as quaestor (elected official) in
    western Sicily in 75 BC
  • Despite his great political success, Cicero
    suffered from his lack of reputable ancestry
  • In 63 BC, Cicero was elected to the Roman consul

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Life in the Consul
  • His only significant accomplishment during his
    year in office was the suppression of the
    Catiline conspiracy, a plot to overthrow the
    Roman Republic
  • Cicero was able to oust Catiline through a series
    of speeches to the Senate however he left behind
    his 'deputies' to start the revolution from
    within whilst Catiline assaulted it from without
  • Cicero managed to have these 'deputies' of
    Catiline confess their crime in front of the
    entire Senate
  • After much debate about their punishment in the
    Senate, Cicero had the conspirators taken to a
    Roman prison, where they were hanged.
  • He was honored for suppressing the conspiracy,
    but thereafter lived in fear of trial or exile
    for having put Roman citizens to death without
    trial

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Life in Exile
  • In 58 BC, a new law went into effect exiling any
    man who had put Roman citizens to death without
    trial
  • Cicero claimed his honor had protected him
    against legal penalty, but he appeared ragged in
    public and began to beg for support from the
    people
  • Cicero maintained that the Senate was jealous of
    him which was why they did not save him from
    exile
  • While in exile, he began putting his speeches to
    paper.
  • Cicero returned after over a dozen months from
    his exile to a cheering crowd

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Last Attempts at Politics
  • Cicero was taken completely by surprise when
    Caesar was assassinated on the Ides of March 44
    BC
  • In a letter to one of the conspirators, Cicero
    expressed a wish of having been "...invited to
    that superb banquet"
  • Cicero became a popular leader during the
    instability and was disgusted with Mark Antony
  • Cicero and Antony became the leading men in Rome
    Cicero as spokesman for the Senate, and Antony as
    consul and as executor of Caesar's wishes
  • During this time, Cicero became an unrivaled
    popular leader

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Ciceros Last Stand
  • Cicero and Antony, quarreled bitterly over their
    political power and personalities.
  • Cicero's failed plan to drive out Octavian and
    Antony resulted in bloodshed
  • Cicero was soon numbered among the enemies of the
    state and was forced to flee Rome
  • Antony hunted for Cicero most viciously
    throughout Italy. Many men fell bravely
  • Ciceros confidants tried to protect him as long
    as they could. However, his executioners had
    arrived at his hideout.

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Ciceros Last Stand
  • His last words were said to have been "there is
    nothing proper about what you are doing, soldier,
    but do try to kill me properly.
  • He was decapitated by his pursuers on December 7,
    43 BC
  • Antony's wife Fulvia took Cicero's head, pulled
    out his tongue, and jabbed the tongue repeatedly
    with her hairpin, taking a final revenge against
    Cicero's power of speech.

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Ciceros Legacy
  • He was declared a "Righteous Pagan" by the early
    Catholic Church, and therefore many of his works
    were deemed worthy of preservation
  • Saint Augustine and others quoted liberally from
    his works "The Republic" and "The Laws," and it
    is due to this that we are able to recreate much
    of the work from the surviving fragments
  • Of Cicero's books, six on rhetoric have survived,
    as well as parts of seven on philosophy
  • Of his speeches, eighty-eight were recorded, but
    only fifty-eight survive
  • More than 800 letters by Cicero to others exist,
    and over 100 letters from others to him

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