Thesis (Ph.D.) - Indiana University, Classical Studies, 2010The friendship between Cicero and Brutus, which has been largely untouched in scholarship, began around 51 B.C. when Cicero was governor in Cilicia, and continued until Cicero's death in December 43 B.C. Their relationship, like any other, had its points of harmony and departure. This dissertation explores their friendship and argues it was so strong at one point that Cicero saw Brutus as his oratorical and philosophical successor. Cicero dedicated no less than six treatises to Brutus in the years of Caesar's autocracy. Some of these treatises, such as the Brutus and the Paradoxa Stoicorum, also give Brutus credit for their inspiration. Since Brutus had a reputation as a respected ...