Cicero’s writings undoubtedly are an essential source for studying numerous aspects of the Late Republic and, particularly, of the Roman administration at the end of the first century BC. More concretely, his letters constitute our main source for knowing how Roman command worked in the provinces, presenting us at the same time a valuable portrait of the role played by the own orator during his stay in Cilicia as proconsul. However, whether this image corresponds to the reality of his government and, particularly, to the traditional standards of the Roman provincial administration is debatable. It seems no casual that Cicero’s portrait as proconsul essentially agrees with the ideal of government presented by him in the letter sent to his br...
Cicero, a Power Broker or an Unsuccessful Adviser? In his speeches, Cicero asserts that he retained ...
none2Being mostly acclaimed throughout the centuries as the champion of Roman oratory and as innovat...
AbstractWhen Kings Become Philosophers: The Late Republican Origins of Cicero’s Political Philosophy...
This paper intends to explore the discursive picture that Cicero builds of himself in the set of let...
The reputation of the statesman M. Tullius Cicero in the Roman imperial period (ca. 31 BC – 300 AD) ...
This paper intends to explore the discursive picture that Cicero builds of himself in the set of let...
The thesis opens with an account of the early provinces, and then, following upon the acquisition of...
Most of what we know about Cicero comes from his own writings, and he was certainly not shy about c...
Includes bibliographical references (pages 102-106).Just before the end of the Roman Republic, Cicer...
The summer of 44 B.C. that followed the death of Julius Caesar was a time of political tension for M...
The History of Provincial Administration in the Speeches of Cicero. Currently, the Ciceronian corpus...
This thesis examines Marcus Tullius Cicero's rhetorical and political strategy in late Roman republi...
The paper studies the initial formation (in the De imperio) and the evolution (in Cicero’s first let...
Cicero wrote the De republica between 54 and 51 B.C., while retreated from political life. Composed ...
My dissertation investigates the reception of Cicero in the early Roman Empire, focusing on the firs...
Cicero, a Power Broker or an Unsuccessful Adviser? In his speeches, Cicero asserts that he retained ...
none2Being mostly acclaimed throughout the centuries as the champion of Roman oratory and as innovat...
AbstractWhen Kings Become Philosophers: The Late Republican Origins of Cicero’s Political Philosophy...
This paper intends to explore the discursive picture that Cicero builds of himself in the set of let...
The reputation of the statesman M. Tullius Cicero in the Roman imperial period (ca. 31 BC – 300 AD) ...
This paper intends to explore the discursive picture that Cicero builds of himself in the set of let...
The thesis opens with an account of the early provinces, and then, following upon the acquisition of...
Most of what we know about Cicero comes from his own writings, and he was certainly not shy about c...
Includes bibliographical references (pages 102-106).Just before the end of the Roman Republic, Cicer...
The summer of 44 B.C. that followed the death of Julius Caesar was a time of political tension for M...
The History of Provincial Administration in the Speeches of Cicero. Currently, the Ciceronian corpus...
This thesis examines Marcus Tullius Cicero's rhetorical and political strategy in late Roman republi...
The paper studies the initial formation (in the De imperio) and the evolution (in Cicero’s first let...
Cicero wrote the De republica between 54 and 51 B.C., while retreated from political life. Composed ...
My dissertation investigates the reception of Cicero in the early Roman Empire, focusing on the firs...
Cicero, a Power Broker or an Unsuccessful Adviser? In his speeches, Cicero asserts that he retained ...
none2Being mostly acclaimed throughout the centuries as the champion of Roman oratory and as innovat...
AbstractWhen Kings Become Philosophers: The Late Republican Origins of Cicero’s Political Philosophy...