The records of the trial of Gaius (sometimes spelled Caius) Verres reveal - far better than any other extant source - the corruption of the last years of the Roman Republic. Through a series of orations and witnesses, Verres\u27s prosecutor, Cicero, presented a powerful story of how the shocking greed and arrogance of a provincial governor wreaked havoc on what had been the breadbasket of the Roman Empire, Sicily. In his successful prosecution of Verres, Cicero both demonstrated the talents that would make him one of Rome\u27s foremost politicians and set in motion events that bring an end to the senatorial oligarchy established by the Sullan constitution. A word of caution: what we know about Gaius Verres comes to us from Cicero\u27s seven...
Something so extended as the corruption is not single of our time, but that own republican Rome not ...
This essay looks at the life of Cicero, focusing on his actions towards the end of the Roman Republi...
After the battle of Thapsus that took place on 6 April 46 Caesar kept delaying his return to Rome fo...
Toe legal background The legal remedy for extortion by a provincial governor was first provided - in...
This thesis addresses issues concerning Cicero’s prosecution of Verres over the course of three chap...
Looting, despoiling temples, attempted rape and judicial murder: these are just some of the themes o...
A great Roman scholar, Cicero was also a brilliant investigative journalist ahead of his time. By th...
Includes bibliographical references (pages 102-106).Just before the end of the Roman Republic, Cicer...
This story of Cicero and the Catilinarian Conspiracy is set within and offers a case study of the po...
International audienceThis paper considers the legal relations between local communities and Roman a...
In 59 B.C., L. Valerius Flaccus, the Roman governor of Asia in 62, was tried at Rome for extortion i...
There are many similarities between the late Roman republic and the modern American republic. Perhap...
Aulus Cluentius was a wealthy man who had accused his stepfather of trying to poison him (so that Au...
The History of Provincial Administration in the Speeches of Cicero. Currently, the Ciceronian corpus...
Most of what we know about Cicero comes from his own writings, and he was certainly not shy about c...
Something so extended as the corruption is not single of our time, but that own republican Rome not ...
This essay looks at the life of Cicero, focusing on his actions towards the end of the Roman Republi...
After the battle of Thapsus that took place on 6 April 46 Caesar kept delaying his return to Rome fo...
Toe legal background The legal remedy for extortion by a provincial governor was first provided - in...
This thesis addresses issues concerning Cicero’s prosecution of Verres over the course of three chap...
Looting, despoiling temples, attempted rape and judicial murder: these are just some of the themes o...
A great Roman scholar, Cicero was also a brilliant investigative journalist ahead of his time. By th...
Includes bibliographical references (pages 102-106).Just before the end of the Roman Republic, Cicer...
This story of Cicero and the Catilinarian Conspiracy is set within and offers a case study of the po...
International audienceThis paper considers the legal relations between local communities and Roman a...
In 59 B.C., L. Valerius Flaccus, the Roman governor of Asia in 62, was tried at Rome for extortion i...
There are many similarities between the late Roman republic and the modern American republic. Perhap...
Aulus Cluentius was a wealthy man who had accused his stepfather of trying to poison him (so that Au...
The History of Provincial Administration in the Speeches of Cicero. Currently, the Ciceronian corpus...
Most of what we know about Cicero comes from his own writings, and he was certainly not shy about c...
Something so extended as the corruption is not single of our time, but that own republican Rome not ...
This essay looks at the life of Cicero, focusing on his actions towards the end of the Roman Republi...
After the battle of Thapsus that took place on 6 April 46 Caesar kept delaying his return to Rome fo...