Cicero: A PortraitCornell University Press, 1983 - 341 páginas Drawing on Cicero's speeches, essays and correspondence, this biography of Cicero explores his politics and philosophy. |
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Resultados 1-3 de 59
Página 9
... whole strongly encouraged emulation , and so did many aspects of both Greek and Roman life . Rhetoric by this time had long been reduced to a system of rules that Cicero himself later regarded as narrow and artificial . They could ...
... whole strongly encouraged emulation , and so did many aspects of both Greek and Roman life . Rhetoric by this time had long been reduced to a system of rules that Cicero himself later regarded as narrow and artificial . They could ...
Página 118
... whole policy had broken down through the great man's suspicious- ness and unreliability . In fact Pompey , on whose reputation the whole affair certainly was a blot , was soon talking in a way that made Cicero's friends hopeful ; for ...
... whole policy had broken down through the great man's suspicious- ness and unreliability . In fact Pompey , on whose reputation the whole affair certainly was a blot , was soon talking in a way that made Cicero's friends hopeful ; for ...
Página 148
... whole problem of political education . For Cicero argues that the only man worthy of the name of orator , and thus of the influence in the state that oratory gives , is the one who unites formal rhetori- cal training with legal and ...
... whole problem of political education . For Cicero argues that the only man worthy of the name of orator , and thus of the influence in the state that oratory gives , is the one who unites formal rhetori- cal training with legal and ...
Índice
Arpinum and Rome 10690 B C ཋ | 7 |
At the Foot of the Ladder 9077 B c | 12 |
Political Apprenticeship 7670 B C | 29 |
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Términos y frases comunes
aedile Antony Antony's Appius army Arpinum Astura attack Atticus Balbus Bibulus brother Brundisium Brut Brutus Caelius Caesar Caesarian Campania Cassius Catiline Cato Cato's Catulus Cicero wrote Cilicia claimed Clodius consul consular consulship Crassus Curio death Decimus declared Deiotarus Dolabella elections enemy Epicurean equites fact favour fear Forum Gabinius Gaul governor Greece Greek Hirtius honour hope Hortensius influence Italy later Latin Lentulus Lepidus letter Lucullus magistrates Marcus Marius Nepos never nobles Octavian optimates orator Pansa perhaps philosophy Piso Plut Plutarch political Pompey Pompey's popular praetor probably proposed prosecution province Puteoli quaestor Quintus refused Republic rhetorical Roman Rome Sallust Scipio seems Senate slaves soon speech Stoic Sulla Sulla's Sulpicius Terentia thought tion trial tribunes troops Tullia Tusculum Varro Verres veterans villa vote wanted write young
Referencias a este libro
Romulus' Asylum: Roman Identities from the Age of Alexander to the Age of ... Emma Dench No hay ninguna vista previa disponible - 2005 |