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  1. fi.wikipedia.org › wiki › CiceroCicero – Wikipedia

    Marcus Tullius Cicero ( [kikero:]; 3. tammikuuta 106 eaa. – 7. joulukuuta 43 eaa.) oli roomalainen poliitikko, puhuja, filosofi, lakimies ja kirjailija. Häntä pidetään yleisesti latinankielisen proosan mestarina, ja klassinen latina määritellään yleensä Julius Caesarin ja Ciceron teosten pohjalta.

  2. Marcus Tullius Tiro (died 4 BC) was first a slave, then a freedman, of Cicero from whom he received his nomen and praenomen. He is frequently mentioned in Cicero's letters. After Cicero's death Tiro published his former master's collected works of letters and speeches. He also wrote a considerable number of books himself, and is thought to have ...

  3. How to Think about God: An Ancient Guide for Believers and Nonbelievers Marcus Tullius Cicero. A vivid and accessible new translation of Cicero’s influential writings on the Stoic idea of the divine. Read More View Book Add to Cart. How to Be a Friend: An Ancient Guide to True Friendship Marcus Tullius Cicero.

  4. advogado, escritor, orador. Marco Túlio Cícero (em latim: Marcus Tullius Cicero, em grego clássico: Κικέρων; romaniz.: Kikerōn; 106 – 43 a.C.) foi um advogado, político, escritor, orador e filósofo da gens Túlia da República Romana eleito cônsul em 63 a.C. com Caio Antônio Híbrida. Era filho de Cícero, o Velho, com Élvia e ...

  5. Marcus Tullius Cicero was born January 6, 106 B.C., on his grandfather’s country estate in Arpinum, about 70 miles southeast of Rome. His father, who shared all three names, was a frail aristocrat with literary interests, property in Arpinum, and a house in Rome.

  6. CICERO, MARCUS TULLIUS(106–43 BCE) The Roman orator and statesman Marcus Tullius Cicero, of Arpinum, had a lifelong interest in philosophy and wrote a number of philosophical works during periods of forced retirement from public life. He was well ac-quainted with the four main Greek schools of his time and counted among his friends and ...

  7. Cicero - Roman Law, Oratory, Philosophy: Cicero studied philosophy under the Epicurean Phaedrus (c. 140–70 bce), the Stoic Diodotus (died c. 60 bce), and the Academic Philo of Larissa (c. 160–80 bce), and thus he had a thorough grounding in three of the four main schools of philosophy. Cicero called himself an Academic, but this applied chiefly to his theory of knowledge, in which he ...

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