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Everitt - Cicero: The Life and Times of Romes Greatest Politician

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    Cicero: The Life and Times of Romes Greatest Politician
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Cicero: The Life and Times of Romes Greatest Politician: summary, description and annotation

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All ages of the world have not produced a greater statesman and philosopher combined.--John Adams He squared off against Caesar and was friends with young Brutus. He advised the legendary Pompey on his somewhat botched transition from military hero to politician. He lambasted Mark Antony and was master of the smear campaign, as feared for his wit as he was for exposing his opponents sexual peccadilloes. Brilliant, voluble, cranky, a genius of political manipulation but also a true patriot and idealist, Cicero was Romes most feared politician, one of the greatest lawyers and statesmen of all times. Machiavelli, Queen Elizabeth, John Adams and Winston Churchill all studied his example. No man has loomed larger in the political history of mankind. In this dynamic and engaging biography, Anthony Everitt plunges us into the fascinating, scandal-ridden world of ancient Rome in its most glorious heyday. Accessible to us through his legendary speeches but also through an unrivaled collection of unguarded letters to his close friend Atticus, Cicero comes to life in these pages as a witty and cunning political operator. Cicero leapt onto the public stage at twenty-six, came of age during Spartacus famous revolt of the gladiators and presided over Roman law and politics for almost half a century. He foiled the legendary Catiline conspiracy, advised Pompey, the victorious general who brought the Middle East under Roman rule, and fought to mobilize the Senate against Caesar. He witnessed the conquest of Gaul, the civil war that followed and Caesars dictatorship and assassination. Cicero was a legendary defender of freedom and a model, later, to French and American revolutionaries who saw themselves as following in his footsteps in their resistance to tyranny. Anthony Everitts biography paints a caustic picture of Roman politics--where Senators were endlessly filibustering legislation, walking out, rigging the calendar and exposing one anothers sexual escapades, real or imagined, to discredit their opponents. This was a time before slander and libel laws, and the stories--about dubious pardons, campaign finance scandals, widespread corruption, buying and rigging votes, wife-swapping, and so on--make the Lewinsky affair and the U.S. Congress seem chaste. Cicero was a wily political operator. As a lawyer, he knew no equal. Boastful, often incapable of making up his mind, emotional enough to wander through the woods weeping when his beloved daughter died in childbirth, he emerges in these pages as intensely human, yet he was also the most eloquent and astute witness to the last days of Republican Rome. On Cicero: He taught us how to think.--Voltaire I tasted the beauties of language, I breathed the spirit of freedom, and I imbibed from his precepts and examples the public and private sense of a man. --Edward Gibbon Who was Cicero: a great speaker or a demagogue? --Fidel Castro From the Hardcover edition.

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Praise for Cicero In the half-century before the assassination of Julius - photo 1
Praise forCicero

In the half-century before the assassination of Julius Caesar Rome endured a series of crises, assassinations, factional bloodletting, civil wars and civil strife, including at one point government by gang war. This period, when republican government slid into dictatorship, is one of historys most fascinating, and one learns a great deal about it in this excellent and very readable biography.

The Plain Dealer

An excellent introduction to a critical period in the history of Rome. Cicero comes across much as he must have lived: reflective, charming and rather vain.

The Wall Street Journal

Riveting a clear-eyed biography Ciceros times offer vivid lessons about the viciousness that can pervade elected government.

Chicago Tribune

Lively and dramatic By the books end, hes managed to put enough flesh on Ciceros old bones that you care when the agents of his implacable enemy, Mark Antony, kill him.

Los Angeles Times

Everitt is an attentive biographer who continuously rehearses and refines his account of the motives of his subject. His achievement is to have replaced the austere classroom effigy with an altogether rounder, more awkward and human person.

Financial Times

Wonderful This is biography at its bestexcellent research, an approachable writing style, a knack for making an ancient ancestor relevant to todays world without overreaching. Yes, the Roman Republic differed greatly from the United States. But political machinations then resonate today, because the way an accomplished politician wins popular support has not changed all that much.

Denver Post

A highly readable examination not only of a great mans career but also of an important chapter in the history of Western civilization. There may be lessons in the death throes of the Roman Republic for those of us who hope to protect our own freedoms in a changing and dangerous world.

Ft. Worth Star-Telegram

Everitt is a skillful, deft, articulate and often humorous expositor. Cicero is fortunate to have found in Everitt one who is at home in the ancient world and able to communicate to readers of the present time.

The Seattle Times/Post Intelligencer

Brilliant not only deeply and carefully researched but well-crafted in a style that should appeal to a wide variety of readers Everitt has made a man of antiquity a flesh-and-blood person with recognizable flaws, as well as impressive strengths.

Deseret News

Cicero mastered the essence of politics. He preached the difference between authority and power. He was an orator who wrote poetry, a politician who read history, ruthless yet able to articulate the demands of clemency, democracy and the rights of free men under law. If good government is rooted in history and history in biography, Cicero is the man of the hour.

The Times (London)

Anthony Everitt is a brilliant guide to the intricacies of Roman politics. [He] has written a book which is unobtrusively crammed with fascinating information about Roman life and customs, splendidly clear and coherent in its narrative and altogether convincing in its portraiture.

Dublin Sunday Independent

Superb Ciceros political life forms the real backbone of this book. As an explicator, [Everitt] is admirably informative and free from breathlessness. He has a sophisticated conception of character, too, including a willingnessso crucial in biographersto embrace contradictions.

Independent on Sunday

Everitts masterful biography draws on Ciceros letters to his friend Atticus to give a clear picture of the famous Roman orator. A staunch defender of the Roman Republic, Cicero spent his career battling foes such as Julius Caesar and Mark Antony. Everitt does a superb job of bringing the last days of the Roman Republic to life, and he accurately portrays the tenuous political situation that marked the times. Most important, he creates a sympathetic portrait of Cicero.

Booklist (starred)

2003 Random House Trade Paperback Edition Copyright 2001 by Anthony Everitt - photo 2

2003 Random House Trade Paperback Edition

Copyright 2001 by Anthony Everitt
Readers guide copyright 2003 by Random House, Inc.

All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. Published in the United States by Random House Trade Paperbacks, an imprint of The Random House Ballantine Publishing Group, a division of Random House, Inc., New York and simultaneously in Canada by Random House of Canada Limited, Toronto.

R ANDOM H OUSE T RADE P APERBACKS and colophon are trademarks of Random House, Inc.

This work was previously published in hardcover by Random House, Inc., in 2002.
This work was originally published in Great Britain by John Murray (Publishers) Ltd. in 2001.

LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOGING-IN-PUBLICATION DATA Everitt, Anthony.
Cicero: the life and times of Romes greatest politician / Anthony Everitt.
p. cm.
Includes bibliographical references.
eISBN: 978-1-58836-034-2
1. Cicero, Marcus Tullius. 2. StatesmenRomeBiography. 3. OratorsRomeBiography. 4. RomePolitics and government26530 B.C . I. Title.
DG260.C5 E94 2002
937.05092dc21s
[B] 2001048531

Random House website address: www.atrandom.com

v3.1

P REFACE

With the disappearance of Latin from the schoolroom, the greatest statesman of ancient Rome, Marcus Tullius Cicero, is now a dimly remembered figure. He does not deserve this fate and it is time to restore him to his proper place in the pantheon of our common past.

One powerful motive for doing so is that, nearly two thousand years after his time, he became an unknowing architect of constitutions that still govern our lives. For the founding fathers of the United States and their political counterparts in Great Britain, the writings of Tully (as his name was Anglicized) were the foundation of their education. John Adamss first book and proudest possession was his Cicero.

Cicero wrote about how a state should best be organized and decision-makers of the eighteenth century read and digested what he had to say. His big idea, which he tirelessly publicized, was that of a mixed or balanced constitution. He favored not monarchy nor oligarchy nor democracy, but a combination of all three. His model was Rome itself, but improved. Its executive had quasi-royal powers. It was restrained partly by the widespread use of vetoes and partly by a Senate, dominated by great political families. Politicians were elected to office by the People.

This model is not so very distant from the original constitution of the United States with the careful balance it set between the executive and the legislature, and the constraints, now largely vanished, which it placed on pure, untrammeled democracy. When George Washington, meditating on the difficulty of ensuring stable government, said, What a triumph for the advocates of despotism, to find that we are incapable of governing ourselves, and that systems on the basis of equal liberty are merely ideal and fallacious, he could have been quoting Cicero.

Towards the end of his life Cicero distinguished himself in his battle to save the Roman Republic. Through sheer force of character he took charge of the state during the months following Julius Caesars assassination, despite the fact that he held no public office, and organized a war against the dead Dictators friend and supporter, Mark Antony. Cicero came to stand for future generations as a model of defiance against tyrannyan inspiration first to the American and then the French revolutionaries.

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