Read The Republic and The Laws (Oxford World's Classics) Online
Authors: Cicero
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753 | Traditional date for foundation of Rome |
509 | Expulsion of Tarquinius Superbus |
494–440 | Struggle of the Orders (i.e. between patrician and plebeian families) |
450 | Publication of the Twelve Tables (the earliest code of Roman law, framed by a Committee of Ten; see |
340–264 | Roman expansion in Italy |
264–241 | First Punic War |
218–202 | Second Punic War |
202 | Scipio defeats Hannibal at Zama in North Africa |
197–133 | Operations in Spain |
185 | Birth of Scipio Aemilianus |
167 | Polybius, the Greek historian, is brought to Rome |
155 | Carneades the Sceptic comes to Rome |
149–146 | Third Punic War |
146 | Carthage sacked by Scipio Aemilianus |
144 | The Stoic Panaetius comes to Rome |
133 | The tribunate and death of Tiberius Gracchus |
| Scipio Aemilianus captures Numantia in Spain |
129 | Death of Scipio Aemilianus |
123–122 | The tribunates and death of Gaius Gracchus |
106 | Marius defeats Jugurtha in North Africa |
| Birth of Cicero |
102–101 | Marius defeats the Teutones and Cimbri |
98–91 | War between Rome and her Italian Allies |
87 | Cicero studies with the Sceptic Philo of Larissa in Rome |
82–80 | Dictatorship of Sulla |
78 | Cicero studies philosophy in Athens with Antiochus of Ascalon |
63 | Cicero consul; Catiline’s insurrection crushed |
61 | Trial and acquittal of Clodius |
60 | The so-called ‘First Triumvirate’ of Pompey, Caesar, and Crassus |
58 | Cicero goes into exile |
57 | Cicero returns |
54–52 | Cicero writing the |
53 | Cicero becomes an augur |
52–51 | Cicero writing the |
51–50 | Cicero Governor of Cilicia |
49 | Caesar crosses the Rubicon; the Civil War begins |
47–44 | Dictatorship of Caesar |
45 | Cicero’s main philosophical works |
44 | Cicero’s |
43 | Cicero is murdered on the insistence of Antony |
[Seventeen leaves are missing at the beginning of our manuscript. Half way through his preface Cicero is criticizing the Epicureans for their lack of patriotism.] | |
(Had it not been for his sense of patriotic duty, X) would not have delivered (our country) from invasion; nor would Gaius Duilius, Aulus Atilius, and Lucius Metellus have rescued it from the Carthaginian menace; the two Scipios | 1 |
Or take Marcus Cato, | |
Yet it is not enough to possess moral excellence | 2 3 |
Against these well-known and well-established principles our opponents set, first, the hardships which have to be endured in | 4 |
On that topic our opponents wax fluent and eloquent (in their own opinion), reeling off the disasters of highly eminent men and the wrongs they have suffered from ungrateful citizens. Here they cite the familiar Greek examples—how Miltiades, the conqueror and tamer of the Persians, before those wounds which he sustained with his face to the foe in that glorious victory were healed, breathed forth the life that had survived the enemy’s onslaught in the fetters of his own compatriots; how Themistocles, cast out and warned off with threats from the country he had freed, found refuge not in the havens of Greece which he had saved but in the shelter of that foreign land which he had brought low. Yes indeed, the caprice and cruelty of Athens towards her greatest citizens can be illustrated again and again. But the habit which started and multiplied there has also, we are told, spread to this sober, responsible, country of ours. One hears of Camillus’ exile, | 5 6 |
Yet I would find it hard to say why, when these very men cross the sea to learn and observe … | 7 8 |
Furthermore, we should certainly not entertain for one moment the excuses | 9 |
Again, when they deny that a wise man will take part in politics, who, I ask you, can be satisfied with their proviso | 10 11 |
I have set out these points at some length, because in the present work I have planned and undertaken a discussion of the state. To prevent the project from seeming futile, I had, at the outset, to get rid of people’s scruples about entering public life. Nevertheless, if any readers are swayed by the authority of philosophers, they should pay attention for a moment and listen to men who enjoy | 12 |