The Life of Cicero, Vol. I


Lu par Philippa

(4.7 stars; 30 reviews)

Marcus Tullius Cicero (106-43BC) was an orator, statesman, philosopher and prolific correspondent, who rose as a ‘new man’ in Rome in the turbulent last years of its republican government. Anthony Trollope, best known as a novelist, admired Cicero greatly and wrote this biography late in life in order to argue his virtues against authors who had granted him literary greatness but questioned his strength as a politician and as a man. He takes a personal approach, affording us an insight into his own mind and times as well as those of his subject.

Volume I covers the period (up to the year 57BC) of Cicero’s education, his rise through the courts and offices of state to the Consulship, and his exile.

Please note that footnotes - predominantly bibliographical citations and Latin quotations - are omitted unless explicitly referred to in the main text; the appendices, which consist mainly of more substantial extracts from other works, are likewise omitted. (Summary by Philippa)

Volume II can be found here. (10 hr 57 min)

Chapitres

Ch1, Introduction, pt1 37:20 Lu par Philippa
Ch1, Introduction, pt2 29:39 Lu par Philippa
Ch2, His Education 45:26 Lu par Philippa
Ch3, The Condition of Rome 35:08 Lu par Philippa
Ch4, His Early Pleadings, pt1 28:30 Lu par Philippa
Ch4, His Early Pleadings, pt2 24:21 Lu par Philippa
Ch5, Cicero as Quaestor 35:50 Lu par Philippa
Ch6, Verres, pt1 35:19 Lu par Philippa
Ch6, Verres, pt2 44:20 Lu par Philippa
Ch7, Cicero as Aedile and Praetor 42:47 Lu par Philippa
Ch8, Cicero as Consul 41:42 Lu par Philippa
Ch9, Catiline, pt1 27:22 Lu par Philippa
Ch9, Catiline, pt2 43:12 Lu par Philippa
Ch10, Cicero After His Consulship 45:41 Lu par Philippa
Ch11, The Triumvirate, pt1 37:30 Lu par Philippa
Ch11, The Triumvirate, pt2 29:09 Lu par Philippa
Ch12, His Exile, pt1 32:03 Lu par Philippa
Ch12, His Exile, pt2 42:15 Lu par Philippa

Critiques

Great Reader


(5 stars)

Philippa made what could have been a very long read into something that kept me interested and listening through volumes 1 and 2.

Expert Narration


(5 stars)

Thanks for the best reading possible. Please record more of these forgotten classics.


(3 stars)

Victorian apology by a novelist rather than an historian. Useful as historiography & chronology, rather than for the tedious & almost worshipful defenses of Cicero against those the author sees as Cicero’s detractors.

Great book greater reader!


(5 stars)

If you're interested in this timeline Rome . Fascinating!