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Cicero the Historian and Cicero the Antiquarian
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Abstract
Cicero’s views on history and historians, and his general conceptions of the past, have received a good deal of attention - some, most recently, in Rambaud’s short book Ciceron et l’Histoire Romaine; but his historical practice has had less consideration. True, practically every passage in which he refers to an event of the past has been somewhere thoroughly elucidated, and the sources to which he turned in any particular work have been investigated by a crowd of commentators. But the general accounts of Cicero’s knowledge of and relation to the historiographical tradition of his time are either antiquated or disappointing, and estimates of Cicero’s scholarship range from the enthusiastic admiration displayed, but hardly justified, by most recent writers, to the contempt of older ones, most extravagantly Munzer, who stigmatized the De senectute as a historical fantasy, or Zingler, who even accused Cicero of inventing his exempla.
Title: Cicero the Historian and Cicero the Antiquarian
Description:
Abstract
Cicero’s views on history and historians, and his general conceptions of the past, have received a good deal of attention - some, most recently, in Rambaud’s short book Ciceron et l’Histoire Romaine; but his historical practice has had less consideration.
True, practically every passage in which he refers to an event of the past has been somewhere thoroughly elucidated, and the sources to which he turned in any particular work have been investigated by a crowd of commentators.
But the general accounts of Cicero’s knowledge of and relation to the historiographical tradition of his time are either antiquated or disappointing, and estimates of Cicero’s scholarship range from the enthusiastic admiration displayed, but hardly justified, by most recent writers, to the contempt of older ones, most extravagantly Munzer, who stigmatized the De senectute as a historical fantasy, or Zingler, who even accused Cicero of inventing his exempla.
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