10 résultats pour "cicéro"
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Marcus Tullius Cicero - Geschichte.
und Akadmie einander gegenüberstellte. Daran schlossen sich die zwei Bücher De Divinatione (44 v. Chr.; Über die Weissagung ) an, ein Dialog über Sinn und Zweck der Weissagungen, sowie das nur fragmentarisch überlieferte, nicht dialogische De fato (44 v. Chr.; Über das Schiksal ). 44 v. Chr. entstanden auch die beiden kleineren, wieder auf ethische Fragen zurückgreifenden Dialoge Cato maior de senectude (Cato der Ältere, über das Greisenalter) und Laelius de amicitia (Laelius, über di...
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Cicero, Marcus Tullius
Cicero's extant works, although only part of his enormous output, comprise over fifty speeches, nearly a thousand letters to friends and associates, several works on rhetorical theory and practice, and twelve on philosophical topics. This vast corpus, besides displaying great intellectual range and stylistic virtuosity, embodies Cicero's conviction that philosophy and rhetoric are interdependent and both essential for the improvement of human life and society. His oratory bears the stamp of...
- Vocabulaire: CICÉRO, substantif masculin.
- Marcus Tullius Cicero: Erste Rede gegen Catilina - Geschichte.
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Ancient Rome .
attributed to Numa, including the selection of virgins to be priestesses of the goddess Vesta. He also established a calendar to differentiate between normal workingdays and those festival days sacred to the gods on which no state business was allowed. His peaceful reign lasted from 715 to 673 BC. Under Tullus Hostilius (672–641 BC) the Romans waged an aggressive foreign policy and began to expand their lands by the conquest of nearby cities like Alba Longa. When the warlike King Hostilius co...
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Ancient Rome - USA History.
attributed to Numa, including the selection of virgins to be priestesses of the goddess Vesta. He also established a calendar to differentiate between normal workingdays and those festival days sacred to the gods on which no state business was allowed. His peaceful reign lasted from 715 to 673 BC. Under Tullus Hostilius (672–641 BC) the Romans waged an aggressive foreign policy and began to expand their lands by the conquest of nearby cities like Alba Longa. When the warlike King Hostilius co...
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Notre Dame de Paris
III.
développait à terre un tapis où une petite chèvre venait se poser, et un groupe de spectateurs qui s'arrondissait à l'entour. Cette vue changea subitement le cours de ses idées, et figea son enthousiasme musical comme un souffle d'air fige une résine en fusion. Il s'arrêta, tourna le dos au carillon, et s'accroupit derrière l'auvent d'ardoise, en fixant sur la danseuse ce regard rêveur, tendre et doux, qui avait déjà une fois étonné l'archidiacre. Cependant les cloches oubliées s'éteignir...
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Cicero pro domo sua
Cicéron pour sa maison
locution est utilisée à propos de quelqu'un qui défend ses biens.
ses...
Cicero pro domo sua Cicéron pour sa maison locution est utilisée à propos de quelqu'un qui défend ses biens. ses intérêts et ses idées avec acharnement et égoïsme. Elle tire son origine d'un discours que Cicéron prononça en 57 avant J.-C. devant le collège des Pontifes (De domo sua) afin qu'on lui restitue le...
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Julius Caesar
I
INTRODUCTION
Julius Caesar (100-44
BC),
Roman general and statesman whose dictatorship was pivotal in Rome's transition from republic to empire.
V CROSSING THE RUBICON In 52 BC, with Crassus out of the way, Pompey was made sole consul. Combined with his other powers, this gave him a formidable position. Jealous of his younger rival, he determined to break Caesar’s power. To achieve this objective, he first needed to deprive Caesar of the forces he commanded in Gaul. Pompey ordered him toreturn to Rome without his troops. To protect himself, Caesar suggested that he and Pompey both lay down their commands simultaneously, but this propos...
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Julius Caesar.
V CROSSING THE RUBICON In 52 BC, with Crassus out of the way, Pompey was made sole consul. Combined with his other powers, this gave him a formidable position. Jealous of his younger rival, he determined to break Caesar’s power. To achieve this objective, he first needed to deprive Caesar of the forces he commanded in Gaul. Pompey ordered him toreturn to Rome without his troops. To protect himself, Caesar suggested that he and Pompey both lay down their commands simultaneously, but this propos...