02603nam 2200385 450 99619920370331620231103112148.00-674-99590-2(CKB)3820000000012152(NjHacI)993820000000012152(EXLCZ)99382000000001215220231103d2001 uy 0engur|||||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierLetters to FriendsVolume III /Marcus Tullius Cicero, edited by D. R. Shackleton BaileyCambridge, Mass. :Harvard University Press,2001.1 online resource (496 pages)Loeb classical library ;205, 216, 230Includes bibliographical references.CICEREO was a prodigious letter writer, and happily a splendid treasury of his letters has come down to us. Collected and in part published not long after his death, over 800 of them were rediscovered by Petrarch and other Italian humanists in the fourteenth century. Among classical texts this correspondence is unparalleled: nowhere else do we get such an intimate look at the life of a prominent Roman and his social world, or such a vivid sense of a momentous period in Roman history, years marked by the rise of Julius Caesar and the downfall of the Republic. The 435 letters collected here represent Ciceros correspondence with friends and acquaintances over a period of twenty years, from 62 BC, when Ciceros political career was at its peak, to 43, the year he was put to death by the forces of Octavian and Mark Antony. They range widely in substance and style, from official dispatches and semi-public letters of political importance to casual notes that chat with close friends about travels and projects, domestic pleasures and books, and questions currently debated. This new Loeb Classical Library edition of the Letters to Friends, in three volumes brings together D.R. Shackleton Baileys standard Latin text, now updated, and a revised version of his much admired translation first published by Penguin Books. This authoritative edition complements the new Loeb edition of Ciceros Letters to Atticus, also translated by Shackleton Bailey.Loeb classical library ;205, 216, 230.LettersLetters.808.86Cicero Marcus Tullius82411Shackleton Bailey D. R.NjHacINjHaclBOOK996199203703316Epistulae14923UNISA