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Sicilia Nutrix Plebis Romanae: Rhetoric, Law & Taxation in Cicero's Verrines (BICS Supplement 97) (Paperback)
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Sicilia Nutrix Plebis Romanae: Rhetoric, Law & Taxation in Cicero's Verrines (BICS Supplement 97) (Paperback)
Series: Bulletin of the Institute of Classical Studies Supplements, 97
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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Corruption in office, pervasive, subversive and perennial, requires
the state to examine itself, its ethical values and its ways of
working. The prosecution for corruption of Gaius Verres, governor
of Sicily, has long been recognized for its exposure of ruthless
depredation, of personal debauchery and abuse of office, and for
the skilled presentation of the case by Cicero in his speech to the
court as prosecutor. Longest of Cicero's surviving orations and his
only prosecution speech, the Verrines are an immensely rich source
of evidence for Roman provincial government, for Roman law and
above all for the rhetoric of prosecution. Deriving from a
colloquium held at the Institute of Classical Studies in 2004,
these papers confront directly the challenge which such rhetoric
poses for our use of the historical material contained within the
speech. The contributions to the volume explore the rhetorical
strategy employed by Cicero for a repetundae prosecution, his use
of witnesses and of devices learned from Attic oratory and his
rhetorical manipulation of the complex legal and taxation systems
at work in the province of Sicily. Several contributors reveal the
extent of Cicero's skill in presentation - but also the perils
which that skill presents for the historian. Many of the papers
focus specifically on the de frumento at the heart of the Verrines,
exploring its rhetorical devices relating it to the archaeology of
Republican Sicily and examining the foundations of its modern
study, Jerome Carcopino's La loi de Hieron et les Romains. This
volume sets the study of the Verrines on a new footing. It is
essential reading for all who work on Cicero provincial government
and Sicily, shedding new light in particular on the much-maligned
de frumento.
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