Complete chronology
Full overview and deeper context for every journey step.
-106
Humble Beginnings
Marcus Tullius Cicero was born in 106 BC at Arpinum, a Latin town southeast of Rome that had already produced one disruptive outsider, Gaius Marius. Cicero's family was locally important and wealthy enough to educate him well, but it did not belong to the small circle of noble families whose ancestors filled Rome's highest offices. That made him a novus homo, a new man, in a political culture obsessed with lineage. His path had to run through ability made visible: legal brilliance, disciplined study, social connection and a public reputation for service. This origin mattered throughout his career. Cicero admired the Republic's traditions, but he also knew its aristocratic gatekeeping from the outside. He wanted entry into the ruling class without surrendering the argument that merit and civic virtue should count for more than inherited names.
Coming from outside the ruling elite sharpened his belief that ability, not birth, should guide leadership.
-80s
Training in Oratory
Cicero came of age when Rome's courts and assemblies rewarded men who could persuade crowds, judges and senators under pressure. He studied with leading Roman teachers, absorbed Greek rhetorical theory, and later travelled in the Greek east to refine his delivery after early strain on his voice. Philosophy was not a decorative addition for him. It gave his speeches a moral architecture: arguments about law became arguments about justice, public duty and the character of the state. He learned to vary speed, rhythm, indignation, humour and forensic detail until speech itself became a form of power. In a Republic where soldiers increasingly made politics by force, Cicero represented a different kind of authority: the belief that reasoned language could still expose wrongdoing and summon citizens to judgement.
Mastery of language gave him a tool that could rival traditional forms of political power.
-80
First Legal Success
Cicero's early fame came from the defence of Sextus Roscius of Ameria, accused of murdering his father. The case was dangerous because it touched the aftermath of Sulla's proscriptions, when property confiscation, political murder and opportunistic enrichment had blurred law and terror. Cicero did not attack Sulla directly, but he made the prosecution look like part of a corrupt scheme by men protected by the dictator's circle. The speech was bold, tactically careful and morally charged. It announced him as a lawyer capable of confronting power without simply inviting destruction. The victory helped launch his reputation, but it also showed the world he would return to repeatedly: a Republic whose legal forms still existed, yet could be bent by violence, money and political intimidation.
Early willingness to confront power helped define his public identity as a defender of justice.
-75 to -63
Rise Through Offices
Roman public life moved through a ladder of magistracies, and Cicero advanced along it with remarkable success. As quaestor in Sicily he built a reputation for honesty; as prosecutor of the corrupt governor Verres he turned legal performance into a public spectacle of accountability. His speeches against Verres were so devastating that the defendant went into exile before the trial was complete. By the time Cicero sought the consulship, he had become the most famous advocate in Rome and a useful figure to conservatives who feared social unrest and aristocrats who could tolerate a talented outsider if he defended their order. His election for 63 BC was a personal triumph and a political signal. A new man had reached Rome's highest annual office without an army, an ancient name or a revolutionary programme.
Steady achievement across roles can build authority even in systems designed to resist outsiders.
-63
Consulship Crisis
Cicero's consulship was defined by Lucius Sergius Catilina, or Catiline, a failed aristocratic candidate who gathered debtors, disaffected nobles and armed supporters into a movement that Cicero presented as a mortal threat to the Republic. Through informants, Senate speeches and public theatre, Cicero forced the conspiracy into the open. The Catilinarian Orations made him the voice of emergency government: urgent, accusatory and convinced that delay meant ruin. Yet his decisive act was also his vulnerability. Several conspirators arrested in Rome were executed without full trial after a Senate debate. Many contemporaries praised Cicero as pater patriae, father of the fatherland. Others saw a consul who had violated citizen rights in the name of security. The episode gave him glory, but it also gave enemies a legal and moral weapon.
Defending a system can sometimes involve choices that later challenge its own principles.
-58 to -57
Exile and Return
Cicero's exile grew out of the same deed that had made him famous. Publius Clodius Pulcher, a bitter enemy and tribune of the plebs, passed a law targeting anyone who had executed Roman citizens without trial. Cicero lacked reliable protection from Pompey, Caesar and Crassus, whose uneasy alliance dominated politics, and he left Italy in 58 BC. His house was destroyed, his property attacked and his public identity humiliated. Recall came the following year after political winds shifted, and his return to Rome was celebrated by crowds. But exile changed him. It taught him that applause was not security, that the Senate could be weak when organized force entered the streets, and that the Republic he loved could abandon even its most articulate defender when powerful men found it convenient.
Political success can be temporary when it depends on shifting alliances rather than stable structures.
-50s
Philosophical Writing
As Caesar and Pompey moved toward civil war, Cicero's political room narrowed. He disliked Caesar's domination, distrusted revolutionary violence and found Pompey's leadership disappointing. Writing became both retreat and intervention. In works such as De re publica, De legibus, De officiis and the Tusculan Disputations, he translated Greek philosophy into a Roman language of public duty. He was not simply preserving ideas; he was recasting them for magistrates, advocates, senators and educated citizens who needed moral vocabulary in a broken political world. His thought could be inconsistent, and he often wrote under personal pressure, especially after the death of his daughter Tullia. Yet his prose gave later Europe a language for natural law, mixed government, friendship, conscience and civic responsibility.
Ideas expressed clearly can endure long after the political systems around them collapse.
-44 to -43
Conflict with Power
Caesar's assassination in 44 BC opened a brief, dangerous space in which Cicero hoped the Republic might still be restored. He had not been part of the murder plot, but he welcomed the possibility that Caesar's dictatorship had ended. The real struggle soon centred on Mark Antony, Caesar's former lieutenant, and the teenage Octavian, Caesar's adopted heir. Cicero chose to use Octavian against Antony, a calculation that looked clever until it became catastrophic. His speeches against Antony, later called the Philippics after Demosthenes' attacks on Philip of Macedon, were ferocious performances of republican outrage. They also made compromise almost impossible. Cicero believed he could still marshal legitimacy through Senate, law and language. Antony and Octavian understood that armies now decided what speeches could not.
Persuasion alone cannot prevail when power is secured through force.
-43
Death and Legacy
When Octavian, Antony and Lepidus formed the Second Triumvirate in 43 BC, they legalised revenge through proscriptions. Cicero's name was included, reportedly at Antony's insistence. He was captured while attempting to flee and killed; his head and hands were displayed in the Forum, a brutal answer to the voice and pen that had attacked Antony. His death became one of the symbolic endings of the Roman Republic, though the Republic had been dying by stages for decades. Cicero's afterlife was larger than his political success. Students learned Latin through his prose, Renaissance humanists treated him as a model of eloquence, and later thinkers drew on his language of law, duty and mixed government. He failed to save the Republic, but he helped define what losing a republic could mean.
A life’s influence can grow after death when its ideas continue to shape future generations.