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Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology/Cicero 2.

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2. M. Tullius Cicero, son of the foregoing, and father of the orator. He was a member of the equestrian order, and lived upon his hereditary estate, in the neighbourhood of Arpinum, near the junction of the Fibrenus with the Liris, devoted to literary pursuits, till far advanced in life, when he removed to Rome for the purpose of educating his two boys, Marcus and Quintus, and became the pro­prietor of a house in the Carinae. His reputation as a man of learning procured for him the society and friendship of the most distinguished charac­ters of the day, especially the orators M. Antonius and L. Crassus, and the jurists Q. Scaevola and C. Aculeo, the latter of whom was his brother-in-law, being married to the sister of his wife Helvia. Although naturally of a delicate constitution, by care and moderation he attained to a good old age, and died in the year b. c. 64, while his son, whose rapid rise he had had the happiness of witnessing, was canvassing for the consulship with every pros­pect of success. (De Leg. ii. 1, de Orat. ii. 1, de Off. iii. 19, ad Att. i. 6.)