Cicero’s personal omens: Pater Patriae and Electus Diuorum

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Abstract

Should the modern reader go through the works of Ancient Romans, he would be baffled by the several hundreds of omens narrated in those living words of the Roman World. Through those works written by and about men of whom we have more questions than answers, we are left with a series of omens, tell-tale of the belief that gods sent signs of what the future held regarding Rome and its leaders. By the time of Cicero, and to his great distress, the Republic was in crisis as the consequences of the Empire’s expansion were felt. The political changes of the Late Republic also resulted in the rise of personal omens regarding the future of the city’s political leaders, omens showing their predestination to greatness or their looming death. Cicero was no exception.
This paper provides a brief symbolic analysis and explanation of those omens and, more importantly, uses those omens’ constructed narrative to effort a better understanding of Cicero’s image being conveyed, in which context, and by whom. Additionally, those omens are used as a case study for the dominant narrative constructions of Late Republican personal omens. Thus, the aim is to provide a better understanding of Cicero and his omens’ place in his time, of how they are part of a broader phenomenon of late republican omens, and of how the operation and manipulation of popular opinion, political propaganda and Roman religion worked together to construct such portrayal of him.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationImages, Perceptions and Productions in and of Antiquity
EditorsMaria Helena Trindade-Lopes, André Patrício
Place of PublicationNewcastle upon Tyne
PublisherCambridge Scholars Publishing
Pages212-222
Number of pages11
ISBN (Print)978-1-5275-9275-9
Publication statusPublished - 2023

Keywords

  • Cicero
  • Omens
  • Roman Religion
  • Roman Republic
  • Symbolic thought

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