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HOME : Classical Antiquities : Classical Masterpieces : Roman Marble Bust of Cicero
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Roman Marble Bust of Cicero - X.0395
Origin: Mediterranean
Circa: 1 st Century AD
Dimensions: 13.5 " (34.3cm) high
Collection: Classical
Style: Roman
Medium: Marble


Additional Information: Height including base- 23.5 inches.

Location: Great Britain
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Description
Marcus Tullius Cicero is famed for being one of the greatest orators of Ancient Rome. However, speaking was only one of his many talents, for he also excelled both in the public sphere as a lawyer and a senator, and in the private sphere as a poet and philosopher. Born in 106 B.C. into a wealthy family, Cicero quickly made a name for himself as a lawyer after studying rhetoric and philosophy in Rome, Athens, and Rhodes. In 80 B.C., at the age of twenty-six, Cicero successfully defended a man unjustly prosecuted by a friend of the dictator Sulla, thereby cementing his reputation. He was elected to the office of quaestor in 76 B.C., making him a member of the senate. In 63 B.C., he was elected consul. His consulship was extraordinary, both for the fact that he was elected at the lowest legal age possible and was the first individual coming from a family where no member had been a senator to achieve that position in more than thirty years.

As consul, he put down the Catilinarian conspiracy, for which he was awarded the title of “Father of his Country.” Politically, Cicero could be characterized as a champion of traditional institutions of the Roman Republic and the common man. However, after the political shift initiated with the rise of Julius Caesar and Pompey, Cicero’s influence waned. During this period away from the public eye, Cicero composed a number of philosophical works for which he is still famed today. In fact, Cicero’s writings formed one of the backbones of classical Western education until recently. Later in his life, after the assassination of Caesar, Cicero briefly returned to politics to lead the Senate’s unsuccessful battle against Mark Antony. For this, Cicero was murdered during a spate of assassination that took place on December 7th, 43 B.C. after the rise of the triumvirate regime of Octavian, Antony, and Lepidus. To Cicero, there was no higher duty of a Roman citizen than to serve in the public life and give back to the institutions that made the Roman way of life possible.

This bust from the 1st Century A.D. depicts the head of Cicero from the neck up. He has short, closely cropped wavy hair and appears to have a receding hairline characteristic of a middle-aged man. His expression is pensive and his brow is slightly creased, perhaps a reflection of his age, perhaps a result of his mood. This bust is a perfect example of the portrait-type initiated during the reign of Augustus. Certain elements reflect the specific individual physiognomy of Cicero (the receding hairline and the furled brow), while other facial features have been idealized in the Hellenic tradition (the eyes, mouth, and neck show none of the aging signs that would be expected from his suggested age).

The following analysis was kindly provided by Dr John Riley (D. Phil. Oxon. Classical Art and Archaeology)

‘This Roman head is almost certainly an Imperial-period copy of a portrait of Cicero, and that if this is confirmed (as I am confident it will be), you will be in possession of only the fifth known and acknowledged head of Cicero. Cicero portraits are incredibly rare and if your portrait is confirmed as Cicero it will be the first ‘new’ Cicero portrait identified in more than a century…Your Roman bust most nearly resembles the ‘Capitoline Cicero’ in Rome- but now, in your version, idealized, smoothed out and ‘juvenated’ (so that Cicero now appears twenty years younger than in acknowledged portraits). But your bust also bears a striking resemblance to the Vatican, Apsley House and Uffizi heads, i.e. all the other acknowledged Cicero portraits.’ - (X.0395)

 

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