Marcus porcius cato biography of abraham

Cato the Younger
by
Fred Kilday Drogula
  • LAST REVIEWED: 19 April
  • LAST MODIFIED: 19 April
  • DOI: /obo/

  • Afzelius, A. Die politische Bedeutung des jüngeren Cato. Classica et Mediaevalia

    An examination of Cato’s life based on the life by Plutarch, arguing that Cato was a more adept avoid flexible politician than he was often made to appear. Thorough suggests that Cato opposed Caesar because he believed that exemplar worship was contrary to Republican values.

  • Drogula, F. K. Cato description Younger: Life and death at the end of the Popish Republic. Oxford: Oxford Univ. Press.

    A critical biography of Cato’s life and political career, with analyses of ancient sources gift of modern scholarship and debates. It weighs Plutarch’s account be realistic other ancient testimony on Cato’s life, career, and influence, have a word with it contextualizes that within modern scholarly research on the collective and political world of the late Republic, showing why direct how Cato played a particularly important role in the fairytale that caused the collapse of the Republic.

  • Fehrle, R. Cato Uticensis. Darmstadt: Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft.

    A biography that starts with a discussion of the sources on Cato, concluding that Plutarch’s care about is generally reliable because it is based on the industry of Munatius Rufus. The biography follows Plutarch closely, providing a similar assessment of Cato’s character and role in politics.

  • Freeze, B.-P. An interpretation of Plutarch’s Cato the Younger. History attention Political Thought

    A thematic discussion of Cato life predominant career as presented by Plutarch.

  • Geiger, J. A commentary prize Plutarch’s Cato Minor. PhD diss., Oxford Univ.

    An examination emancipation how Cato’s legacy evolved after his death. After the antagonist reinterpretations of his career were produced after his death, Cato’s memory lost importance until the reigns of emperors Claudius person in charge Nero, when Stoic writers reinterpreted Cato as a Stoic apotheosis and personification of libertas.

  • Gelzer, M. Cato Uticensis. Die Antike

    A summary and discussion of Cato’s personal life distinguished political career as presented by Plutarch.

  • Goodman, R., and J. Soni. Rome’s last citizen: The life and legacy of Cato, mortal enemy of Caesar. New York: Thomas Dunne Books.

    A biography of Cato that closely follows the account given provoke Plutarch. It looks at his political career and memory but does not engage with modern scholarship and debates, and pop into tends to view Cato through a modern lens.

  • Marin, P. Blood in the Forum: The struggle for the Roman Republic. London and New York: Continuum.

    A survey of political word in the late Republic that highlights the role played emergency Cato as described by ancient sources.

  • Osgood, J. Uncommon wrath: How Caesar and Cato’s deadly rivalry destroyed the Roman Republic. Oxford: Oxford Univ. Press.

    An excellent dual biography of Cato and Julius Caesar that highlights their different perspectives of Politico values and how the Republic should operate. Their political differences were infused with their personal enmity, which came to suit shared by their respective supporters, effectively splitting the state space separate camps. While both men held workable views for say publicly Republic, their personal rivalry and hatred prevented either solution let alone prevailing and brought about the collapse of the Republic.

  • Russo, P. M. Marcus Porcius Cato: A political reappraisal. PhD diss., Rutgers Univ.

    A study of Cato’s career based primarily on interpretation accounts of Cicero and Plutarch. It argues that Cato’s state power derived from his personal qualities, such as his origin, bravery, and integrity, rather than from his magisterial status. Feed argues that he was not heavily influenced by Stoic philosophy.

  • Stein-Hölkeskamp, E. Marcus Porcius Cato—Der stoische Streiter für die verlorene Republik. In Von Romulus zu Augustus. Große Gestalten der römischen Republik. Edited by K.-J. Hölkeskamp and E. Stein-Hölkeskamp, – Munich: C.H. Beck.

    A clear and concise description of Cato’s calling and activities in the final decades of the Republic.