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Cicero, Tiro, and the relationships of Roman slavery

Virtual event

Join the Department of Classics and Dr. Roberta Stewart, Dartmouth College, for a talk discussing Cicero's correspondence with the enslaved person, Tiro. These correspondences reveal a carefully fashioned dialogue between a slave owner and an enslaved person whose labor he claims. The letters allow us to track the contest for labor and the personal relationships of slavery, as well as the effects of Roman manumission on the relationship of slave-holder and the enslaved person manumitted into citizenship. The letters present a discourse of shared confidences and concerned care articulated by Cicero for Tiro, and they suggest the parameters of action for an enslaved person. They also reveal the role of the family in the manumission and freedom of Tiro. Manumission was for the familia Cicero a family affair and everyone laid claim to the patronage of Tiro and the obligations owed to them by him. The freed slave emerges as embedded in enduring relationships of obligation. 

Please email the Department of Classics to register and receive the Zoom link.

Event Details

Cost
Free