119:. Cicero's defense of his former teacher was not only on the legal grounds since he received the citizenship of Lucanian Heraclea, but on the importance of offering him citizenship, if not, based on his poetical skill, and the literary contributions he made to Rome. Cicero argued that "Archias is deserving of Roman citizenship even if he did not already possess it upon Archias's contributions to Roman society through his poetry." Equally, Cicero pointed out that Archias, “as a poet and an intellectual, should hold a place of honor in Rome, and even if he were not a citizen, he should be granted citizenship on the basis of his literary attainments alone.” Further Cicero strongly argued that creators of literature had almost universally been held in high esteem.
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Plautia-Papiria to become a Roman citizen. He also fulfilled another requirement of having a residence in Rome. As a result, Archias was able to acquire Roman citizenship in 89 under the newly passed Lex Plautia Papiria, which granted Roman citizenship to all citizens of states allied
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That speech, which furnishes nearly all the information concerning
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Archias enjoyed his citizenship in peace for twenty-seven years. In 62 BC, he was accused by a certain
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Co-Workers in the
Kingdom of Culture: Classics and Cosmopolitanism in the Thought of W. E. B. Du Bois
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Voices of
Ancient Greece and Rome: Contemporary Accounts of Daily Life
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and that he was engaged upon a poem of which the events of Cicero's
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155:See also
149:epigrams
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107:Grattius
70:Lucullus
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31:Greco
21:Greek
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