Cicero: Letters to Atticus
12/23/2016
The Letters to Atticus (Latin: Epistulae ad Atticum) is a collection of correspondence between Cicero and his close friend Atticus, covering the period between 68 and 43 BCE. When the collection was rediscovered in Verona in 1345, the great renaissance humanist Petrarch was scandalised by their revelations of Cicero's personality. Together with Cicero's other letters they provide one of the most remarkable insights into the life of any individual from the ancient world.
Letters to Atticus at Amazon: United States | Canada | United Kingdom | France | Germany | Spain | Italy
Free online texts
Latin Library: Epistulae ad Atticum. Latin text, HTML format.
Loebulus. L007N - Cicero -- Letters to Atticus I. PDF of public domain Loeb edition in Latin and English.
Loebulus. L008N - Cicero -- Letters to Atticus II. PDF of public domain Loeb edition in Latin and English.
Loebulus. L097N - Cicero -- Letters to Atticus III. PDF of public domain Loeb edition in Latin and English.
Perseus: Letters to Atticus. Latin text, HTML and XML format.
Wikisource: Epistulae ad Atticum. Latin text, multiple formats.
Wikisource: Letters to Atticus, translated by Evelyn Shuckburgh (1900). Multiple formats.
Other Resources
History of Philosophy without any gaps: Rhetorical Questions: Cicero - podcast by philosopher Peter Adamson.
History of Philosophy without any gaps: Raphael Woolf on Cicero - podcast by philosopher Peter Adamson.
Wikipedia: Cicero - Epistulae ad Atticum.
The Great Conversation: Further reading at Tom's Learning Notes
Cicero: Letters to Brutus.
Cicero: Letters to Friends.
Cicero: Letters to Quintus.
Latin resources: Learn to read Latin texts in the original.
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