Dictionary Definition
tiro n : someone new to a field or activity [syn:
novice, beginner, tyro, initiate] [also: tyros (pl)]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Alternative spellings
Etymology
From etyl la tiroNoun
- A newly recruited soldier.
- A novice without practical experience.
Italian
Noun
Extensive Definition
The date of Tiro's birth is uncertain. From
Jerome it
can be dated to 103 BC, which would make him only a little younger
than Cicero. However, he may have been born considerably later than
that: Cicero refers to him as a "young man" in 50 BC.
It is possible that Tiro was born a slave in
Cicero's household in Arpinum and came
with his family to Rome. However we do
not know for sure that he was a verna (homegrown slave). Cicero
refers to Tiro frequently in his letters. His duties included
taking dictation, deciphering Cicero's handwriting and managing his
table, as well his garden and financial affairs. Cicero remarks on
how useful he is to him in his work and studies. He was freed in
53 BC and
accompanied Cicero to Cilicia during
Cicero's governorship there, although he was frequently separated
from his patron due to poor health, and many of Cicero's letters
refer with concern to his illnesses.
He is believed to have collected and published
Cicero's work after his death, and, it seems, was a writer himself:
several ancient writers refer to works of Tiro, now lost. Aulus
Gellius says, " [he] wrote several books on the usage and
theory of the Latin language and on miscellaneous questions of
various kinds," and quotes him on the difference between Greek and
Latin names for certain stars. Asconius
Pedianus, in his commentaries on Cicero's speeches, refers to a
biography of Cicero by Tiro in at least four books, and Plutarch refers to
him as a source for two incidents in Cicero's life. He is credited
with inventing the shorthand system of Tironian
notes later used by monks among others. There is no clear
evidence that he did, although Plutarch credits Cicero's clerks as
the first Romans to record speeches in shorthand.
After Cicero's death Tiro bought an estate near
Puteoli,
where Jerome says he died in 4 BC at the age of ninety-nine.
Tiro in fiction
Tiro appears as a recurring character in Steven Saylor's Roma Sub Rosa crime fiction series, where he occupies the role of sometime sidekick to Saylor's investigator hero, Gordianus the Finder. He was also used as the first-person narrator in Robert Harris's 2006 fictionalised biography of Cicero, Imperium.Tiro (spelled Tyro) appears in the show Rome,
played by Clive Riche
in the episodes "Son of
Hades", "These
Being the Words of Marcus Tullius Cicero", "Heroes
of the Republic", and "Philippi".
This version of Tiro appears to be older than Cicero, and is only
freed in Cicero's will.
References
tiro in German: Marcus Tullius Tiro
tiro in French: Marcus Tullius Tiro
tiro in Italian: Marco Tullio Tirone
tiro in Latin: Marcus Tullius Tiro
tiro in Hungarian: Marcus Tullius Tiro
tiro in Dutch: Marcus Tullius Tiro
tiro in Polish: Tyron
tiro in Ukrainian: Тірон Марк
Туллій