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Parenting & Family Quote by Cicero

"To be ignorant of what occurred before you were born is to remain always a child"

About this Quote

Adulthood, for Cicero, isn’t a birthday; it’s a relationship to time. In one crisp line, he turns history from a dusty archive into a civic and psychological threshold. The insult is calibrated: “always a child” isn’t innocent wonder but permanent dependency, a mind that can be led, flattered, or frightened because it lacks reference points. Ignorance here isn’t just not knowing facts; it’s being trapped in the tyranny of the present, mistaking whatever is loudest now for what is true.

The line works because it weaponizes Rome’s own self-image. Cicero lived in the late Republic, when institutional norms were collapsing under ambition, propaganda, and private armies. In that climate, memory becomes political infrastructure. Knowing “what occurred” arms you against demagogues who sell recycled crises as unprecedented, and against elites who rewrite their own failures as destiny. History is implied as a form of inoculation: a citizen who can compare, remember, and judge is harder to manipulate.

The subtext is also personal and professional. Cicero, a statesman-philosopher and master rhetorician, believed public life depended on educated judgment. “Before you were born” is a reminder that your life is not the whole story; maturity requires accepting that you entered a long argument already in progress. He’s not romanticizing the past so much as demanding continuity: to participate responsibly in a republic, you need an inheritance of examples, warnings, and precedents. Without that, politics becomes adolescence with sharper knives.

Quote Details

TopicKnowledge
Source
Verified source: Orator (Ad M. Brutum) (Cicero, -46)
Text match: 95.00%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
nescire autem quid ante quam natus sis acciderit, id est semper esse puerum. (Chapter 34, section 120). This is the primary (author’s own) source: Cicero’s rhetorical treatise Orator, addressed to Marcus Junius Brutus, composed in 46 BCE. The commonly-circulated English version (“To be ignorant of what occurred before you were born is to remain always a child”) is a translation/paraphrase of this Latin sentence. The quote is sometimes mis-cited as being from Cicero’s earlier dialogue De oratore (55 BCE), but the locus that contains this wording is Orator §120 (often given as 34.120).
Other candidates (1)
Historia and Fabula (Peter G. Bietenholz, 1994) compilation95.0%
... To be ignorant of what occurred before you were born is to remain always a child . For what is the worth of human...
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Cicero. (2026, February 7). To be ignorant of what occurred before you were born is to remain always a child. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/to-be-ignorant-of-what-occurred-before-you-were-9061/

Chicago Style
Cicero. "To be ignorant of what occurred before you were born is to remain always a child." FixQuotes. February 7, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/to-be-ignorant-of-what-occurred-before-you-were-9061/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"To be ignorant of what occurred before you were born is to remain always a child." FixQuotes, 7 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/to-be-ignorant-of-what-occurred-before-you-were-9061/. Accessed 23 Feb. 2026.

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To Be Ignorant of What Occurred Before You Were Born - Cicero
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Cicero

Cicero (106 BC - 43 BC) was a Philosopher from Rome.

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