Livy, Books I-X.Clarendon Press, 1871 - 198 pages |
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Page 20
... Aeneas . Aeneas is presented to us in three aspects : ( 1 ) as the founder of a dynasty which ruled in Ida over the remnant of the Trojans after the destruction of Troy ; ( 2 ) As the founder of several cities in Greece ; ( 3 ) As the ...
... Aeneas . Aeneas is presented to us in three aspects : ( 1 ) as the founder of a dynasty which ruled in Ida over the remnant of the Trojans after the destruction of Troy ; ( 2 ) As the founder of several cities in Greece ; ( 3 ) As the ...
Page 21
... Aeneas , rather than with the victorious Greek Ulysses , whose descendants were supposed to reign in the neigh- bouring town of Tusculum . ( See on 1. 49 , 11. ) The belief of the Romans that they were of Trojan descent can be traced as ...
... Aeneas , rather than with the victorious Greek Ulysses , whose descendants were supposed to reign in the neigh- bouring town of Tusculum . ( See on 1. 49 , 11. ) The belief of the Romans that they were of Trojan descent can be traced as ...
Page 22
... Aeneas as the Trojan oikiorŋs . The latter is much easier than the former . In the Iliad itself Aeneas is the only Trojan hero who appears to have a future . The famous lines ( Il . 20 . 306 ) show that the poet knew of descendants of ...
... Aeneas as the Trojan oikiorŋs . The latter is much easier than the former . In the Iliad itself Aeneas is the only Trojan hero who appears to have a future . The famous lines ( Il . 20 . 306 ) show that the poet knew of descendants of ...
Page 23
... Aeneas , back to the Sicilian poet Stesichorus , who belongs to the first half of the sixth century , and to the Regal Period of Rome . The Iliac Table in the Capitoline Museum has representations of different Trojan legends , the last ...
... Aeneas , back to the Sicilian poet Stesichorus , who belongs to the first half of the sixth century , and to the Regal Period of Rome . The Iliac Table in the Capitoline Museum has representations of different Trojan legends , the last ...
Page 24
... Aeneas with Cumae , is plainly visible in the Aeneid ( Book 6 ) , and it is remarkable that the Iliac Table , profess- ing to quote from Stesichorus , introduces the trumpeter Misenus . Misenus was the name of a headland over Cumae : it ...
... Aeneas with Cumae , is plainly visible in the Aeneid ( Book 6 ) , and it is remarkable that the Iliac Table , profess- ing to quote from Stesichorus , introduces the trumpeter Misenus . Misenus was the name of a headland over Cumae : it ...
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Common terms and phrases
according Aeneas Alba ancient appears army assembly atque authority believed bellum called centuries character Cicero comitia curiata Compare connected considered deinde deities Dionysius early erant erat esset etiam evidence existed explained expression fact fuit give given Greek haec haud historians important inde institutions inter introduced Italy king later Latin legend Livy Livy's Madvig means mentioned natural neque original passage patres patrician perhaps period populi probably quae quam question quia quibus quod quoque quoted refers regal period regem regis religious represented Roman Rome Romulus Sabine says seems senate Servius statement story suggested sunt suppose taken tamen Tarquinius temple tion town tradition Translate tribes true urbis whole worship writers
Popular passages
Page 102 - ... ego contra hoc quoque laboris praemium petam, ut me a conspectu malorum, quae nostra tot per annos vidit aetas, tantisper certe, dum prisca illa tota mente repeto, avertam omnis expers curae, quae scribentis animum etsi non flectere a vero, sollicitum tarnen efficere posset.
Page 102 - Datur haec venia antiquitati, ut miscendo humana divinis primordia urbium augustiora faciat; et si cui populo licere oportet consecrare origines suas et ad deos referre auctores, ea belli gloria est populo Romano ut cum suum conditorisque sui parentem Martem potissimum ferat tam et hoc gentes humanae patiantur aequo animo quam imperium patiuntur.
Page 180 - Sabini cives additi consederunt, qui a bono omine " id appellarunt ; nam cyprum Sabine bonum.
Page 66 - Nam si ita esset, quod patres apud majores nostros tenere non potuerunt, ut reprehensores essent comitiorum, id haberent judices, vel quod multo etiam minus esset ferendum.
Page 133 - Numae imposita precatus ita 10 9 est : ' luppiter pater, si est fas hunc Numam Pompilium, cuius ego caput teneo, regem Romae esse, uti tu signa nobis certa adclarassis inter eos fines, quos fed.
Page 173 - ... solam intuentes postmoerium interpretantur esse ; est autem magis circamoerium, locus quem in condendis urbibus quondam Etrusci qua murum ducturi erant certis circa terminis inaugurato consecrabant, ut neque interiore parte aedificia moenibus continuarentur, quae nunc uolgo etiam coniungunt, et extrinsecus puri aliquid ab humano cultu pateret soli.
Page 144 - Lex horrendi carminis erat: duumviri perduellionem iudicent. Si a duumviris provocarit, provocatione certato. Si vincent, caput obnubito, infelici arbori reste suspendito, verberato vel intra pomerium vel extra pomerium.
Page 164 - Deditisne vos populumque Conlatinum, urbem, agros, aquam, terminos, delubra, utensilia, divina humanaque omnia in meam populique Romani dicionem ? ' 'Dedimus.'
Page 5 - Quotiens magni alicuius viri mors ab historicis narrata est, totiens fere consummatio totius vitae et quasi funebris laudatio redditur. hoc, semel aut iterum a Thucydide factum, item in paucissimis personis usurpatum a Sallustio, T. Livius 35 benignus omnibus magnis viris praestitit ; sequentes historici multo id effusius fecerunt.
Page 125 - Eodem tempore et centuriae tres equitum conscriptae sunt : Ramnenses ab Romulo, ab T. Tatio Titienses appellati ; Lucerum nominis et originis causa incerta est.