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References
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A Biography of Horace and an Annotated Bibliography - Diotíma65 Quintus Horatius Flaccus was born 8 December 65BC in Venusia, a Roman military colony in southeastern Italy on the border between Apulia and Lucania (Vita).
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Quintus Horatius Flaccus [Unbound sheets] - UNT Digital LibraryOct 2, 2025 · Horace Quintus Horatius Flaccus, (Born Venosa, December 8, 65 BC - Died Rome, November 27, 8 BC), was the leading Roman lyric poet during ...Missing: biography | Show results with:biography
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Suetonius • Life of Horace### Summary of Suetonius' Life of Horace
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Satires. Epistles. Art of Poetry - Harvard University PressHorace (Quintus Horatius Flaccus, 65–8 BC) was born at Venusia, son of a freedman clerk who had him well educated at Rome and Athens.Missing: biography | Show results with:biography<|separator|>
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About Horace | Academy of American PoetsRoman lyric poet, satirist, and critic Horace (Quintus Horatius Flaccus) was born in Apulia, Italy, in 65 BC. His father, an Italian freedman, sent Horace to ...
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Horace | The Poetry FoundationHorace (Quintus Horatius Flaccus) was a Roman poet, satirist, and critic. Born in Venusia in southeast Italy in 65 BCE to an Italian freedman and landowner.
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Classics in the Renaissance Classroom: Who was Horace?Horace (Quintus Horatius Flaccus, 65–8 BCE) was born at Venusia, the son of a freedman clerk who had him well-educated in Rome and Athens.Missing: biography | Show results with:biography
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Philosophical Background to Epicureanism in the SatiresThis chapter explores the many philosophical influences that inform the content and scope of Horace's Satires, including Platonism, Aristotelianism ...
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Horace - Joe PellegrinoHe later moved to Rome, where his father was able to provide him with a good education, first in Rome and then in Athens, where he studied Greek and philosophy.
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Epicurean Ethics in Horace: The Psychology of SatireUltimately, Yona shows that Philodemus is a foundational philosophical influence on Horace's moral and ethical thought in the Sermones, and in doing so ...
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EPICUREAN ETHICS IN HORACE: The Psychology of SatireJun 19, 2018 · It has often been noted that Horace's Satires are gentler and more self-deprecating than other Roman verse satirists, and that his stance of ...
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Horace - IMPERIUM ROMANUMDec 21, 2018 · Being a tribune of the army, he partook in the battle of Philippi in 42 BCE, from which he had to flee in order to save his life. After the ...<|separator|>
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The Political Views of Horace - jstorplace. Horace was notoriously a Republician after Julius Caesar's murder and actually fought on the side of Brutus and Cassius at Philippi; and.
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Philippi (42 BCE) - Battle - Livius.orgAug 10, 2020 · Battle of Philippi (42 BCE): decisive battle in the war between the republican assassins of Caesar and his avengers, the triumvirs, who won.
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Horace - World History EncyclopediaMay 18, 2017 · Horace was born on December 8, 65 BCE, in the town of Venusia in Apulia, a region in southeastern Italy, bordering the Adriatic Sea. As an adult ...
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Who Was the Roman Poet Horace? - ThoughtCoOct 24, 2020 · In 39 B.C., after Augustus granted amnesty, Horace became a secretary in the Roman treasury by buying the position of questor's scribe. In 38, ...
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Who Was Horace? - Classical WisdomMay 25, 2023 · While serving in the army, he became an officer, fought at the Battle of Philippi (42 BC) and commanded a legion. After the total defeat of ...
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Horace's Epistles - World History EncyclopediaFeb 14, 2023 · Quintus Horatius Flaccus, better known as Horace (65-8 BCE) wrote 20 letters around 20-19 BCE, collected in Epistles I, while Epistles II, most ...
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Horace - Heritage HistoryKey events during the life of Horace: ; 42 BC. Fought at Philippi on the side of the republicans. ; 38 BC. Introduced to Maecenas by his friend Virgil. ; 35 BC.Missing: transition | Show results with:transition<|separator|>
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HORACE, Satires. Epistles. The Art of Poetry - Loeb Classical Library10.45 Horace refers to Virgil's Eclogues, which were published in 37 b.c., while the introduction to Maecenas (Sat. i. 6.54 ff.) is commonly assigned to 38 ...<|control11|><|separator|>
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THE FAMOUS SABINE FARM OF HORACE FOUND AT LASTTHE FAMOUS SABINE FARM OF HORACE FOUND AT LAST; Excavations at the Foot of Mount Lucretile, Near Licenza, Prove Beyond Doubt That the Modest Estate Given the ...
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Horace and Augustus - jstorHorace refused the position of private secretary to. Augustus, probably in 25 B. C.; later we have a letter addressed to Horace in which Augustus jestingly ...
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Horace and the Gift Economy of Patronage... Maecenas for the grant of the Sabine farm. Those who object to this view ... Horace here acknowledges his patron in the wish that Maia nate, Maecenas ...
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Horace | UNRV Roman HistoryHis final years were spent in the quietude of his Sabine farm or in Rome. He remained close to Maecenas, who also died in 8 BC. According to tradition, ...Missing: transition | Show results with:transition
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Quintus Horatius Flaccus - Wythepedia: The George Wythe ...Jul 24, 2025 · Horace Quintus Horatius “Horace” Flaccus (65 BCE–8 CE) was a Roman poet about whom modern scholars actually have a good deal of information ...
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Horace Quintus Horatius Flaccus (65-8 BC) - Our CivilizationBrief Biography of ... later, Mæcenas presented him with the celebrated Sabine Farm, and Horace was at liberty to the end of his life to do as he liked.
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Horace's Satires - Classics - Oxford BibliographiesMar 21, 2024 · To get a good idea of some of the most important themes and discussions surrounding Horace's Sermones, McGann 1973, Courtney 2013, and Rudd 1966 ...
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Horace (Chapter 1) - Satires of RomeAug 5, 2012 · 1 - Horace. Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 August 2012. Kirk Freudenburg.
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Horace and His Fathers: Satires 1.4 and 1.6 - Project MUSESatires 1.4 and 1.6 are the well-known loci of Horace's upbringing by his father, told in the context of Horace's relation to Lucilius, his satiric forebear, ...
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The Road to Peace: Horace's Fifth Satire as Travel LiteratureHorace's poem is set during one of the diplomatic efforts at resolving affairs between Octavian and Antonius, most likely the negotiations at Tarentum in 37 BCE ...
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[PDF] Summary of Horace's SatiresPage 2. Book 2. 1. A literary discussion with the lawyer Trebatius about how to pitch his satires between the extremes of harsh cruelty on the one hand and ...
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Horace - The Satires: Book II Satire II - Poetry In TranslationLearn how great the virtue is, my friends, of plain living. (This isn't my advice, but Ofellus' peasant teaching, An unorthodox philosopher, and an 'idiot' ...BkIISatII:1-22 Food tastes... · BkIISatII:23-52 Gourmet eating...Missing: analysis | Show results with:analysis
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Horace Satires 2.5: Restrained Indignation - jstorHorace's Satire 2.5 is a dialogue between Tiresias and Ulysses, rep- resented as a continuation of their interview in Book 11 of the Odyssey. Ulysses inquires ...
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[PDF] Friendship in Horace's Satiresamicus and amicitia — throughout the Satires in an effort to illustrate the themes that mentions of friendship have ...
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Irony and Aequabilitas : Horace, Satires 1.3 - OpenEdition JournalsIn Satire 1.3 Horace upholds 'Stoic' aequabilitas, ironically aligning it with Epicurean moderation to attack Stoic inflexibility.
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Satire and the Threat of Speech in Horace's Satires, Book 1 - ClassicsJul 1, 2005 · In his first book of Satires, written in the late, violent days of the Roman republic, Horace exposed satiric speech as a tool of power and ...Missing: summary | Show results with:summary
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The Date of Horace's First Epode | The Classical QuarterlyFeb 11, 2009 · The Epodes were published about 30 B.C. and, perhaps for that reason, the scholiast Pseudo-Acron confidently assigns the poem to the period ...
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A Commentary on Horace's Epodes - Bryn Mawr Classical ReviewLindsay Watson, A commentary on Horace's Epodes. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2003. xvii, 604 pages ; 24 cm. ISBN 0199253242. $150.00.Missing: scholarly | Show results with:scholarly
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[PDF] Blame as Consolation: Rehabilitating the Iambic in Horace's PostApr 23, 2014 · Published at the end of the 30s, this collection contains seventeen poems of various lengths, styles, and subjects, but they are loosely modeled ...
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The Date of Horace's First Epode - Cambridge University PressThe Epodes were published about 30 B.C. and, perhaps for that reason, the ... 1 Dyer rejects the view of Bentley2 and Tate3 that Horace wrote and published his ...
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[PDF] Iambic Metapoetics in Horace, Epodes 8 and 12Oct 1, 2016 · The human bodies in these sexually obscene poems have profound literary valence that Horace uses to negotiate the difference of his erotic ...
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[PDF] AN ORGANISING PRINCIPLE IN HORACE'S EPODES?By implication Canidia, as representative of Rome, embodies a fundamental perversion of normal social values. In Epode 3 Canidia is mentioned as a possible ...
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[PDF] Akroterion 46 (2001) 43-59 HORACE ON HORACE ODES 4 S Thom ...Horace's fourth Book of Odes was published in 13 B.C.1 Ten years had passed since the publication of Odes 1-3. In Epistles 1.1.4 published 7 years before ...Missing: scholarly | Show results with:scholarly
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Horace and the Greek Lyric Poets (Chapter 4) - Explorations in Latin ...Now Alcaeus' poetry is being associated openly with the more Orphic tradition which Horace had referred to in his Pindarising 1.12, where the voice of Orpheus ...
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[PDF] Horace's Imitation and Manipulation of Greek Lyric ModelsApr 29, 2021 · Although Horace relied on different sources, such as Epicurean philosophy, Greek lyric poetry, and Greek epigram, he did not copy any of these ...
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Political Poems | Horace's Odes - Oxford AcademicThis chapter discusses examples of each subgroup. Horace is seen as balancing support for Augustus with a measure of independence; that balance becomes more ...Missing: Carmina | Show results with:Carmina
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Horace Carm. 2.12, Maecenas, and Prose History | AntichthonMay 8, 2015 · Horace begins with a polite refusal to incorporate epic themes into his poetry, and in lines 9-12 he announces that Maecenas will better tell of ...
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Horace's Epistles and Ars Poetica - Classics - Oxford BibliographiesFeb 19, 2025 · The 476-line Ars Poetica is addressed to a Piso and his two sons and has been variously dated, with some estimates as early as 24 BCE and some ...
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[PDF] horace - epistles - book i - Assets - Cambridge University Presspoetry did not content Horace. At the height of his creative powers he himself became the 'discoverer' of a new verse form, the epistle. The novelty is to ...
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Horace, Epistles I - Bryn Mawr Classical ReviewFeb 24, 1995 · Mayer's eloquent 52-page introduction treats: 1. the 'epistle' as a literary form; 2. Horace's career; 3. addressees and date; 4. poetic style; ...
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Ars Poetica | The Poetry FoundationOct 13, 2009 · Horace places particular emphasis on the importance of decorum in poetry, and on the necessity of “join[ing] the instructive with the agreeable.
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The Ars Poetica (Chapter 10) - The Cambridge Companion to HoraceThe Ars provided an object of imitation, as well as a code of practice, for Renaissance poets and playwrights; it continued to be the paradigm for neo-classical ...
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Horace, Satires. Epistles. The Art of Poetry | Loeb Classical LibraryThe Epodes in various (mostly iambic) metres are akin to the 'discourses' (as Horace called his satires and epistles) but also look towards the famous Odes, in ...
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Horace (65 BC–8 BC) - The Odes, Epodes, Satires, Epistles, Ars ...Mar 15, 2005 · Horace (Quintus Horatius Flaccus) The Odes His Lyrics in Greek Metres in four books in a new English translation The Satires, Epistles and Ars PoeticaMissing: used | Show results with:used
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Metrical Variety and the Development of Latin Lyric Poetry in the ...Jun 23, 2022 · Pythiambics. Pythiambic metres (combinations of dactylic and iambic lines) are also found in Horace, but only in the Epodes: Epodes 14 and 15 ...
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Horatian Meters - DiotímaHorace didn't merely adopt the two stanzas directly from Greek, he introduced a number of subtle metrical changes that enhanced their unity, gravity and ...Missing: scholarly analysis dactylic hexameter
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Metre, Latin | Oxford Classical DictionaryThe Sapphic stanza was also used by Horace for the Carmen saeculare, written for musical performance (see Secular Games), and his slightly different ...
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Horace's Debt to Greek Literature - jstorto consider again the nature of Horace's imitation of Greek authors, where this imitation is conscious. Moreover, the publication during the last twenty ...
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Horace in Satire 1.1 stake - jstorAbstract: Horace in Satire 1.1 stakes out a Callimachean-neoteric identity, typically using ethical themes to double as programmatic statements on ...
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[PDF] The Epicurean Parasite: Horace, "Satires" 1.1-3 - Swarthmore CollegeJan 1, 1998 · The speaker's philo- sophic loyalties are signalled by polemical attacks on Stoics, at least if we ac- cept the identifications of the ancient ...Missing: summary | Show results with:summary
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PHILOSOPHY AT THE SABINE FARM (HOR. <italic>SATIRES ...He is a model of Epicurean self-sufficiency. In the structural architecture of Satires II, and in their themes, 2.2 and. 2.6 are parallel. Both have rural ...
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Horace, Odes - ToposTextAnd lest the gifts of Liber pass the bounds of moderation set, ... within the bounds that we've now set for them. Event Date: -25 LA. § 2.10 THE GOLDEN MEAN
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M. Dyson, Avarice and Discontent in Horace's First Satire - PhilPapersAvarice and Discontent in Horace's First Satire · M. Dyson · Classical ... The Poet, The Critic, and the Moralist: Horace, Epistles 1.19.C. W. Macleod ...Missing: luxury excess
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HORACE, Satires | Loeb Classical LibrarySatires. no more certain cause of misery than avarice. Yet one must not run to the other extreme, but should observe the golden mean (41-107).
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Satires II.III - HORACE, Satires | Loeb Classical LibraryThe sermon of Stertinius may be divided into four parts, dealing with avarice ... The avaricious are the largest class of madmen. They believe poverty to be ...Missing: critiques luxury excess
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Episode 51: Horace and Augustan PoetryThis is the second of two programs on the Roman poet Quintus Horatius Flaccus, a writer who lived from 65-8 BCE and witnessed firsthand the fall of the republic ...<|separator|>
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[PDF] Saturnalia festivities, satirical persona, Horace, Stoicism. - AkroterionDavus even proclaims a sermo through which he personally disarms his criticism against Horace. ... satires (avarice, self-indulgence, lust) are presented here as ...
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Horace - The Satires: Book II Satire III - Poetry In TranslationFevered by excess, sad superstition, or another. Disorder of mind: sit nearer ... “Avarice should get the largest dose of medicine,. I'd say: all of ...
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LUXURY AND THE POLITICS OF NEED AND DESIRE - jstoravarice and excessive pleasures with a craving for luxury and a wantonness ... satirists like Juvenal and Horace. Beneath the scorn lay that same ...Missing: critiques | Show results with:critiques
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[PDF] Horace and his art of enjoymentuncharted mysteries of universe and of human nature. This point of view of the artist who seeks to live, to understand life, to reproduce it, explains much.
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[PDF] Evidences of Stoic Philosophy in Horace's Satires and EpistlesWilliam Francis Fay, S.J., was born at Chicago, Illinois, April 7, 1910. He re- ceived his elementary education at st. Cath- erine's Grammar School.
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Horace and Practical Philosophy (Chapter 18)He argues that self-interested people have reason to favor just practices and institutions because they are in everyone's interest.Missing: moderation | Show results with:moderation
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(PDF) An Epicurean “Measure of Wealth” in Horace, Satires 1.1Horace's Satires 1.1 explores the idea of a proper "measure of wealth," primarily shaped by Epicurean philosophy, particularly as interpreted by Philodemus ...Cite This Paper · Key Takeaways · References (80)<|control11|><|separator|>
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[PDF] Horace - mcsprogramReflecting on mortality and the fleeting nature of fame, Horace's work urges humility and the enduring value of moral integrity.
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Pietas: Horace and Augustan Nationalism - jstorOct 1, 2018 · Also, Horace would probably have rejected the belief in human perfecti- bility, as he expressly does the natural goodness of men.Missing: fate scholarly
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[PDF] Cynic and Epicurean Parrhesia in Horace's Epodes 5 & 6Horace examines the parrhesia of Cynicism and contrasts it with the parrhesia of Epicureanism. After establishing Horace's philosophical influences, I engage in ...<|separator|>
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Horace on Thinking and Living Life to Its FullestJan 26, 2016 · Roman lyric poet, satirist, and critic Horace (Quintus Horatius Flaccus) was born in Apulia, Italy, in 65 B.C. His father, an Italian Freedman, ...
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[PDF] Migliore dissertation editedperspective now suggests that Horace considers claims of such self-sufficiency to be naïve or impossible. The Cynic defeat has led to the belief that Horace ...
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[PDF] Horace and the Ancient Grotesque - Harvard DASHJan 18, 2018 · 2018. Horace and the Ancient Grotesque. Doctoral dissertation, Harvard University, Graduate School of Arts & Sciences. Link.
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[PDF] POLITICAL OR PERSONAL PROPAGANDA? HORACE ...There is no really convincing evidence to suggest that Horace's efforts to consolidate his position within Maecenas' circle were coloured noticeably by wider ...Missing: republicanism | Show results with:republicanism
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Horace | Odes & Epodes | BritannicaHorace (born December 65 bc, Venusia, Italy—died Nov. 27, 8 bc, Rome) was an outstanding Latin lyric poet and satirist under the emperor Augustus.
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A Visit to Horace's Sabine Farm - jstorMaecenas presented Horace with the Sabine estate in 35 or 34 B.C.. -probably the latter year-and from that time till his death, twenty-six years later ...Missing: gift date
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Horace's paean to Augustus | Latin Poetry Recited and TranslatedMar 25, 2024 · Rome, says Horace, owes its new era of peace and stability to the Emperor Augustus, whom he likens to a God on Earth.
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Roman Satire, Part I: The Republican Tradition | History TodayHorace. 'Satire, at least,' Quintilian declared ... But what in fact did Quintilian mean? Hardly that Rome had a monopoly over the satirical vein; Horace ...
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[PDF] Seeking Correlations in Horace, Juvenal and Persius against the ...Jan 1, 2013 · We have discerned Horace to be the most highly correlated to Lucilius, and further, poem 1.4 to be among the most highly correlated to. Lucilius ...
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Roman Verse Satire: Lucilius to Juvenal: A Selection with an ...$$39.00Lucilius, Horace, Persius, and Juvenal are equally represented, in an attempt to redress a tendency in other anthologies to favor Horace and Juvenal. The ...
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Martial, Epigrams - ToposTextYou are ignorant, alas! you are ignorant of the fastidiousness of Rome, the mistress of the world; the sons of Man, believe me, are much too critical. Nowhere ...
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SINGING HORACE IN ANTIQUITY AND THE EARLY MIDDLE AGESFeb 23, 2022 · Horace's creative turning point came in about 38 BC, when Virgil introduced him to Maecenas, one of the richest men in Rome, an adviser of ...
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SINGING HORACE IN ANTIQUITY AND THE EARLY MIDDLE AGESScholarly understanding of their early medieval reception has been hampered by the insistence of classical philologists that he was a purely literary poet.
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The Medieval Horace. Analecta Romana Instituti DaniciThe ninth essay ('The reception of Horace in the Middle Ages'), written for inclusion in the Cambridge Companion to Horace, presents a survey of the field.
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The reception of Horace in the Middle Ages (Chapter 21)Horace was not the stuff that prophets or expert lovers are made of, but instead he became the embodiment of a typical human being who had lived through the ...
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The reception of Horace in the Middle Ages - ResearchGateHorace was not the stuff that prophets or expert lovers are made of, but instead he became the embodiment of a typical human being who had lived through the ...Missing: sources | Show results with:sources
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Petrarch's Horace - Ziereis FacsimilesThe Odes by Quintus Horatius Flaccus (65-8 BC), commonly known as Horace, are some of the most quoted and influential texts from antiquity. He is also the ...<|control11|><|separator|>
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Horace in the Italian Renaissance (1498-1600) - Academia.eduHorace emerged as a primary figure within the Renaissance literary scene, influencing editions, commentaries, and imitative practices. " Within the sixteenth- ...
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Horace's Fortune in early modernity: a poetical laboratory - ANRHorace plays a key-role in the development of Renaissance poetry, because he is both a theorist and a model for an tremendously inventive and varied lyrical ...
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Horace in the sixteenth century: commentators into critics (Chapter 5)The first instinct of the humanist interested in formulating a theory of discourse was to go back (as for so much else) to an ancient prototype.Missing: revival | Show results with:revival
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Horace across the Media: Textual, Visual and Musical Receptions of ...Mar 24, 2023 · This ample volume looks at the European reception of Horace in the Renaissance and early modern periods, a time of real riches in ...Missing: medieval | Show results with:medieval
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Horace in the English literature of the eighteenth centuryHorace did not seize upon the imagination of English authors so quickly or so strongly as did Ovid and Virgil; nor has his influence ever been so direct as ...Missing: 18th neoclassical
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[PDF] The influence of Horace on the chief English poets of the nineteenth ...poets were at the high tide of popularity in England, with Horace as one of the leaders. Throughout the eighteenth century our poet holds his own; when a.Missing: 18th | Show results with:18th
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24 - The reception of Horace in the nineteenth and twentieth centuriesHorace was popular among both general and scholarly readers in Victorian England. The centrality of Horace to the curriculum of the newly influential elite ...Missing: Romantic era
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A Commentary on Horace: Odes, Book I - BookshopThe commentary includes a large number of parallel passages--showing how Horace plays new variations on old themes--sections on chronology and meter, and a ...
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[PDF] A NEW COMMENTARY ON HORACE, ODES IIIWith the appearance of A.J. Woodman's commentary on Odes 3, the Cambridge. Greek and Latin Classics series (informally known as the Green and Yellows) com-.
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Two-author Commentaries on Horace: Three Case StudiesThis chapter considers the two best-known collaborative commentaries on Horace's Odes: that of Adolf Kiessling and Richard Heinze, where Kiessling's ...
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A New Horace (completed) - Department of Philosophy, Classics ...Aug 24, 2020 · The project constructed, and published online, a database forming a repertory of conjectures made on the Opera of Horace from ca. 1500 up to the present time.
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[PDF] HORACE - How to use the personal web pages serviceA central theme of the book is Horace's relationship with Augustus, one of developing admiration and respect according to Fraenkel, who sees Odes 4.5 (his.
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How "Carpe Diem" Got Lost in Translation - JSTOR DailyAug 7, 2019 · The phrase is “carpe diem,” taken from Roman poet Horace's Odes, written over 2,000 years ago. As everyone and their grandmother knows by now, “ ...
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Carpe Diem Does Not Mean 'Seize the Day' | The SwaddleAug 29, 2019 · Carpe diem gained fame from the movie Dead Poet's Society, which stars Robin Williams as an inspiring English teacher at an all-boys prep school ...
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Horace, Our Contemporary | Bernard KnoxJun 11, 1998 · He will come…to help me write my letters.” But Horace declined the offer, and managed to do so without offending Augustus, who, according to ...