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         Apuleius:     more books (102)
  1. The Golden Asse by Lucius Apuleius, 2010-07-06
  2. The Golden Ass (Oxford World's Classics) by Apuleius, 2008-06-15
  3. The Golden Ass (Penguin Classics) by Apuleius, 1999-01-01
  4. Golden Ass of Apuleius: The Liberation of the Feminine in Man (C. G. Jung Foundation Books) by Marie-Louise von Franz, 2001-05-01
  5. Apuleius: The Metamorphoses, Book 1 (Latin Edition) (Bk. 1) by James S. Ruebel, 2001-01-01
  6. The Golden Ass by Apuleius, 2005-06
  7. The Story of Cupid and Psyche as Related by Apuleius: Edited, With Introduction and Notes, by Louis C. Purser (1910) by Apuleius, 2009-06-01
  8. Metamorphoses (The Golden Ass), Volume I: Books 1-6 (Loeb Classical Library) by Apuleius, 1996-01-01
  9. The Apologia and Florida of Apuleius of Madaura (Dodo Press) by Lucius Apuleius, 2008-10-21
  10. The golden ass by Apuleius, 2009-08-03
  11. Apuleius: Cupid and Psyche (Cambridge Greek and Latin Classics - Imperial Library) by Apuleius, 1991-02-22
  12. Apuleius: Rhetorical Works by Apuleius, 2001-12-06
  13. The Fortunes of Apuleius and the "Golden Ass": A Study in Transmission and Reception (Martin Classical Lectures, New Series) by Julia Haig Gaisser, 2008-01-03
  14. The Golden Ass,: Being the Metamorphoses of Lucius Apuleius ( Black and Gold Edition, 1943) by Apuleius, 1927

1. Apuleius Web Page
Links to articles and other resources, including a specialized bibliography.Category Arts Classical Studies Roman apuleius......(Apul. Met. I 1,6). A Web page devoted to apuleius. by Luca Graverini. (AntonioCanova, Amore e Psiche). Contents Bibliography on apuleius.
http://www.unisi.it/ricerca/ist/anc_hist/online/apuleio/apucover.htm
Lector intende: laetaberis (Apul. Met . I 1,6).
A Web page devoted to Apuleius
by Luca Graverini.
(Antonio Canova, Amore e Psiche Contents:
  • Bibliography on Apuleius . About 700 titles, almost complete from 1971 onwards. Specialized bibliographies are also available. N. B.: the bibliography has not been updated in the last months . A new data structure and interface (a searchable database) is being prepared. Vincent Hunink Apuleius of Madauros. Pro Se De Magia (Apologia) . Edited with a Commentary by V. H.: Amsterdam, Gieben 1997, 2 voll. The Introduction is reproduced here, by courtesy of the Author and the Publisher (97 Kb). Luca Graverini Lucio presso l'ortolano. Influenze della letteratura storiografica in Apul. met. 9.32-38 . A 1996 article (71 Kb; a short abstract is available) that was supposed to be published in " Arachnion. A Journal of Literature and Ancient History on the Web ", before this electronic journal ceased or suspended publication. It is a preliminary study to another paper, In historiae specimen (Apul. met. 8.1.4). Elementi della letteratura storiografica nelle Metamorfosi di Apuleio , forthcoming in "Prometheus".

2. The Internet Classics Archive | The Defense By Apuleius
English translation of the Apologia, translated by H. E. Butler
http://classics.mit.edu/Apuleius/apol.html

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The Defense
By Apuleius
Translated by H. E. Butler The Defense has been divided into the following sections:
Section 1

Section 2
Section 3 Section 4 Commentary: No comments have been posted about The Defense Add your own comment to start discussion. Reader Recommendations: Recommend a Web site you feel is appropriate to this work, list recommended Web sites , or visit a random recommended Web site Download: A 208k text-only version is available for download

3. Apuleius, Apologia: Seminar
Provides a biography of the Roman poet, philosopher, and rhetorician best known as the author of "The Golden Ass." apuleius, Apology. Introduction. apuleius of Madauros (born c. 123 AD, d.
http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/jod/apuleius

4. Bibliografia Apuleiana
apuleius Bibliographies. Augustine's reception of apuleius, you have to searchfor APUna instead. Obviously, this sistems has several limits.
http://www.unisi.it/ricerca/ist/anc_hist/online/apuleio/bib/bibintro.htm
Apuleius
Bibliographies

Ritratto di Apuleio su contorniato
This Apuleian bibliography has grown during several years of study. Recently, I have completed my list with the scrutiny of the volumes of the from 1971 to 1992, at the moment the latest available. More recent information was obtained in various ways, between which I mention here the TOCS-IN database and GNOMON Online ; a learned survey of previous years is available in C. C. Schlam The Scholarship on Apuleius Since 1938 , "The Classical World" 64.9 (1971), pp. 285-309. The bibliography is divided into a few chronological sections to limit file sizes; editions, translations and commentaries are collected in a separate file. Whenever possible, I added to each entry a short abstract , which I normally took from the . There is also a hierarchical (Dewey-like) classification system , which can sometimes be very useful in order to extract the requested information from the list easily and quickly. So, if you are looking for articles about Apuleius' influence and diffusion, you only have to search, with your browser or your word processor, for the string "#APUn"; if you are only interested in St. Augustine's reception of Apuleius, you have to search for "#APUna" instead. Obviously, this sistems has several limits. So, you'll have to rely on my ability to guess what an article is about from his title or from second-hand information (sure I haven't read all of the works listed here), and to type in the appropriate code without errors. Moreover, since I prepared this classification system according to my interests, you might find my choices questionable: e. g., there are a lot of sub-categories for the

5. Bibliotheca Augustana
p e r s o n a. apuleius, philosophus, orator, poeta, natus circiter anno 125 Madaurae in Numidia, circiter anno 160
http://www.fh-augsburg.de/~harsch/apu_intr.html
B I B L I O T H E C A A U G U S T A N A
Apuleius
ca. 125 - ca. 160
installare
fontem unicodenum
p e r s o n a
Apuleius, philosophus, orator, poeta, natus circiter anno 125 Madaurae in Numidia, circiter anno 160 Carthagine sacerdos provinciae, obiit circiter anno 180.
effigies Apulei
(saec. IV,
Aug. Treverorum)
contorniatum Apulei
(saec. IV)
o p e r a
apologia sive pro se de magia (ca. 158) metamorphoseon libri XI (ca. 170) de deo Socratis de Platone et eius dogmate de mundo florida (excerpta orationum) fragmenta
o p e r a s u b d i t i v a
peri hermeniae Apulei
Asclepius
herbarium sive de herbarum virtutibus
de remediis salutaribus
liber physiognomoniae
s e c u n d a r i a
pagina Apuleiana (Vincent Hunink) pagina Apuleiana (James J. O'Donnell) bibliographia fontes

6. Apuleius, Apologia: Seminar
A resource site by James J. O'Donnell on apuleius' selfdefense; provides e-texts of translations, background on related issues, and commentary on the author and his times. Also provides bibliographies and links to other sites.
http://www.georgetown.edu/faculty/jod/apuleius/

7. PROJECT GUTENBERG OFFICIAL HOME SITE -- Listing By AUTHOR
Lucius apuleius.
http://promo.net/cgi-promo/pg/cat.cgi?&label=ID&ftpsite=ftp://ibiblio.or

8. Apuleius
APVLEI OPERA Metamorphoses Liber I Liber II Liber III Liber IV Liber V Liber VI Liber VII Liber VIII Liber IX Liber X Liber XI Cupid Psyche Apologia Florida de Mundo de Deo Socratis de Dogmate Platonis The Latin Library The Classics Homepage
http://patriot.net/~lillard/cp/apuleius.html
APVLEI OPERA Metamorphoses Liber I Liber II Liber III Liber IV ... The Classics Homepage

9. Apuleii Madaurensis Pagina
apuleius! The Home Page! My name is apuleius, the distinguished rhetorician.Perhaps you've heard of me? You probably know me
http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/jod/apuleius/home.html
Apuleius! The Home Page!
My name is Apuleius , the distinguished rhetorician. Perhaps you've heard of me? You probably know me best from a little book I wrote which I modestly titled Metamorphoses , but which has had a much better sale since that fellow Augustine reported people were calling it The Golden Ass . Mind you, if only somebody would make a movie of it, and I really can't imagine why they don't, then I'd really be rolling in fame. I'm really a fine-looking fellow, even if I am a little vain about my hair I'm kind of new at this Internet business, so I'll just do for the moment what I see everybody else doing, which is giving you a few of my favorite links. I hope in this way you'll get to know me better and come to enjoy a few of my favorite things: MY BOOKS! My reflections! My god! My good taste! ... Something fishy?
  • Enough about me, let's talk about my books! Some of my works, of course, have modestly made their way to the Internet, such as the English translation of The Golden Ass , or the Latin text of the Cupid and Psyche episode which that rather unusual man C.S. Lewis
  • 10. Sabratha
    Images and maps of the Roman site of Sabratha.
    http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/jod/Picts/apuleius.images.html
    Modern Libya : Sabratha is between the two small towns marked on the coast just west of Tripoli (Tripoli, of course, is Apuleius' Oea). Antoninus Pius as a 2nd century CE African (in Kedime, near Hadrumetum south of Carthage [=modern Sousse, visible on our map]) would have seen him ; image from Paul Zanker, Apuleius from the Trier ceiling Cupid and Psyche from the Trier ceiling The full Trier ceiling : from E. Simon, Die konstantinischen Deckgemaelde , p. 31, abb. 14 Three images of Mercury, showing him as an orator, a (perhaps) magical/personal god w/African connection (Thot), and in his traditional role in commerce: Statuette representing Hermes Logios , found off the coast of Tunisia (near Mahdia) in the wreck of a Greek merchant vessel with the stuff "for sale". It is now in the Bardo Museum, Tunis. It dates from the 1st c. BCE, and the image comes from Richard Brilliant, Gesture and Rank in Roman Art: The Use of Gestures to Denote Status in Roman Sculpture and Coinage (New Haven, 1963). Statuette of Mercury , (base lost, caduceus damaged). Image from Erika Simon

    11. Apuleius Metamorphoses
    Translate this page Die Adresse dieser Seite hat sich geändert. In 10 Sekunden werden Sie nach http//www.phil.uni-erlangen.de/~p2latein/schmitzer/apuleius.htmlweitergeleitet.
    http://www.phil.uni-erlangen.de/~p2latein/personal/apuleius.html
    Lateinische Philologie
    http://www.phil.uni-erlangen.de/~p2latein/schmitzer/apuleius.html

    weitergeleitet.
    Bitte aktualisieren Sie Ihre Bookmarks. Vielen Dank. zum Seitenanfang

    12. The Golden Asse
    Hypertext of Adlington's translation of 1566 in eleven books, with notes about the author and a glossary for some of the archaic English terms.
    http://eserver.org/books/apuleius/

    The Golden Asse
    by Lucius Apuleius
    Adlington's translation, 1566. This edition by Martin Guy, 1996
    Table of Contents
    Notes on this Edition Epistle Dedicatory
    To the Reader

    The Life of Lucius Apuleius
    ...
    Eleventh Booke

    This edition is published to the Internet by the English Server

    13. Apuleius - Metamorphosen
    Translate this page Studienbibliographie zu apuleius Metamorphosen, bes. Amor und Psyche (1995). 3. Auflage.Leipzig 1931 (ND 1992). apuleius Der goldene Esel. Metamorphosen. Hg.
    http://www.phil.uni-erlangen.de/~p2latein/schmitzer/apuleius.html
    Studienbibliographie zu Apuleius: Metamorphosen, bes. Amor und Psyche (1995)
    Texte, Kommentare, Übersetzungen
    L. Apulei Madaurensis opera quae supersunt. Vol. I: Metamorphoseon libri XI. Ed. R. Helm. 3. Auflage. Leipzig 1931 (ND 1992).
    Apuleius: Der goldene Esel. Metamorphosen. Hg. und übersetzt von E. Brandt und W. Ehlers. Mit einer Einführung von N. Holzberg. 4. Auflage. München, Zürich 1989.
    Apuleius: Das Märchen von Amor und Psyche. Lateinisch/Deutsch. Übersetzt und hg. von K. Steinmann. Stuttgart 1978 (u.ö.)
    Apuleius: The Golden Ass. Translated with Introduction and Explanatory Notes by P.G. Walsh. Oxford 1994.
    Apulei Metamorphoseon libri IV-VI (La favola di Amore e Psiche). Introduzione e testo critico de E. Paratore. Firenze 1948.
    Apulei Metamorphoseis (IV,28-VI,24). Édition, introduction et commentaire de P. Grimal. Paris 1963.
    J.M.H. Fernhout: Ad Apulei Madaurensis Metamorphoseon librum quintum commentarius exegeticus. Diss. Groningen 1949.
    Index Apuleianus. Ed. by W.A Oldfather, H.W. Vernon, B.E. Perry. Middletown 1934 (Philological Monographs 3). Sekundärliteratur M. Bandini: Il modello della metamorfosi ovidiana nel romanzo di Apuleio. Maia 38 (1986) 27-32.

    14. Apuleius
    APVLEI OPERA. Metamorphoses. Liber I Liber II Liber III Liber IV. LiberV Liber VI Liber VII Liber VIII. Liber IX Liber X Liber XI. Cupid Psyche.
    http://www.thelatinlibrary.com/apuleius.html
    APVLEI OPERA Metamorphoses Liber I Liber II Liber III Liber IV ... The Classics Page

    15. Apuleius
    apuleius was a novelist who describes, in his story The Golden Ass, how his hero, Lucius, was redeemed through the initiation into the mysteries of Isis. This is an example of Egyptian religion making an impact on Greek society.
    http://interoz.com/egypt/who/apuleius.htm
    Apuleius
    Ptolemaic Dynasty Apuleius was a novelist who describes, in his story The Golden Ass , how his hero, Lucius, was redeemed through the initiation into the mysteries of Isis. This is an example of Egyptian religion making an impact on Greek society. These cults of Egyptian gods gained widespread interest outside of Egypt.
    Return to the Who's Who List
    Design, Layout and Graphic Art by Jimmy Dunn , an InterCity Oz, Inc. Employee

    16. Cupid & Psyche
    Translate this page APVLEI PSYCHE ET CVPIDO. 4.28 Erant in quadam civitate rex et regina.hi tres numero filias forma conspicuas habuere, sed maiores
    http://www.thelatinlibrary.com/apuleius/apuleius.cupid.shtml
    APVLEI PSYCHE ET CVPIDO [4.28] Erant in quadam civitate rex et regina. hi tres numero filias forma conspicuas habuere, sed maiores quidem natu, quamvis gratissima specie, idonee tamen celebrari posse laudibus humanis credebantur, at vero puellae iunioris tam praecipua, tam praeclara pulchritudo nec exprimi ac ne sufficienter quidem laudari sermonis humani penuria poterat. multi denique civium et advenae copiosi, quos eximii spectaculi rumor studiosa celebritate congregabat, inaccessae formonsitatis admiratione stupidi et admoventes oribus suis dexteram primore digito in erectum pollicem residente ut ipsam prorsus deam Venerem venerabantur religiosis adorationibus. iamque proximas civitates et attiguas regiones fama pervaserat deam, quam caerulum profundum pelagi peperit et ros spumantium fluctuum educavit, iam numinis sui passim tributa venia in mediis conversari populi coetibus, vel certe rursum novo caelestium stillarum germine non maria sed terras Venerem aliam virginali flore praeditam pullulasse. [29] Sic immensum procedit in dies opinio, sic insulas iam proxumas et terrae plusculum provinciasque plurimas fama porrecta pervagatur. iam multi mortalium longis itineribus atque altissimis maris meatibus ad saeculi specimen gloriosum confluebant. Paphon nemo, Cnidon nemo ac ne ipsa quidem Cythera ad conspectum deae Veneris navigabant; sacra praetereuntur, templa deformantur, pulvinaria proteruntur, caerimoniae negleguntur; incoronata simulacra et arae viduae frigido cinere foedatae. puellae supplicatur et in humanis vultibus deae tantae numina placantur, et in matutino progressu virginis victimis et epulis Veneris absentis nomen propitiatur, iamque per plateas commeantem populi frequenter floribus sertis et solutis adprecantur.

    17. Lucius Apuleius
    Lucius apuleius (c. 123 c. 170), Quaestiones conviviales (Festal Questions). Spuriousattributions to apuleius Asclepius. De remediis salutaribus. Herbarius.
    http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Forum/6946/literature/apuleius_bio.html
    Lucius Apuleius
    (c. 123 - c. 170)

    Poet, philosopher, and rhetorician born of prosperous parents at Madaurus (M'Daourouch) in Africa Proconsularis. Apuleius claimed to have travelled extensively as a young man , and was educated in Carthage, Greece, and Rome. Brought as a child to Athens to learn Greek, he earned the right to call himself a philosophus Platonicus . He disliked studying in Rome, because the city was large and confusing and because he had no regular schoolmasters Probably in the winter of 156, he arrived at Oea (Tripoli) while on his way to Alexandria. There, as related in his Apologia , Apuleius met Pontianus, an ex-pupil from Athens, who influenced him to stay at his home for a year. Pontianus later persuaded Apuleius to marry his mother Pudentilla in order to keep her fortune in his family. Pudentilla's relatives did not want Apuleius to inherit her money, however, so they accused Apuleius of using magic to seduce his wife. They also might have implied that he murdered Pontianus, who had died mysteriously soon after the marriage. In 158, Apuleius stood trial before the Roman provincial court at Sabratha, where he delivered his own defense speech. Since this Apologia was later published, it can be assumed that Apuleius was acquitted.

    18. The Golden Asse
    The Golden Asse. by Lucius apuleius. Notes on this Edition Epistle Dedicatory Tothe Reader The Life of Lucius apuleius The Preface of the Author. Glossary.
    http://eserver.org/books/apuleius/default.html

    The Golden Asse
    by Lucius Apuleius
    Adlington's translation, 1566. This edition by Martin Guy, 1996
    Table of Contents
    Notes on this Edition Epistle Dedicatory
    To the Reader

    The Life of Lucius Apuleius
    ...
    Eleventh Booke

    This edition is published to the Internet by the English Server

    19. The Golden Asse
    The Golden Asse. by Lucius apuleius. Adlington's translation, 1566.The Life of Lucius apuleius. Briefly Described. LUCIUS apuleius
    http://eserver.org/books/apuleius/life.html

    The Golden Asse
    by Lucius Apuleius
    Adlington's translation, 1566 The Life of Lucius Apuleius Briefly Described Immediately after he went to Rome, and studied there the Latine tongue, with such labour and continuall study, that he achieved to great eloquence, and was knowne and approved to be excellently learned, whereby he might worthily be called Polyhistor, that is to say, one that knoweth much or many things.

    20. The Internet Classics Archive | Works By Apuleius
    Books and CDROMs, Get help Help. Works by apuleius The Defense Translatedby HE Butler Read discussion No comments © 1994-2000
    http://classics.mit.edu/Browse/browse-Apuleius.html

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    Works by Apuleius
    The Defense

    Translated by H. E. Butler
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