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         Livius Andronicus:     more books (28)
  1. A Linguistic Commentary on Livius Andronicus (Studies in Classics) by Ivy Livingston, 2004-09-28
  2. A History of Roman Literature: From Livius Andronicus to Boethius : With Special Regard to Its Influence on World Literature (Mnemosyne, Bibliotheca Classica Batava Supplementum) by Michael Von Albrecht, Gareth L. Schmeling, 1997-08
  3. Gestorben Im 3. Oder 2. Jahrhundert V. Chr.: Livius Andronicus, Theodotos Hemiolios, Marcus Valerius Laevinus, Lysimachos (German Edition)
  4. LIVIUS ANDRONICUS: An entry from Gale's <i>Arts and Humanities Through the Eras</i>
  5. Untersuchungen zur Selbstdarstellung älterer römischer Kaiser. Livius Andronicus, Naevius, Ennius. Spudasmata, Studien zur Klassischen Philologie und ihren Grenzgebieten. Band XIX. by Werner: Suerbaum, 1968
  6. The Literary Saturnian: Part 1, Livius Andronicus (1910) by Thomas Fitzhugh, 2008-02-21
  7. Remains of Old Latin Vol. II of Four (Livius Andronicus / Naevius / Pacuvius / Accius, Loeb Classical Library)
  8. Ancient Greeks in Rome: Ammianus Marcellinus, Dionysius of Halicarnassus, Livius Andronicus, Herodian, Carneades, Dio Chrysostom
  9. Old Latin Writers: Plautus, Terence, Cato the Elder, Ennius, Caecilius Statius, Livius Andronicus, Quintus Lutatius Catulus, Valerius Antias
  10. Ancient Roman Tragic Dramatists: Seneca the Younger, Ennius, Lucius Accius, Livius Andronicus, Gnaeus Naevius, Pacuvius, Hosidius Geta
  11. La Poésie Latine, (de Livius Andronicus À Rutilius Namatianus) (French Edition) by Plessis Frédéric 1851-, 2010-09-28
  12. Ancient Tarantines: Aristoxenus, Livius Andronicus, Archytas, Leonidas of Tarentum, Cleinias of Tarentum, Phalanthus of Tarentum
  13. Livius Andronicus
  14. Dramaturge de La Rome Antique: Plaute, Sénèque le Jeune, Térence, Naevius, Livius Andronicus, Lucius Accius, Pacuvius, Caecilius Statius (French Edition)

61. Www.btinternet.com/~caractacus.bear/book/chapter14.txt
Well, I never! said Julius. I thought he was the descendant of L livius andronicus,the Roman dramatic and epic poet of the third century BC. I am, said
http://www.btinternet.com/~caractacus.bear/book/chapter14.txt

62. Manuwald
Translate this page ausgewählter Stücke (dh der erhaltenen Fragmente) aller bedeutenden römischenTragiker aus republikanischer Zeit livius andronicus, Naevius, Ennius
http://www.ergon-verlag.de/details/3933563682.htm
Gesine Manuwald (Hrsg.)

63. George A. Sheets
a school commentary on Herodotus Book I. Later I wrote a series of articles on stylisticexperiments in early Latin literature (livius andronicus, Plautus, and
http://cnes.cla.umn.edu/Faculty/Sheets.html
George A. Sheets
Associate Professor
Department of in the
University of Minnesota
, Twin Cities
tel.: 612-625-3326; fax: 612-624-4894
email: gasheets@umn.edu
Education
BA (Latin) Univ. of North Carolina (1970)
Int. Ctr. for Classical Studies, Rome (1968)
PhD (Classical Studies) Duke University (1974)
Amer. Academy in Rome (Fellow/Classics)(1985)
JD William Mitchell College of Law (1990).
Specialization
Historical Linguistics
Latin Literature
Legal History

Selected Publications "Palatalization in Greek," Indogermanische Forschungen Herodotus: Book I , Bryn Mawr Commentaries (Bryn Mawr: 1981). "The Dialectological Implications of Secondary Mid-Vowels in Greek, American Journal of Philology "The Dialect Gloss, Hellenistic Poetics, and Livius Andronicus," American Journal of Philology "Ennius Lyricus," Illinois Classical Studies "Plautus and Early Roman Tragedy," Illinois Classical Studies "Conceptualizing International Law in Thucydides,"

64. A History Of Roman Literature
From livius andronicus to Boethius with special regard to its influence onworld literature. Michael von Albrecht. (you can always remove it later).
http://www.brill.nl/product.asp?ID=2806

65. Vorlesungsverzeichnis WS 2002/03
Translate this page Dies trifft für livius andronicus und seine Übersetzung der Odysseewie auch seine Tätigkeit als Komödiendichter zu. Andererseits
http://www.uni-trier.de/uni/fb2/philologie/WS2003.HTM
Lehrveranstaltungen im Wintersemester 2002/03
KLASSISCHE PHILOLOGIE
um 16.00 Uhr c.t. in Raum B 14
I) GRIECHISCHE PHILOLOGIE VORLESUNG Ulrich Eigler
Griechische Literatur in Rom
Mo. 11-13, B 14 Beginn: 4. November 2002
PROSEMINAR Johannes Schwind
Euripides, Hippolytos
Di. 14-16, B 19 Beginn: 29. Oktober 2002
S Schein aufgrund eines schriftlich auszuarbeitenden Referats.
HAUPTSEMINAR Ulrich Eigler Do. 11-13, C1 Beginn: 31. Oktober 2002 S Hauptseminarschein aufgrund einer schriftlichen Hausarbeit Johannes Schwind Mi. 8-10, E 139 Beginn: 30. Oktober 2002 S Teilnahmeschein Bernhard Herzhoff Mi. 8-10, E 50 Beginn: 30. Oktober 2002 Johannes Schwind Do. 18-20, A 12 Mo. 14-16, B 430 V Griechischkenntnisse L Franz Stoessl, Kommentar zu Menander Dyskolos, Paderborn 1965; Text: Menandri rel. sel. Sandbach (OCT) 1972ff.; Kommentar: Menander, A Commentary by A. W. Gomme and F. H. Sandbach, Oxford 1973.

66. Rome
Translate this page III e. Guilde des Artistes de Dionysos (Athènes, Corinthe, Téoset peut-être Alexandrie. ~277. Naissance de livius andronicus. ~270.
http://www.er.uqam.ca/nobel/c2545/chronologie/chrono3.html
Rome
Contexte historique Fondation de Rome c~616 ludi Romani Tarquinia Hexagone ~ III e Naissance de Livius Andronicus Le Cheval de Troie La Jeune Tarentine Lycurgue Romulus et Clastidium et Maccus jeune fille c~270 Achille exil ludi Florales fabula riciniata ) en ~211 ludi Plebeii c~220 Le Revenant La Marmite Amphitryon canticum ludi Megalenses ludi Cereales Stichus de Plaute Le Barbu ), et de Lucius Afranius ( Le Coiffeur Les Tantes maternelles ~ II e de Plaute Pseudolus de Plaute Les Bacchides de Plaute c~184 av. ~169 Hautontimoroumenos Le Masochiste et Phormion Les Adelphes [Inde: Patanjali Patanjali, Mahabhasya av. ~132 av. ~77 Asinius Pollion inaugure les recitationes de salon av. ~65 Thyeste de Varius Rufus Introduction de la pantomime ( fabula saltica ) par Pylade et Bathyllus Vitruve, De Architectura c ~ 14 Horace, Thyeste Les Troyennes Agamemnon c ~ 2 Natyasastra c I e Orange (Gaule) et de Sagonte (Catalogne) Fresques peintures [Inde: Bhasa, Charudattam Le Couronnement La Statue II e Luni , en Toscane Antonin empereur , en Asie Mineure Tertullien

67. Lateinische Literatur
Translate this page Frühzeit. Ihren Anfang nimmt die römische Literatur mit livius andronicus,der als freigelassener griechischer Sklave nach Rom kam.
http://www.kreienbuehl.ch/lat/latein/kultur/literatur/literatur2.html
Lateinische Literatur Lateinische Literatur, die Literatur des antiken Rom und weiter Teile Westeuropas vom Mittelalter bis in die Renaissance, verfasst in lateinischer Sprache. Geschichte des Lateinischen als Literatursprache Die frühesten Zeugnisse in lateinischer Sprache verfasster Literatur stammen aus dem 3. Jahrhundert v. Chr. In unterschiedlicher Ausprägung setzt sich deren Tradition bis zum heutigen Tag fort. Der Zerfall des Römischen Weltreiches (siehe römische Geschichte) und die stufenweise Entwicklung der romanischen Sprachen aus dem Vulgärlateinischen (der gesprochenen Sprache des gemeinen Volkes) konnte über Jahrhunderte hinweg der Stellung des Lateinischen als führender literarischer Sprache Westeuropas nichts anhaben. Die lateinische Literatur entwickelte sich in christianisierter Form auch während des Mittelalters weiter, als das Lateinische Amtssprache der römisch-katholischen Kirche war. Mit dem Aufkommen des Humanismus im 14. Jahrhundert und dessen Betonung der klassischen Formen der Antike erlebte das Lateinische eine neue Blüte, die bis ins 17. Jahrhundert anhalten sollte. Noch bis vor kurzem galt in der abendländischen Kultur die Kenntnis der klassischen römischen (und griechischen) Literatur als Grundlage einer guten Allgemeinbildung.

68. The Roman Republic Timeline
is assassinated Julius Caesar is consul Last plebian secession Laws of the TwelveTables codified in Rome livius andronicus, first Latin poet Lydia absorbed
http://www.timelines.info/history/empires_and_civilizations/ancient_civilisation
Can't see the timeline? Click Here Home Empires and Civilizations Ancient Civilisations ... Ancient Rome The Roman Republic
Do you have any comments and suggestions about this timeline, please e-mail and tell us at: suggestions@timelines.info Events Birth of Gaius Julius Caesar
Birth of Gaius Octavius ( Augustus )
Birth of Virgil
Cataline's conspiracy
Civil war in Rome
Colossus of Rhodes completed
Construction of the Pantheon begins
Etruscan rule ends in Rome
First known paved streets appear in Rome
First Mithridatic War First public gladiator combat in Rome First Roman coins Gaius Gracchus is murdered Gauls sack Rome Julius Caesar and Pompey fight a Civil War Julius Caesar conquerors Gaul Julius Caesar crosses the Rubicon Julius Caesar is assassinated Julius Caesar is consul Last plebian secession Laws of the Twelve Tables codified in Rome Livius Andronicus, first Latin poet Lydia absorbed into the Roman Empire Marius begins his military reforms Marius is Consul Marius seizes Rome Octavian defeats Anthony and Cleopatra at Actium Phrygia becomes a Roman province Pompey and Crassus are consuls Praetor peregrinus Praetor urbanus Punic wars Pyrrhus of Epirus invades Italy Republic established at Rome Revolt of slaves and gladiators led by Spartacus Rome at war with Samnites and Latins Rome begins conquest of Italy Rome signs treaty with Carthage Scipio Aemilianus Scipio Africanus Second Macedonian War Sulla, consul, marches on Rome

69. Bookbeat
A History of Roman Literature Volume 2 from livius andronicus to Boethius Michaelvon Albrecht (Revised by Gareth Schmeling (Classics) and the author) EJ
http://clasnews.clas.ufl.edu/news/clasnotes/9804/book.html
BOOKBEAT A Socialist Utopia in the New South
The Ruskin Colonies in Tennessee and Georgia, 1894-1901

W. Fitzhugh Brundage
(History)
University of Illinois Press (review taken from book jacket)
This first book-length study of the Ruskin colonies shows how several hundred utopian socialists gathered as a cooperative community in Tennessee and Georgia in the late nineteenth century. The communitarians' noble but fatally flawed act of social endeavor revealed the courage and desperation they felt as they searched for alternatives to the chaotic and competitive individualism of the age of robber barons and for a viable model for a just and humane society at a time of profound uncertainty about public life in the United States. (excerpt)
Utopians drawn to the South differed little from northern tourists who sought relief from the climate and the acquisitive, atomistic urban culture of the North in the exotic, curative landscape of the South. As advancing technology made the South more accessible, increasing numbers of Americans saw in it an escape from the angst of modern industrial society. For tourists, the escape was brief and exhilarating; for the utopians, it was intended to be both permanent and transcendent.
Advances in Quantum Chemistry - Volume 27

Editor-in-Chief (QTP) and Editors John R. Sabin

70. Literatura Latina
Horatius Flaccus, Quintus. John XXII Qui quorundam. John XXII Quum inter nonnullos.livius andronicus. Livius, Titus. Lucretius Carus, Titus. Luther 95 Theses.
http://www.ual.es/Universidad/Depar/Filesla/latin/literlat.htm
Departamento de Filología Española y Latina
área de filología latina
Optimizado para Internet Explorer 4.0 ó superior. Resolución mínima recomendada: 800*600
AUTORES Y TEXTOS
BIBLIOTECAS ELECTRÓNICAS OTROS RECURSOS Por momento, sin clasificaciones ulteriores Sitios generalistas con acceso a distintos autores y textos Una miscelánea de difícil clasificación AUTORES Y TEXTOS Addison, Joseph Opera Agnelli Ravennensis Liber pontificalis ecclesiae Ravennatis Alciato's Book of Emblems Alex ... Vitruvius, Marcus Pollius BIBLIOTECAS ELECTRÓNICAS Bibliotheca Augustana Carrie Medieval Latin Literature Center for Electronic Texts in the Humanities CETEDOC ... WORDTHEQUE - Word by word multilingual library OTROS RECURSOS Faculty, Department of Classics, University of Maryland Fontes Christiani Itinera Electronica - Explication approfondie d'auteurs latins Obscenity in Classical Latin ... Stylistic Analysis of Latin Prose A Checklist Estas páginas están vinculadas a las del Departamento de Filología Española y Latina de la Universidad de Almería
Sitio creado y mantenido por Manuel López Muñoz - Última modificación: 18/10/02

71. Arts/Classical_Studies/Roman/Livius_Andronicus
Our search portal also gives you the option to conduct a query using our intelligentsearch feature. / Arts / Classical_Studies / Roman / livius andronicus.
http://www.arts-entertainment-recreation.com/Arts/Classical_Studies/Roman/Livius
Search: Welcome to arts-entertainment-recreation.com, the comprehensive search portal dedicated to the arts. We have located some of the finest art and entertainment resources from across the Web and accumulated them into a single directory. Here you can choose from a wide variety of documents, reviews, articles, and Web sites about your favorite activities. Whether you enjoy film, Broadway shows, television, books, fine art, or travel, there is something here for you. As you peruse the directory, you will notice several categories pertaining to the arts. Feel free to navigate through these categories, from broad art-related topics to specific information on selected subjects. Our search portal also gives you the option to conduct a query using our intelligent search feature. Arts Roman Livius Andronicus Livius Andronicus - The Odyssey [Forum Romanum]
English translation of the Odissia (in turn a Latin version of Homer's Odyssey) by David Camden
URL: http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Forum/6946/literature/odissiae.html
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72. Vindex, De Vindplaats Van Het Nederlandse Web
Science Social Sciences Language and Linguistics Natural Languages IndoEuropeanItalic Latin Texts Ancient livius andronicus. Verwante Rubrieken,
http://www.vindex.nl/dir/Science/Social_Sciences/Language_and_Linguistics/Natura

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73. Die Lateinische Literatur
Translate this page Frühzeit Ihren Anfang nimmt die römische Literatur mit livius andronicus,der als freigelassener griechischer Sklave nach Rom kam.
http://www.altsprachen.traxx.ch/literatur.html
Die lateinische Literatur
Lateinische Literatur , die Literatur des antiken Rom und weiter Teile Westeuropas vom Mittelalter bis in die Renaissance, verfasst in lateinischer Sprache. Geschichte des Lateinischen als Literatursprache
Das Goldene Zeitalter: Dichtkunst
Das Goldene Zeitalter: Prosa
Das Silberne Zeitalter
Mittellateinische Literatur
Lateinische Literatur der Renaissance

74. Symposion 1999
livius andronicus und die Anverwandlung des hellenistischenDramas in Rom . 10.00 - 10.30 Diskussion. 10.30 - 11.00 Kaffeepause.
http://ella.phil.uni-freiburg.de/SFB541/A6/symp99.html
Programm zum Symposion 1999
17. - 19. November 1999 im Rahmen des Teilprojekts A6 des SFB 541:
Mittwoch, 17. November 1999
20.00 c.t.
HS 3043 Hans-Joachim Gehrke (Sprecher des SFB 541)
Donnerstag, 18. November 1999
Ekkehard Weber (Wien):
Jacqueline Dangel (Paris):
"Livius Andronicus und die Anverwandlung des hellenistischen Dramas in Rom"
Diskussion
Kaffeepause
am Beispiel des Equos Troianus und Lycurgus Gianna Petrone (Palermo):
"La praetexta repubblicana e il linguaggio della celebrazione" Frank Bernstein (Mainz):
Diskussion Mittagspause
Ulrike Auhagen (Freiburg):
"Ennius' Andromacha im politischen Kontext der Zeit" Sander M. Goldberg (Los Angeles): "Cicero and the Ideology of Tragedy" Ulrich Eigler (Trier): Diskussion Kaffeepause Gregor Vogt-Spira (Greifswald): "Ennius, Medea Antonio La Penna (Firenze): "Ennio, Sabinae. Il tema della concordia nella tragedia arcaica latina" Severin Koster (Erlangen): Stefan Faller (Freiburg): "Romanisierungstendenzen in der Iphigenia des Ennius" Diskussion Geselliges Beisammensein der Referenten im Restaurant Irodion (hinter dem Martinstor)
Freitag, 19. November 1999

75. The Miscellany
Grattius, Historia Apolloni, Hyginus, Ilias Latina. Iordanes, Iulius Obsequens,Iulius Paris, livius andronicus. Manilius, Maximianus, Minucius Felix, Naevius.
http://patriot.net/~lillard/cp/misc.html
THE MISCELLANY Apicius Asconius Avienus Ausonius ... Vegetius TBD TBD TBD The Latin Library The Classics Homepage

76. Latin Literature Quiz: Van Alstyne High School Latin Club
1. Which of the following was translated into Latin by livius andronicus? OdysseyAnnales Iliad Theogony. livius andronicus Petronius Juvenal Horace.
http://www.vanalstyneisd.org/Latinpg/latlit.html
Latin Literature Quiz
Which of the following was translated into Latin by Livius Andronicus? Odyssey
Annales
Iliad
Theogony
Who is considered to be the father of Latin Literature? Cicero
Cato the Elder
Naevius
Ennius 3. What play of Plautus' is unique in that there are no women involved? Mostellaria
Pseudolus
Aulularia
Captivi
4. Where was the birthplace of Publius Virgilius Maro? Rome
Padua Mantua Andes 5. How many books comprise the Georgics 6. To where was Ovid banished? Mantua Tomi Corsica Gades 7. Who found the tomb of Archimedes while serving in Sicily? Cicero Cato Pliny the Elder Hortensius 8. Which emperor supposedly appointed his horse, Incitatus, a Roman consul? Caligula Nero Elagabalus Domitian 9. Which of the following is best known for his writings about education? Tertullian Ovid Quintilian Seneca the Younger 10. Who wrote the Satyricon Livius Andronicus Petronius Juvenal Horace

77. Changes In Roman Life
plays, a comedy and a tragedy. livius andronicus was asked to translatethem into Latin. This event was the beginning of dramatic
http://www.sacredspiral.com/Database/rome/rome25.html
THE STORY OF THE ANCIENT NATIONS (1912)
BY WILLIAM L. WESTERMANN CHAPTER XXX THE CHANGE IN ROMAN LIFE 402. Early Roman Literature. Ñ The Romans were not by nature a people gifted, as the Greeks were, in expressing their thoughts well in poetry, or in carving beautiful statues in stone. They were, as the oldest forms of their religion prove, a practical farming people. Their early days handed down to future times no great epic poems, such as the Iliad and the Odyssey of the Hellenes. Their lives were filled with hard fighting and sober thought upon matters affecting the state. They had, of course, their old songs, connected with the practical needs of life, especially with their religion. These were prayers and songs of thanksgiving to the gods, set in crude verse forms. Neither these, nor the annals of the priest, nor the records kept by the noble families of the deeds of their ancestors, could be regarded as good literature. 403. The Beginning of the Greek Influence. Ñ In the third century B. C., in the war with Pyrrhus, with Tarentum, and with Carthage, the Romans were brought into contact with the great Mediterranean world. The culture of this world was the cosmopolitan, Greek culture, which had spread so rapidly after Alexander's conquests. Its language was the "common" Greek dialect which had become the general tongue used among all civilized peoples, although the native languages were still used in the different countries.

78. SearchUK - Finds It Fast!
Home Top Arts Classical_Studies Roman livius andronicus. ADULT(18+), SHOPPING, FINANCE, GAMBLING, JOBS, TRAVEL, livius andronicus
http://www.searchuk.com/Top/Arts/Classical_Studies/Roman/Livius_Andronicus/
Home Top Arts Roman > Livius Andronicus ADULT SHOPPING FINANCE GAMBLING ...
Livius Andronicus - The Odyssey [Forum Romanum]
- English translation of the Odissia (in turn a Latin version of Homer's Odyssey) by David Camden
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79. Study Guide For Livy 21-30
livius andronicus the poet (mentioned at 27.37) Syphax, king of Maesulii inN. Africa Indibilis, prince of Ilergetes in Spain (first appearance at 22.21
http://www.barca.fsnet.co.uk/Livy-Study-Guide-21-30.htm
Study Guide for Livy 21-30
About the War Cannae Tarentum If it is necessary to limit oneself to three main characters, they are: Other noteworthy people in Book 21 (and often subsequently) include:
People who become prominent in Book 22 include:
L. Aemilius Paullus, consul in 216 (whose grandson, many years later, was adopted by the son of Scipio Africanus; this grandson was known as Scipio Aemilianus, and was a close friend of the Greek historian Polybius, Livy's best source)
NB: If you wonder about the Camillus to whom both Flaminius and Minucius compare themselves, he is a great military hero (and rather independent person) of the late fifth and early fourth centuries. He appears again as an example in Books 25.4 and 27.34. Interesting people in Book 23 include: Tib. Sempronius Gracchus, consul in 215 and 213, master of horse to the dictator M. Junius Pera
People in Book 24: Archimedes
People in Book 25:
People in Book 26:
People in Book 27:
Aratus of Sicyon, a leader of the Achaean League (27.31) People in Book 28: L. Cornelius Scipio, consul in 190, brother of Scipio Africanus

80. Events At Rome 509-240 BCE
272 Siege and capture of Tarentum (livius andronicus), 268 Sabines become fullcitizens, 268 Roman coinage introduced. 240 First plays of livius andronicus.
http://www.uvm.edu/~bsaylor/rome/events.html
Chronological Table Showing Major Military and Civil Events 509-240 BCE
Militiae
Domi
509 Treaty with Carthage 506 Battle of Aricia 504 Sabine Attius Clausus moved to Rome 496 Battle at Lake Regillus 494 First secession of Plebs (Aventine or Mons Sacer) 493 Foedus Cassianum with Latins 486 Rome and Latins make treaty with Hernici 485 Sp. Cassius tried and killed 484 Romans drive Aequi out of Tusculum 479 Roman victory vs. Fidenae 471 Lex Publilia (Concilium Plebis Tributum) 467 Latin colony founded at Antium 460 Cincinnatus saves Roman army on Mt. Algidus 451-450 Twelve Tables 449 Second Secession of the Plebs, Valerio-Horatian Laws 445 Oscans take over Capua 445 Lex Canuleia (intermarriage) 444-367 22 years of consuls; military tribunes otherwise 443 First censors (patrician) 442 Latin colony founded at Ardea 440-439 Sp. Maelius killed by C. Servilius Ahala 431 Romans defeat Aequi 428 Oscans take over Cumae (but not Neapolis) 426-5 Rome captures Fidenae from Etruscans 421 Quaestors (now 4) can be plebeian 418 Latin colony founded at Labici 405-396 Siege of Veii by 396 Pay for military rank and file 390 Gauls sack Rome 385 M. Manlius Capitolinus tried and killed

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