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         Manilius:     more books (100)
  1. Manilius: Astronomica (Loeb Classical Library No. 469) (English and Latin Edition) by Manilius, 1977-01-01
  2. Five Books of M. Manilius by M. Manilius, 2007-07-25
  3. The Poetics of Latin Didactic: Lucretius, Vergil, Ovid, Manilius by Katharina Volk, 2002-08-29
  4. Die Eigenschaften der Tierkreiszeichen in der Antike: Ihre Darstellung und Verwendung unter besonderer Berucksichtigung des Manilius (Sudhoffs Archiv) (German Edition) by Wolfgang Hubner, 1982
  5. Stace Martial, Manilius, Lucilius Junior, Rutilius, Gratius Faliscus, Nemesianus Et Calpurnius Part 2 (1860) (French Edition) by Desire Nisard, 2010-09-10
  6. Forgotten Stars: Rediscovering Manilius' Astronomica by Steven J. Green, Katharina Volk, 2011-04-15
  7. Stace Martial, Manilius, Lucilius Junior, Rutilius, Gratius Faliscus, Nemesianus Et Calpurnius Part 1 (1860) (French Edition) by Desire Nisard, 2010-09-10
  8. Uber Die Altesten Ausgaben Von Manilius' Astronomica (1893) (German Edition) by Adolf Cramer, 2010-05-23
  9. Astronomica /Astrologie by Marcus Manilius, 2008
  10. Textkritische Und Exegetische Beiträge Zum Astrologischen Lehrgedicht Des Sogenannten Manilius (German Edition) by Hermann Kleingünther, 2010-04-02
  11. Über Die Ältisten Ausgaben Von Manilius' Astronomica (German Edition) by Adolf Cramer, 2010-05-25
  12. M. Manilivs Astronomica, Volumes 1-2 (Latin Edition) by Marcus Manilius, 2010-03-28
  13. Manilius, ""Astronomica"" Buch V (Sammlung Wissenschaftlicher Commentare (Swc)) (German Edition) by Wolfgang Hübner, 2010-10-14
  14. Untersuchungen zu den Gleichnissen im romischen Lehrgedicht: Lucrez. Vergil. Manilius (Hypomnemata) (German Edition) by Claudia Schindler, 2000-04-12

1. M@nilius!
Informaci³n sobre la obra del poeta latino Marco Manilio, y recursos de investigaci³n tales como bibliograf­a, art­culos y enlaces.
http://manilio.f2g.net/

2. Manilius
M. MANILII ASTRONOMICA. Liber Primus, Liber Secundus, Liber Tertius, LiberQuartus, Liber Quintus. The Miscellany, The Latin Library, The Classics Homepage.
http://www.gmu.edu/departments/fld/CLASSICS/manilius.html
M. MANILII ASTRONOMICA Liber Primus Liber Secundus Liber Tertius Liber Quartus ... The Classics Homepage

3. Manilius: Poetry & Science After Vergil
manilius Poetry Science after Vergil. Housman's edition of manilius, the young man answered, abstractedly removing his collar and tie.
http://ablemedia.com/ctcweb/showcase/pendergraft1.html
by Mary Pendergraft, Wake Forest University
My earliest acquaintance with Manilius came through a text only vaguely classical: E.C. Bentley's parody of Dorothy L. Sayers' Gaudy Night. In this short story Lord Peter Wimsey visits Oxford to investigate a murder; strolling by night through the quad he encounters a young man sitting on "an obese volume on the gravel." With alacrity and courtesy the student offers the detective his seat: "Won't you sit down, sir? Not enough room for two, I'm afraid, even on Liddell and Scott." He explains that after the general rowdiness following the Aquinas dinner, he had been… "just sitting here for rest and meditation. D'you ever meditate?" "Oh, often," said Wimseythe passage continues "What were you thinking of mediating upon this time?" "Housman's edition of Manilius," the young man answered, abstractedly removing his collar and tie. "Wonderful chapHousman, I mean; Manilius was rather a blister. The way Housman pastes the other commentators in the slats does your heart good. I was just concentrating on the way he kicks the stuffing out of Elias Stöberlovely!" [E. C. Bentley, “Greedy Night,” reprinted from , ed. James Sandoe (NY 1972).]

4. MANILIUS
goods
http://53.1911encyclopedia.org/M/MA/MANILIUS.htm
document.write("");
MANILIUS
Philippines are almost unlimited. Enormous areas of good abacá land are as yet untouched, while the greater part of land already under cultivation might yield a greatly increased product if more careful attention were given to the various deLails of cultivation. The introduction of irrigation will make possible the planting of abacd in many districts where it is now unknown. The perfection of a machine for the extraction of the fibre will increase the entire output by nearly one-third, as this amount is now lost by the wasteful hand-stripping process.” Hitherto, while numerous attempts have been made to extract the fibre with machinery, some obstacle has always prevented the general use of the process. The exports have increased with great rapidity, as shown by the following table:— 1870 . . . - - 31,426 tons. In 1901 the value of the export was $14,453,410, or 62.3% of tl~e total exports from the Philippines. The fibre is now so valuable that Manila hemp cordage is freely adulterated by manufacturers, chiefly by admixture of phormium (New Zealand flax), and Russian hemp. says that hardly any Roman except Caesar, Cicero and Fronto had treated the subject, it is probable that he did not know the work of Manilius. The latest event referred to in the poem (i. 898) is the great defeat of Varus by Arminius in the Teutoburgiensis Saltus (A.D. 9). The fifth book was not written till the reign of Tiberius; the work appears to be incomplete, and was probably never published.

5. §11. Editions Of Terence And Manilius. XIII. Scholars And Antiquaries. Vol. 9.
manilius was the last Latin poet of whom a revised text was published by Bentley.
http://www.bartleby.com/219/1311.html
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The Cambridge History of English and American Literature in 18 Volumes
Volume IX. From Steele and Addison to Pope and Swift.

6. Manilius: Poetry & Science After Vergil
manilius Poetry Science after Vergil. Thus, manilius found an increasingly receptiveclimate for the poetic undertaking whose innovative nature he stressed.
http://ablemedia.com/ctcweb/showcase/pendergraft2.html
by Mary Pendergraft, Wake Forest University
We can quickly sketch the outlines of the history of ancient astrology. Its beginnings are Babylonian, but the complex and sophisticated form in which it came to Rome largely grew out that Babylonian data in the Greek-speaking cities of the Hellenistic era, and particularly in Egypt. References to astrological ideas appear in Rome by the time of Cicero, for instance, who dismisses it in De Divinatione ; Horace of course, before he tells Leuconoe carpe diem , tells her not to bother with Babylonios numeros . At the same time, though, a senator like Nigidius Figulus could cast horoscopes; Varro apparently was interested in this skill and his lost de astronomia may have included astrology as well as what we would call astronomy. And Stoicism provided a philosophical basis for accepting the truth of astrology's claims, with its understanding that the universe is orderly and rational, its parts held together by divine logos ; this logos is manifest as creative fire, clearly the constituent of the heavenly bodies but also present in the human soul. The Stoic divinity is well-disposed to humankind and thus willing to reveal the orderly working of the cosmos , particularly, as Manilius urges, through our understanding of how the stars influence terrestrial life.

7. WIEM: Marcus Manilius
Patrz maniliusz
http://www.encyklopedia.pl/wiem/00b983.html
wiem.onet.pl napisz do nas losuj: has³a multimedia Historia powszechna, Postacie historyczne, Literatura, W³ochy
Marcus Manilius widok strony
znajd¼ podobne

poka¿ powi±zane Patrz: Maniliusz zobacz wszystkie serwisy do góry Encyklopedia zosta³a opracowana na podstawie Popularnej Encyklopedii Powszechnej Wydawnictwa Fogra

8. Manilius Astronomica
manilius Astronomica (1st century CE). For I shall sing of God, silentmindedmonarch of nature, who, permeating sky and land and
http://www.roanoke.edu/religion/Maclean/RELG211/ManiliusAstronomica.htm
Manilius Astronomica (1st century CE)
Who, Great Pompey, after your victory over the forces of Mithridates, your recovery of the seas from piracy, and your three triumphs gained from campaigns which traverses the earth, would have believed that, when you could now represent yourself as another styled the Great, you were destined to perish on Egyptian shores with but fire of shipwrecked wood to burn your corpse and remnants of an upcast barque to make your pyre? Who can experience such changes of fortune except by fate’s decree? When after his victory and happy settlement of civil strife he was administering the laws of peace, even he who was born of heaven and was to heaven restored could not escape the violence so oft foretold: before the eyes of the assembled senate he obliterated with his own blood the evidence of the plot and the list of the conspirators which he held in his hand: all this so that fate could prevail (4.50-62). Let man’s merits, therefore, possess glory all the greater, seeing that they owe their excellence to heaven; and , again, let us hate the wicked all the more, because they were born for guilt and punishment. Crime, whencesoever sprung, must still be reckoned crime. This, too, is sanctioned by fate, that I should thus expound the rule of fate (4.114-18). Selections from the translation of G. P. Goold (Loeb Classical Library; Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1977).

9. Manilius - Wikipedia
Printable version. 216.239.46.148 Log in Help. manilius. From Wikipedia, thefree encyclopedia. Marcus manilius, Roman poet; Gaius manilius, Roman tribune.
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10. Marcus Manilius - Wikipedia
Similar pages More results from www.wikipedia.org maniliusmanilius Despite its modest size, this crater is prominent under allilluminations. A low angle of light, when it is near the terminator
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Marcus Manilius
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Marcus Manilius , a Roman poet , author of a poem in five books called Astronomica The author is neither quoted nor mentioned by any ancient writer. Even his name is uncertain, but it was probably Marcus Manilius; in the earlier books the author is anonymous, the later give Manilius, Manlius, Mallius. The poem itself implies that the writer lived under Augustus or Tiberius , and that he was a citizen of and resident in Rome . According to R. Bentley he was an Asiatic Greek; according to F. Jacob an African. His work is one of great learning; he had studied his subject in the best writers, and generally represents the most advanced views of the ancients on astronomy (or rather astrology His Astronomicon was critically edited by A.E. Housman

11. Menelaus & Manilius
menelaus manilius These two craters are in many ways like twins.Apart from their very similar names (manilius is named after
http://www.inconstantmoon.com/img_mene_ac.htm
These two craters are in many ways like twins. Apart from their very similar names (Manilius is named after a Roman poet, Menelaus after a Greek astronomer) and sizes (Manilius, to the west, is six mles wider), each is a sharp, class 1 feature, with central peaks and a 100 mile radius ray system (roughly equal to their separation) and is very prominent around the full moon. Photo: António Cidadão . His Home Page of Astrophotography includes stereograms, animations, and "Seven Craters a Week" from his forthcoming photographic lunar atlas. Inconstant Moon

12. MSN Learning & Research - Search Results - Manilius AND Marcus
manilius, Marcus (lived in the 1st century ad ), Roman poet. manilius is known for his Astronomica, a poem on astronomy
http://encarta.msn.com/teleport/fromTools/find.asp?brand=elibrary&q1=Manilius+AN

13. Manilius
Translate this page manilius A. Reek, Interpretationen zu den Astronomica des manilius, mit besondererBerücksichtigung der philosophischen Partien, diss. Marburg 1977.
http://www.let.kun.nl/~m.v.d.poel/bibliografie/manilius.htm
MANILIUS #Bibliographia #Editiones #Indices #Studia docta ... #Bibliographia
R. Helm, Nachaugusteische nichtchristliche Dichter I, 1925-1942, in : Lustrum I (1956), pp. 121-318 (129-157).
E. Romano, Recenti studi su Manilio, in : Cultura e scuola 18 (1979) (no. 72), pp. 39-58.
#Editiones

J. v. Wageningen, transl., Leiden 1914.
J. v. Wageningen, Teubner 1915.
J. v. Wageningen, comm., Amsterdam 1921.
A.E. Housman, 5 voll., c. comm., Cambridge 19372 (2 voll., Hildesheim 1972).
A.E. Housman, ed. minor, Cambridge 1937.
G.P. Goold, Loeb 1977.
G.P. Goold, Teubner, Leipzig 1985; ed. corr., 1998. D. Liuzzi, l. 2, c. transl., Galatina 1991. D. Liuzzi, l. 3, c. transl., Lecce 1988. #Indices M. Wacht, Concordantia in Manilii Astronomica, Hildesheim 1990. M. - M. Manzino, Concordanze degli Astronomica di Manilio, 2 voll., Genua 1991-1992. P.J. del Real Francia, Lexicon Manilianum / curavit, Hildesheim 1998. #Studia docta F. Boll, Sphaera, Leipzig 1903 (Hildesheim 1966). E. Romano, Struttura degli Astronomica di Manilio, Palermo 1979. C. Salemme, Introduzione agli Astronomica di Manilio, Napels 1983.

14. Harvard University Press/Manilius, Astronomica
Astronomica by manilius Translated by GP Goold,published by Harvard University Press.
http://www.hup.harvard.edu/catalog/L469.html
FROM THE LOEB CLASSICAL LIBRARY
MANILIUS
Astronomica
Translated by G. P. Goold Astronomica is the earliest treatise we have on astrology. Here Manilius provides an account of celestial phenomena and the signs of the Zodiac. He also gives witty character sketches of persons born under particular constellations. Explanatory notes, 24 drawings, and two star charts are included.
January 1977
1 map, 2 star charts, index
510 pages
Cloth edition:
ISBN 0-674-99516-3
G. P. Goold is William Lampson Professor Emeritus of Latin Language and Literature, Yale University, and Editor Emeritus of the Loeb Classical Library.

15. Manilius, Marcus
Pronunciation Key. manilius, Marcus , fl. A.D. 10, Roman poet.
http://www.factmonster.com/ce6/people/www.factmonster.com/ce6/people/A0831545.ht

Encyclopedia

Manilius, Marcus [m u E u s]
Pronunciation Key
Manilius, Marcus , fl. A.D. 10, Roman poet. Of his didactic poem on astrology, the Astronomica, five books remain. These may or may not have constituted the whole work.
Manila hemp
Manin, Daniele AD AD AD AD AD
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16. Harvard University Press/Manilius, Astronomica/Reviews
Reviews of Astronomica by manilius Translated byGP Goold, published by Harvard University Press.
http://www.hup.harvard.edu/reviews/L469_R.html
FROM THE LOEB CLASSICAL LIBRARY
MANILIUS
Astronomica
Translated by G. P. Goold Perhaps the most ingenious... of Latin poets [is here translated by] a distinguished Latinist, deeply versed in celestial lore... [Manilius] is faithfully conveyed in a style both lucid and elegant.
D. R. Shackleton Bailey, Classical Philology
January 1977
1 map, 2 star charts, index
510 pages
Cloth edition:
ISBN 0-674-99516-3
G. P. Goold is William Lampson Professor Emeritus of Latin Language and Literature, Yale University, and Editor Emeritus of the Loeb Classical Library.

17. Manilius, Marcus. The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001. manilius, Marcus.(m n l´ s) (KEY) , fl. AD 10, Roman poet. Of his didactic poem
http://www.bartleby.com/65/ma/Manilius.html
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18. IntraText Digital Library: Author Card: Marcus Manilius
IntraText Digital Library Author Card manilius, Marcus Marcus manilius CatalogueDownload Info Contacts News IXT format Privacy Copyright Ratings
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Manilius, Marcus

Marcus Manilius
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Astronomica

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19. Manilius, Liber V
Translate this page M. MANILII ASTRONOMICON LIBER QUINTUS. Hic alius finisset iter signisquerelatis quis adversa meant stellarum numina quinque quadriiugis
http://www.thelatinlibrary.com/manilius5.html
M. MANILII ASTRONOMICON LIBER QUINTUS Hic alius finisset iter signisque relatis
quis adversa meant stellarum numina quinque
quadriiugis et Phoebus equis et Delia bigis
non ultra struxisset opus, caeloque rediret
ac per descensum medios percurreret ignes
Saturni, Iovis et Martis Solisque, sub illis
post Venerem et Maia natum te, Luna, vagantem.
me properare etiam mundus iubet omnia circum
sidera vectatum toto decurrere caelo,
cum semel aetherios ausus conscendere currus
summum contigerim sua per fastigia culmen. hinc vocat Orion, magni pars maxima caeli, et ratis heroum, quae nunc quoque navigat astris, Fluminaque errantis late sinuantia flexus et biferum Cetos squamis atque ore tremendo Hesperidumque vigil custos et divitis auri et Canis in totum portans incendia mundum araque divorum, cui votum solvit Olympus; illinc per geminas Anguis qui labitur Arctos Heniochusque memor currus plaustrique Bootes atque Ariadnaeae caelestia dona coronae, victor et invisae Perseus cum falce Medusae Andromedanque necans genitor cum coniuge Cepheus, quaque volat stellatus Equus celerique Sagittae Delphinus certans et Iuppiter alite tectus

20. Manilius, Liber III
Translate this page M. MANILII ASTRONOMICON LIBER TERTIUS. In nova surgentem maioraque viribusausum nec per inaccessos metuentem vadere saltus ducite, Pierides.
http://www.thelatinlibrary.com/manilius3.html
M. MANILII ASTRONOMICON LIBER TERTIUS In nova surgentem maioraque viribus ausum
nec per inaccessos metuentem vadere saltus
ducite, Pierides. vestros extendere fines
conor et ignotos in carmina ducere census.
non ego in excidium caeli nascentia bella,
fulminis et flammis partus in matre sepultos,
non coniuratos reges Troiaque cadente
Hectora venalem cineri Priamumque ferentem,
Colchida nec referam vendentem regna parentis
et lacerum fratrem stupro, segetesque virorum
taurorumque trucis flammas vigilemque draconem et reduces annos auroque incendia facta et male conceptos partus peiusque necatos; non annosa canam Messenes bella nocentis, septenosve duces ereptaque fulmine flammis moenia Thebarum et victam quia vicerat urbem, germanosve patris referam matrisque nepotes, natorumve epulas conversaque sidera retro ereptumque diem, nec Persica bella profundo indicta et magna pontum sub classe latentem immissumque fretum terris, iter aequoris undis; non regis magni spatio maiore canenda quam sunt acta loquar. Romanae gentis origo

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