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         Sallust:     more books (100)
  1. Sallust on the Gods and the World by Sallustius, 2009-12-28
  2. Sallust, Florus, and Velleius Paterculus, Literally Tr. with Notes, by J.S. Watson by Lucius Annaeus Florus, Gaius Sallustius Crispus, 2010-03-05
  3. Sallust, Florus, and Velleius Paterculus by Lucius Annaeus Florus, John Selby Watson, et all 2010-03-31
  4. Pax und libertas bei Sallust (German Edition) by Wolfgang Kriz, 2007-10-19
  5. C. C. Sallust's History Of The Catilinarian And Jugurthine Wars (1744) by C. C. Sallustii Bellum, 2008-08-18
  6. The Catiline and Jugurtha of Sallust by 86-34 B.C Sallust, Alfred W. 1859-1944 Pollard, 2010-08-21
  7. Chiasmus in Sallust, Caesar, Tacitus and Justinus by Robert Benson Steele, 2009-12-30
  8. Sallust's Jugurthine War and Conspiracy of Catiline with an Englishcommentary.by Charles Anthon by Sallust, 1836
  9. The Catiline and Jugurtha of Sallust Tr., by A.W. Pollard by Gaius Sallustius Crispus, 2010-04-01
  10. Ambitio mala, Studien zur politischen Biographie des Sallust (Saarbrucker Beitrage zur Altertumskunde) (German Edition) by Jurgen Malitz, 1975
  11. The Catilina and Jugurtha of Sallust: With Notes and Excursus by Thomas Keightley, Sallust Sallust, 2010-04-20
  12. Sallust's Catiline-War (Latin Edition) by John Tahourdin White, Sallust, 2010-03-05
  13. The Works of Sallust by Sallust, 2009-12-28
  14. Sallust's Jugurthine War and Conspiracy of Catiline: With an English Commentary, and Geographical and Historical Indexes by Sallust, 2010-03-16

61. SALLUST
Translate this page sallust (Gaius sallustius Crispus), geb. 86 v.Chr. in Amiternum gest. Bellum IugurthinumI (Vorwort) Kremser. sallust bei amazon.de. © Helmut Schulze, 2002.
http://www.litlinks.it/sx/sallust.htm
SALLUST (Gaius Sallustius Crispus) geb. 86 v.Chr. in Amiternum
gest. 35 v.Chr. in Rom
Letzte Änderung Texte im Internet

62. OUP USA: Sallust's Bellum Catilinae
9 An American Philological Association Book, sallust's Bellum Catilinae Editedwith an Introduction and Commentary by JT RAMSEY This new commentary, while
http://www.oup-usa.org/isbn/0891305602.html

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American Philological Association Textbook Series No. 9

An American Philological Association Book

Sallust's Bellum Catilinae
Edited with an Introduction and Commentary by J. T. RAMSEY
"This new commentary, while going into a good deal of detail on the historical side...is laudably concerned at every turn to make sure that the student understands Sallust's grammar.... Ramsey has read his text with attention, and will stimulate his readers to do the same." Michael Winterbottom, Classical Review "The commentary is a mine of solid information for students, not only on the immediate topic, but also on related aspects of Roman civilization.... It is an exemplary commentary for the modern student of Sallust."Thomas Scanlon, Classical World "Ramsey has produced what is likely to become the standard textbook for all intermediate students of Latin studying Sallust.... It has just the right balance of all the factors necessary for such a student to gain a good understanding of this great work and its author."Darel Engen, Favonius
272 pp.; 0-89130-560-2

63. Sallust
sallust 86 bc c.34 bc , Roman historian. He was tribune of the people(52 bc ) and praetor (46). sallust. 86 bc -c.34 bc , Roman historian.
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    Sallust b.c. -c.34 b.c. , Roman historian. He was tribune of the people (52 b.c. ) and praetor (46). He was ejected (50) from the senate ostensibly for adultery, but more probably because of his partisanship for Caesar. He served with Caesar after his praetorship and was his governor in Numidia; he was subsequently accused of misusing his governorship for personal gain. His principal works are the Bellum Catilinae, on the conspiracy of Catiline and his account of the Jugurthine War, Bellum Jugurthinum. His history of Rome is extant only in fragments; it probably covered the period 78 b.c. to 67 b.c. There are also two letters, in rhetorical style, from Sallust to Caesar, the authenticity of which has been greatly disputed. As a historian Sallust was important as one of the first to write historical monographs dealing with sharply limited events and periods. Although his style is consciously archaic, it is distinguished by its terseness and directness. His character sketches are particularly impressive and vivid, and his work has found as many imitators as critics. See studies by D. C. Earl (1961) and Ronald Syme (1964); bibliography by A. D. Leeman (rev. ed. 1965).
  • 64. Latein Am Wüllenweber Gymnasium
    Translate this page Lebenslauf. sallust heißt mit ganzem Namen Gaius sallustius Crispus und wurde86 v. Chr. Daraufhin wurde sallust Statthalter der neuen Provinz Afrika.
    http://www.zum.de/Faecher/L/NRW/wwg_neu/Sallust/sallust.html
    Autoren: Christina Koch / Mira Jansen / Stephanie Wintersohl
    GAIUS SALLUSTIUS CRISPUS
    Lebenslauf
    Sallust heißt mit ganzem Namen Gaius Sallustius Crispus und wurde 86 v. Chr. in Amiternum im Sabinerland als Sohn einer angesehen Familie geboren .
    Als Jugendlicher kam er nach Rom. Er interessierte sich sehr für Politik, machte eine Ausbildung zum Rhetor und informierte sich auf dem Forum über politische Anschauungen. Im Alter von 20 Jahren zählte er zu den Anhängern des Catilina.
    So erlebte er viele politische Ereignisse mit, wie z.B. den Aufstieg von Pompeius und Caesar, den hoffnungslosen Kampf der Optimaten und die wieder zunehmende Brutalisierung der innenpolitischen Konflikte.
    Als er 32 Jahre alt war, gehörte er zu den Anhängern des Machthabers Caesar. Nun wurde Sallust Quästor und trat in den Senat ein, wo er durch eine gehässige Schmähschrift gegen Cicero viel Unruhe verursachte.
    Zwei Jahre später (52 v. Chr.) wurde er

    65. UNIT XIII - Sallust
    UNIT XIII sallust C. sallustius Crispus (ca.8735 BC) held political office in theturbulent middle decades of the first century BC Born of a plebeian family
    http://www.holycross.edu/departments/classics/wziobro/Readings/UNITXIIISallust.h
    UNIT XIII
    SALLUST C. Sallustius Crispus (ca.87-35 B.C.) held political office in the turbulent middle decades of the first century B.C. Born of a plebeian family, he was tribune in 52 B.C., and shortly afterwards gained admission to the senate, from which, however, he was removed by censure in 50 B.C. He sided with Caesar in the Civil War and was awarded a second quaestorship, senatorial status again, a military command in Illyricum, and finally a proconsulship of the province of Numidia in Africa. In 44 B.C. he retired to his lavish estate in Rome where all these political experiences served as ample material for his late life passion, history writing. His primary, extant, historical works are the De Catilinae Coniuratione , also known as Bellum Catilinae , and the Bellum Iugurthinum Sallust's historical style breaks from the annalistic style of Caesar since he sacrifices strict chronological development for a pronounced rhetorical flair and vivid character development. As a result, the sequence of events during the years 66 to 63 B.C. are at times confusing in his narration of the Catilinarian conspiracy, but his lively and penetrating description of Catiline (see selection A) leaves no doubt about this conspirator's sinister intentions to violate peace and harmony in Rome. In this essay, Sallust also reveals his political indebtedness to Caesar by unduly patronizing him. Because of this excessive acknowledgment, Sallust was chastised by John Clarke in the introduction to his 1743 translation of Sallust:

    66. Sallust Kleine Übersetzungs-Bibliothek, Nr.83/84, Verschwörung Des Catilina
    Translate this page sallust Kleine Übersetzungs-Bibliothek, Nr.83/84, Verschwörung des Catilina.Titel Kleine Übersetzungs Catilina Autor sallust. Rubrik1 Lernhilfen
    http://www.mega-buecher.de/Sallust-Kleine-Uebersetzungs-3804411835.html
    Sallust Kleine Übersetzungs-Bibliothek, Nr.83/84, Verschwörung des Catilina
    Titel: Kleine Übersetzungs-Bibliothek, Nr.83/84, Verschwörung des Catilina
    Autor: Sallust
    Rubrik1: Lernhilfen, Abiturwissen, Catilina Lucius Sergius
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    67. Pompeii - House Of Sallust
    Pompeii House of sallust. The house of Sullust is located next to the bakershouse. Pompeii - House of sallust www.volcanolive.com Copyright John Seach.
    http://www.volcanolive.com/sallust.html
    Volcano Live
    www.volcanolive.com Pompeii - House of Sallust The house of Sullust is located next to the bakers house.
    Pompeii - House of Sallust
    www.volcanolive.com

    68. Gregory Sallust Series
    The Gregory sallust series of novels in chronological order of plot Title (clickon title to return to 1st editions), Period of Plot, Date of 1st publication.
    http://users.whsmithnet.co.uk/bob.rothwell/Sallust.htm
    T he Gregory Sallust series of novels in chronological order of plot: Title (click on title to return to 1st editions) Period of Plot Date of 1st publication Contraband 3 Aug 1935 - 11 Aug 1935 9 October 1936 The Scarlet Impostor 7 Sep 1939 - 8 Nov 1939 7 January 1940 Faked Passports 9 Nov 1939 - 13 Mar 1940 June 1940 The Black Baroness 14 Mar 1940 - 17 Jun 1940 22 October 1940 V For Vengeance 14 Jun 1940 - 22 Jun 1941 12 March 1942 Come Into My Parlour 23 Jun 1941 - 12 Dec 1941 28 November 1946 Traitors' Gate 30 Mar 1942 - Oct 1942 1 September 1958 They Used Dark Forces May 1943 - 6 Jun 1945 5 October 1964 The Island Where Time Stands Still 20 September 1954 Black August circa 1960 January 1934 The White Witch Of The South Seas Jan 1963 - 1963 26 August 1968 OMNIBUSES Title (click on title to return to 1st editions) Date of 1st Publication Contents The Secret Missions Of Gregory Sallust 1 June 1955 'The Scarlet Impostor', 'Faked Passports' and 'The Black Baroness'. Plot And Counterplot 14 December 1959 'Black August', 'Contraband' and 'The Island Where Time Stands Still' Site Map Home Contents What's New About This Site Dennis Wheatley (an introduction) Bibliography of all things Wheatley Title Index of 1st editions A to C D to E F to I K to Q R to Sh Si to Th Ti to W Bibliography of 1st editions The Sixties The Seventies The Lymington Editions The Century Hutchinson editions The Crime Dossiers of Dennis Wheatley and J G Links Illustrated End-Papers Films and Screenplays

    69. Sallust
    gen_jd95t.jpg. ptg_jd-95t.jpg.
    http://cti.itc.virginia.edu/~jjd5t/region-vi/sallust/sallust-table1.html
    gen_jd-95t.jpg ptg_jd-95t.jpg gen_jd-95t.jpg ptg_jd-95t.jpg

    70. Some Points Concerning Sallust And History
    Some points concerning sallust and the growth of Roman History. By sallust smoothness’.For sallust history should make you work. It
    http://chss2.montclair.edu/classics/romciv/sallust.html
    Some points concerning Sallust and the growth of Roman History. By Sallust’s time Greek history had seen its two greatest historians, Herodotus and Thucydides. History writing, according to some, had degenerated due to a desire to be dramatic as opposed to accurate. Some authors concentrated on scandals of royalty rather than wider political events. Sometimes these histories included merely interesting stories, digressions on geography, ethnography or ‘marvels’. There was also the tendency to write history to make a moral point. As the power of Rome grew, writers like Timaeus and especially Polybius wrote on Rome, its origin and rise. From the earliest period (approx. 500 B.C.) Romans had kept records of the consuls for every year and a record of their deeds and major events, often a pretty sparse account. Also the great families of Rome kept alive records of the deeds of their ancestors, which would be recalled at funerals, although these were obviously slanted accounts. The first two Roman Historians were Fabius Pictor and Cincinius Alimentus, who lived during the second war with Carthage. They wrote their histories in Greek, not Latin. Roman history from the beginning was not simply a chronicle. It was patriotic in orientation, glorifying Rome’s rapid rise to power. Also it tended to be moralizing, that is, used to assign praise or blame, to glorify Roman virtues. What is often lacking is an in-depth political analysis of events; Roman historians have a tendency to preach about the decay of morals due to wealth as the cause of all evils, but, while this is to some extant true, the problems were more complex than that. As I noted in class, scientific history considers economic, environmental, ideological

    71. [Dirk Herrmann ]
    Dirk Herrmann dirk@sallust.ida.ing.tubs.de . From Marius Vollmer.Subject Dirk Herrmann dirk@sallust.ida.ing.tu-bs.de .
    http://mail.gnu.org/archive/html/guile-devel/2002-12/msg00073.html
    guile-devel Top All Lists Advanced Date Prev ... Thread Index
    From Marius Vollmer Subject Date 19 Dec 2002 18:44:04 +0100 User-agent Gnus/5.09 (Gnus v5.9.0) Emacs/21.2 dirk@bogus.example.com djurfeldt@bogus.example.com neil@bogus.example.com guile-devel@bogus.example.com ... dirk@bogus.example.com Could you explain this to me? Why is it such a strong assumption? My obvious counter example is: (define foo2 (local-eval (procedure-source foo) (procedure-environment foo))) [There is a need here to treat the first `lambda' specially, but that is a trivial problem.] Which do you think puts the heavier constraint, procedure-source or procedure-environment? Note that there is no assumption needed that procedure-source returns the verbatim source expression from which the closure was created. And an environment is simply a mapping of variables to bindings. Note that there is nothing "around" the method into which it should fit. The method has it's own closed environment. That is fine. Can you share your current source? I will prepare a patch in the next couple of days. Best regards Dirk Herrmann GPG: D5D4E405 - 2F9B BCCC 8527 692A 04E3 331E FAF8 226A D5D4 E405

    72. 205G T-O Map, Sallust From Miller Via Wright.
    Slide 205G. TO map, sallust from Miller via Wright. (orientedwith East at the top) Slide 205 Monograph.
    http://gate.henry-davis.com/MAPS/EMwebpages/205G.html
    Slide #205G
    T-O map, Sallust from Miller via Wright.
    (oriented with East at the top)
    Slide #205 Monograph

    73. 205MM T-O Map From 13 Th Century Sallust Manuscript (10.5 Cm Diameter).
    Slide 205MM. TO map from 13th century sallust manuscript (10.5 cmdiameter) oriented with East at the top. Slide 205 Monograph.
    http://gate.henry-davis.com/MAPS/EMwebpages/205MM.html
    Slide #205MM
    T-O map from 13th century Sallust manuscript
    (10.5 cm diameter)
    oriented with East at the top
    Slide #205 Monograph

    74. Sallust
    sallust The Jugurthine War. Prominent Roman politicians mentioned in sallust'smonograph (for page numbers see index at the back of the book)
    http://www.uvm.edu/~bsaylor/rome/sallust.html
    Sallust The Jugurthine War
    Numidian royal family
    Masinissa BJ 5.4-5; p. 39) (202-148), ally of Rome against Carthage and Hannibal in second Punic War, friend of Scipio Africanus and, according to some sources, of his grandson by adoption Scipio Aemilianus. He had three sons mentioned by Sallust ( BJ 5.6, p.39): Micipsa Mastanabal Gulussa Gulussa had at least one son, Massiva BJ 35.1-6, p.71) Mastanabal had at least two sons, Jugurtha BJ 5.7, p. 39) (118-106) and Gauda BJ 65.1-3, p. 101) (said to be cerebrally challenged) Micipsa (148-118) had two sons, Adherbal (118-112) and Hiempsal BJ 5.7, p. 39) After the war the Romans installed Gauda (Jugurtha's half-brother) (106-88) as the king of Numidia; he was succeeded by his son Hiempsal II (88-60) (mentioned in BJ 17.2 p. 77 as a source for African history), and he in turn by his son Juba I (60-46), who supported Pompey and his successors (i.e. the losing side) in the civil war. His infant son was brought up at Rome under Octavian (Augustus) and later installed as client king Juba II (25 BCE - CE 23). A man of wide learning, he collected art, invented a new dyeing process, and wrote books in Greek on Libya, Arabia, and Assyria, a history of Rome, researches into language, drama, and painting, a treatise on the plant euphorbia, which he discovered and named after his doctor Euphorbus, and a comparative study of antiquities, mostly Greek and Roman.

    75. Sallust
    Conspiracy of Catiline ca. 4340 BC by sallust 87-35 BC Reading notesAdamKissel. Secondary sources. outline more or less following
    http://home.uchicago.edu/~ahkissel/sallust.html
    Conspiracy of Catiline [ca. 43-40 B.C.
    by Sallust [87-35 B.C.
    Reading notes Adam Kissel
    Secondary sources [outline more or less following Ramsey and Syme 1964, 67 f.] [page numbers below are from Rolfe (Loeb edn.)] 1-4 Preface Mind and body work together, 1.7; qualities of mind availed most in war, 2.2
    Win and retain empire, 2.4; the better men rise to power, 2.6 Earlier men were content and did not covet, 2.1 History is important but difficult, and second to real action. 3.1-2
    readers of history may disbelieve. 3.2 Sallust began in public life, was trapped almost by ambition [ defending himself against his earlier reputation
    comes out as a historian, 4
    will write as briefly and as truthfully as possible, 4 5-13 on Catiline and Rome Catiline had strong mind and body, misdirected, 5.1; disordered, 5.5
    Follower in the footsteps of Sulla, 5.6
    felt guilty, and this was intensified by the corruption of morals, 5.7-8
    "luxuria atque avaritia" causing Rome's downfall, 5.8
    5.8-13.4 on earlier Rome, to Sulla At first , "encouraged one another, went to meet the foe, and defended their liberty, their country, and their parents by arms" 6.5; gave rather than received favors. Constitutional monarchy, 6.6, minds over bodies.

    76. Sallust
    sallust. To Multiple recipients of list exlibris@library.berkeley.edu ; Subjectsallust; I am looking for a bibliographical reference on an edition of sallust.
    http://palimpsest.stanford.edu/byform/mailing-lists/exlibris/1998/10/msg00103.ht
    Table of Contents Search
    Date Prev Date Next ... Thread Index
    Sallust

    77. Re: Sallust
    Re sallust. Undorf, Wolfgang wrote Hello, dear colleagues. I amlooking for a bibliographical reference on an edition of sallust.
    http://palimpsest.stanford.edu/byform/mailing-lists/exlibris/1998/10/msg00145.ht
    Table of Contents Search
    Date Prev Date Next ... Thread Index
    Re: Sallust
    http://www.ubka.uni-karlsruhe.de/kvk.html ) I found the following title: C. Crispi Sallusti opera omnia ... (ed.) Christ. Juncker Lipsiae 1706 (A copy is held at the "Staats- und Universitaetsbibliothek Goettingen" with the shelfmark "Gauss Bibl. 173". To verify please contact themselves at: info@mail.sub.uni-goettingen.de) There exist also other editions edited by Juncker! With greetings, Bernhard Wirth Stadt- und Universitaetsbibliothek Frankfurt am Main, Abteilung Frankfurt Bockenheimer Landstrasse 134 - 138 60325 Frankfurt am Main Tel. 069/212-39248 Fax 069/212-37398

    78. Sallust
    Translate this page BIOGRAFIE sallusts. sallust sallust wurde 86 v. Chr. in Amiternum (heute SanVittorino bei L'Aquila) geboren und entstammte einer wohlhabenden Familie.
    http://www.land.salzburg.at/schule/faecher/latein/st_rupert/sallustbio.htm
    BIOGRAFIE Sallusts Werke: Sowohl in seinem archaisierenden Stil als auch in Weltsicht und Geschichtsauffassung orientierte sich Sallust am Vorbild des griechischen Geschichtsschreibers Thukydides, von dem er auch die Technik übernahm, durch eingestreute stilisierte Reden und Briefe die Hauptpersonen eingehender zu charakterisieren und ihre Beweggründe nachvollziehbar zu machen. In der römischen Geschichtsschreibung beeinflusste er besonders Tacitus, der ihn als den „glänzendsten römischen Geschichtsschreiber" bezeichnete.

    79. PS: Sallust. Politik Und Geschichtsschreibung Im 1. Jahrhundert V. Chr.
    Translate this page Prof. Dr. Klaus-Peter Johne Proseminar sallust. Politik und Geschichtsschreibungim 1. Jahrhundert v. Chr. Literatur sallust, hrsg. vV Pöschl, 2. Aufl.
    http://www.geschichte.hu-berlin.de/vorlesng/ws9697/data/ws969706104.htm
    Prof. Dr. Klaus-Peter Johne
    Proseminar
    Sallust. Politik und Geschichtsschreibung im 1. Jahrhundert v. Chr. WS 1996/97
    Termin Zyklus Ort Beginn Vorbesprechung Mi 14.00-16.00 BE 1 keine
    Kommentar:
    Literatur:
    Texte:

    80. UE: Latein Für Historiker: Sallust, De Coniuratione Catilinae
    sallust, Werke, lat. u. dt.
    http://www.geschichte.hu-berlin.de/vorlesng/ws9697/data/ws969706103.htm
    Prof. Dr. Klaus-Peter Johne
    WS 1996/97
    Termin Zyklus Ort Beginn Vorbesprechung Do 14.00-16.00 DOR 24 keine
    Kommentar:
    Literatur:
    Lateinische Grammatik von H. Rubenbauer u. J. B. Hofmann, neubearb. von R. Heine, 11. Aufl. Bamberg 1989; C. Sallustius Crispus, De Catilinae coniuratione, kommentiert von K. Vretska, Heidelberg 1976.
    Texte:

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