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         Menaechmus:     more books (26)
  1. The Menaechmus Twins, and Two Other Plays (The Norton Library, N602) by Titus Maccius Plautus, 1971-09
  2. Four Comedies: The Braggart Soldier; The Brothers Menaechmus; The Haunted House; The Pot of Gold (Oxford World's Classics) by Plautus, 2008-06-15
  3. The Birds / The Brothers Menaechmus: Two Classical Comedies by Aristophanes, Plautus, 1958-06
  4. Plautus : Three Comedies - The Braggart Soldier, The Brothers Menaechmus, and The Haunted House by Erich Edited By Segal, 1969
  5. Three Comedies (The Braggart Soldier, The Brothers Menaechmus, by T. Maccius (Erich Segal, trans. & intro.; Hirschfeld, cover) Plautus, 1969
  6. Two classical comedies: The birds, by Aristophanes [and] The brothers Menaechmus, by Plautus (Crofts classics) by Peter D Arnott, 1958
  7. Plautus - Pot of Gold, the Prisoners, the Brothers Menaechmus, the Swaggering Soldier and Pseudolus by No Author Credited, 1972-01-01
  8. Menaechmus: An entry from Gale's <i>Science and Its Times</i> by Judson Knight, 2001
  9. 320 Bc Deaths: Menaechmus
  10. The Birds and the Brothers Menaechmus by Peter D. Arnott, 1958-01-01
  11. Three Comedies: Braggart Soldier, The Brothers Menaechmus, The Haunted House (Torchbooks) by Titus Maccius Plautus, 1978-10-19
  12. 320 Bc: 320 Bc Births, 320 Bc Deaths, Perdiccas, Timon of Phlius, Menaechmus, Timocharis, Gongsun Long, Dinostratus, Alcetas, Zoilus
  13. 380 Bc Births: Pytheas, Darius Iii of Persia, Aristander, Menaechmus, Memnon of Rhodes, Theodectes, Demades
  14. THE MENAECHMUS TWINS AND TWO OTHER PLAYS.Edited and translated by Lionel Casson by Lionel,editor Plautus.Casson, 1971-01-01

1. Menaechmus
A synopsis of the play by Plautus.
http://www.educ.fc.ul.pt/icm/icm99/icm15/menaech.htm
Menaechmus Nasceu cerca de 380a.C. em Alopeconnesus, Ásia Menor (agora Turquia) Morreu cerca de 320 a.C. Menaechmus era aluno de Eudoxus, estudou com Platão, e fez da Geometria como um todo ainda mais perfeito. Há quem pense que Menaechmus foi tutor de Alexandre "O Grande", e, realmente, não é de todo impossível, visto que Allman sugere que Aristóteles foi o elo de ligação entre eles. Menaechmus é conhecido pela sua descoberta das secções cónicas, foi o primeiro a mostrar que as elipses, as parábolas e as hipérboles são obtidas cortando um cone num plano não paralelo à base. Menaechmus fez as suas descobertas das secções cónicas enquanto tentava resolver o problema da duplicação do cubo. De facto, o problema específico que tentava resolver, era encontrar duas médias proporcionais entre duas linhas rectas. Ao fazer a descoberta das secções cónicas, conseguiu resolver o problema de duplicação do cubo. Outro tema relacionado com estruturas matemáticas que Menaechmus discutiu foi a distinção entre problemas e teoremas. Apesar de muitos terem alegado que eram diferentes, Menaechmus, por seu lado, alegou que não havia qualquer distinção fundamental. Ambos são problemas, mas o uso dos termos é direccionado a diferentes objectivos. Tradução sintetisada do site: http://www-groups.des.st-and.ac.uk/history/mathematicians/menaechmus.html

2. Menaechmus
menaechmus. menaechmus is mentioned by Proclus who tells us that he wasa pupil of Eudoxus in the following quote (see for example 3).
http://www-gap.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Mathematicians/Menaechmus.html
Menaechmus
Born: about 380 BC in Alopeconnesus, Asia Minor (now Turkey)
Died: about 320 BC
Show birthplace location Previous (Chronologically) Next Biographies Index Previous (Alphabetically) Next Main index
Menaechmus is mentioned by Proclus who tells us that he was a pupil of Eudoxus in the following quote (see for example [3]):- Amyclas of Heraclea, one of the associates of Plato , and Menaechmus, a pupil of Eudoxus who had studied with Plato , and his brother Dinostratus made the whole of geometry still more perfect. There is another reference in the Suda Lexicon (a work of a 10th century Greek lexicographer) which states that Menaechmus was (see for example [1]):- ... a Platonic philosopher of Alopeconnesus, or according to some of Proconnesus, who wrote works of philosophy and three books on Plato 's Republic... Alopeconnesus and Proconnesus are quite close, the first in Thrace and the second in the sea of Marmara, and both are not far from Cyzicus where Menaechmus's teacher Eudoxus worked. The dates for Menaechmus are consistent with his being a pupil of Eudoxus but also they are consistent with an anecdote told by Stobaeus writing in the 5th century AD. Stobaeus tells the rather familiar story which has also been told of other mathematicians such as

3. Menaechmus
Biography of menaechmus (380BC320BC) menaechmus. Born about 380 BC in Alopeconnesus, Asia Minor (now Turkey)
http://www-groups.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Mathematicians/Menaechmus.html
Menaechmus
Born: about 380 BC in Alopeconnesus, Asia Minor (now Turkey)
Died: about 320 BC
Show birthplace location Previous (Chronologically) Next Biographies Index Previous (Alphabetically) Next Main index
Menaechmus is mentioned by Proclus who tells us that he was a pupil of Eudoxus in the following quote (see for example [3]):- Amyclas of Heraclea, one of the associates of Plato , and Menaechmus, a pupil of Eudoxus who had studied with Plato , and his brother Dinostratus made the whole of geometry still more perfect. There is another reference in the Suda Lexicon (a work of a 10th century Greek lexicographer) which states that Menaechmus was (see for example [1]):- ... a Platonic philosopher of Alopeconnesus, or according to some of Proconnesus, who wrote works of philosophy and three books on Plato 's Republic... Alopeconnesus and Proconnesus are quite close, the first in Thrace and the second in the sea of Marmara, and both are not far from Cyzicus where Menaechmus's teacher Eudoxus worked. The dates for Menaechmus are consistent with his being a pupil of Eudoxus but also they are consistent with an anecdote told by Stobaeus writing in the 5th century AD. Stobaeus tells the rather familiar story which has also been told of other mathematicians such as

4. References For Menaechmus
References for menaechmus. Biography The URL of this page is http//wwwhistory.mcs.st-andrews.ac.uk/history/References/menaechmus.html.
http://www-gap.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/References/Menaechmus.html
References for Menaechmus
  • Biography in Dictionary of Scientific Biography (New York 1970-1990). Books:
  • J L Coolidge, A history of the conic sections and quadric surfaces (Oxford, 1945).
  • T L Heath, A History of Greek Mathematics (2 Vols.) (Oxford, 1921). Articles:
  • G J Allman, Greek Geometry from Thales to Euclid (Dublin-London, 1889), 153-179. Main index Birthplace Maps Biographies Index
    History Topics
    ... Anniversaries for the year
    JOC/EFR April 1999 School of Mathematics and Statistics
    University of St Andrews, Scotland
    The URL of this page is:
    http://www-history.mcs.st-andrews.ac.uk/history/References/Menaechmus.html
  • 5. The Brothers Menaechmus
    THE BROTHERS menaechmus by Titus Maccius Plautus brought to the stage by the Furman University Theater and the Classics faculty and students of Furman University January 31February 3, 6-10, 1996 About the Translation
    http://www.acs-classics.rhodes.edu/ACS/users/prior/MenaechmiFU.html

    THE BROTHERS MENAECHMUS
    by Titus Maccius Plautus
    brought to the stage by the Furman University Theater
    and the Classics faculty and students
    of Furman University
    January 31-February 3, 6-10, 1996

    About the Translation
    In the Fall of 1995, Dr. Rich Prior of the Furman Classics faculty struck a deal with Dr. Court Gilmour of the Furman Theater a new translation of a Roman comedy for the Theater to perform in its regular season. The Menaechmi was chosen and Dr. Prior offered roles to a few of his students to translate (specific credits below). Once the translations were complete, they were edited by Dr. Prior and again by Mr. John Scott Gray. Auditions were held and rehearsals began. After one or two 'read throughs', Drs. Prior and Gilmour collaborated to iron out awkward lines and scenes and embellish Plautus's work here and there and make the play more accessible to a modern audience. Therefore, the script which follows should be seen more as a working script than as a word for word translation of the original. Nevertheless, apart from the wholesale reworking of the prologue, no great violence has been done.

    6. The Brothers Menaechmus
    THE BROTHERS menaechmus. by Titus Maccius Plautus. brought to thestage by the Furman University Theater and the Classics faculty
    http://server.forlang.rhodes.edu/ACS/users/prior/MenaechmiFU.html

    THE BROTHERS MENAECHMUS
    by Titus Maccius Plautus
    brought to the stage by the Furman University Theater
    and the Classics faculty and students
    of Furman University
    January 31-February 3, 6-10, 1996

    About the Translation
    In the Fall of 1995, Dr. Rich Prior of the Furman Classics faculty struck a deal with Dr. Court Gilmour of the Furman Theater a new translation of a Roman comedy for the Theater to perform in its regular season. The Menaechmi was chosen and Dr. Prior offered roles to a few of his students to translate (specific credits below). Once the translations were complete, they were edited by Dr. Prior and again by Mr. John Scott Gray. Auditions were held and rehearsals began. After one or two 'read throughs', Drs. Prior and Gilmour collaborated to iron out awkward lines and scenes and embellish Plautus's work here and there and make the play more accessible to a modern audience. Therefore, the script which follows should be seen more as a working script than as a word for word translation of the original. Nevertheless, apart from the wholesale reworking of the prologue, no great violence has been done.

    7. Knorr And Menaechmus
    THE BROTHERS menaechmus by Titus Maccius Plautus Here is the translation performed by the players, with images from the production (click the thumbnail for a larger version). The file has been divided by acts for quicker downloading. This kidnapped boy's name was menaechmus. menaechmus' father was depressed at his son's loss and died of grief a few
    http://mathforum.com/epigone/math-history-list/clinbospa
    a topic from math-history-list
    Knorr and Menaechmus
    post a message on this topic
    post a message on a new topic

    13 Sep 1998 Knorr and Menaechmus , by Michael Fried
    13 Sep 1998 Re: Knorr and Menaechmus , by Jim Propp
    The Math Forum

    8. THE BROTHERS MENAECHMUS
    THE BROTHERS menaechmus. by Titus Maccius Plautus. The Script. Hereis This kidnapped boy's name was menaechmus. menaechmus' father
    http://server.forlang.rhodes.edu/ACS/users/prior/Men.script.a0.html

    THE BROTHERS MENAECHMUS
    by Titus Maccius Plautus
    The Script
    Here is t he translation performed by the players, with images from the production (click the thumbnail for a larger version). The file has been divided by acts for quicker downloading.

    PROLOGUE
    PR: Entering from UR and gesturing extravagantly
    Nunc argumentum accipite atque animum advortite
    ut apporto vobis Plautum. Mercator quidam fuit Syracusis ... senex.
    Ei sunt nati filii gemini duo. Pater unum Tarentum avexit secum;
    alterum domi apud matrem reliquit. Somewhere in here, the magister scaenae interrupts the prologue.
    Angry but inaudible words are exchanged. The
    magister scaenae leaves the stage as the Prologa removes her robe, revealing an Elizabethan costume of some splendor beneath. The prologue continues, as follows:
    I am not partial to infringe our laws;
    The enmity and discord which of late
    Sprung from the rancorous outrage of your Duke To merchants, our well-dealing countrymen, Who, wanting guilders to redeem their lives, Have seal'd his rigorous statutes with their bloods, Excluds all pity from our threat'ning looks: For since the mortal and intestine jars 'Twixt thy seditious countrymen and us ...

    9. Sumner Academy Main Page
    Brothers menaechmus, The by Titus Maccius Plautus Cyllia, Amy Southerland (1984).menaechmus II, Gorman Stanley (1985). menaechmus I, Michael Trent (1983). Crew
    http://www.sumneracademy.com/theatre_db/prod_detail.php?prod=4

    10. References For Menaechmus
    References for the biography of menaechmus References for menaechmus. Biography in Dictionary of Scientific Biography (New York 19701990).
    http://www-history.mcs.st-and.ac.uk/history/References/Menaechmus.html
    References for Menaechmus
  • Biography in Dictionary of Scientific Biography (New York 1970-1990). Books:
  • J L Coolidge, A history of the conic sections and quadric surfaces (Oxford, 1945).
  • T L Heath, A History of Greek Mathematics (2 Vols.) (Oxford, 1921). Articles:
  • G J Allman, Greek Geometry from Thales to Euclid (Dublin-London, 1889), 153-179. Main index Birthplace Maps Biographies Index
    History Topics
    ... Anniversaries for the year
    JOC/EFR April 1999 School of Mathematics and Statistics
    University of St Andrews, Scotland
    The URL of this page is:
    http://www-history.mcs.st-andrews.ac.uk/history/References/Menaechmus.html
  • 11. Sumner Academy Main Page
    Mari Meng (1984), Brothers menaechmus, The (1981). Debbie Phillips (1984), Brothersmenaechmus, The (1981). Gail Reedy (1985), Brothers menaechmus, The (1981).
    http://www.sumneracademy.com/theatre_db/list_crew.php?crew_role=38

    12. History Of Mathematics: Chronology Of Mathematicians
    Bryson of Heraclea (c 350?). menaechmus (c. 350) *SB
    http://aleph0.clarku.edu/~djoyce/mathhist/chronology.html
    Chronological List of Mathematicians
    Note: there are also a chronological lists of mathematical works and mathematics for China , and chronological lists of mathematicians for the Arabic sphere Europe Greece India , and Japan
    Table of Contents
    1700 B.C.E. 100 B.C.E. 1 C.E. To return to this table of contents from below, just click on the years that appear in the headers. Footnotes (*MT, *MT, *RB, *W, *SB) are explained below
    List of Mathematicians
      1700 B.C.E.
    • Ahmes (c. 1650 B.C.E.) *MT
      700 B.C.E.
    • Baudhayana (c. 700)
      600 B.C.E.
    • Thales of Miletus (c. 630-c 550) *MT
    • Apastamba (c. 600)
    • Anaximander of Miletus (c. 610-c. 547) *SB
    • Pythagoras of Samos (c. 570-c. 490) *SB *MT
    • Anaximenes of Miletus (fl. 546) *SB
    • Cleostratus of Tenedos (c. 520)
      500 B.C.E.
    • Katyayana (c. 500)
    • Nabu-rimanni (c. 490)
    • Kidinu (c. 480)
    • Anaxagoras of Clazomenae (c. 500-c. 428) *SB *MT
    • Zeno of Elea (c. 490-c. 430) *MT
    • Antiphon of Rhamnos (the Sophist) (c. 480-411) *SB *MT
    • Oenopides of Chios (c. 450?) *SB
    • Leucippus (c. 450) *SB *MT
    • Hippocrates of Chios (fl. c. 440) *SB
    • Meton (c. 430) *SB

    13. Menaechmus (ca. 380 BC-?) -- From Eric Weisstein's World Of Scientific Biography
    menaechmus (ca. 380 BC?), Greek mathematician and geometer said tohave been the tutor of Alexander the Great. When his pupil asked
    http://scienceworld.wolfram.com/biography/Menaechmus.html

    Branch of Science
    Mathematicians Nationality Greek
    Menaechmus (ca. 380 BC-?)

    Greek mathematician and geometer said to have been the tutor of Alexander the Great. When his pupil asked him for a shortcut to geometry, he replied "O King, for traveling over the country, there are royal road to geometry and roads for common citizens, but in geometry there is one road for all" (Beckmann 1989, p. 34). However, this quote has also been attributed to the tutor of Napoleon Bonaparte.
    Additional biographies: MacTutor (St. Andrews)
    References Beckmann, P. A History of Pi, 3rd ed. New York: Dorset Press, 1989.
    Author: Eric W. Weisstein

    14. Menaechmus

    http://www.math.uvic.ca/courses/math415/Math415Web/greece/gmen/menaech.html
    This page uses frames, but your browser doesn't support them.

    15. Picture Of Menaechmus

    http://www.math.uvic.ca/courses/math415/Math415Web/greece/gmen/menaechpict.html

    16. Ottawaplus.ca > Profile > The Brothers Menaechmus
    The Brothers menaechmus Third Wall Theatre presents their final play of the season,about two twin brothers, separated at birth, who unknowingly cross paths
    http://www.ottawaplus.ca/profile/793636/
    Search My sympatico.ca Home
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    The Brothers Menaechmus
    Third Wall Theatre presents their final play of the season, about two twin brothers, separated at birth, who unknowingly cross paths later in life. Where: Arts Court
    2 Daly Ave
    Ottawa, ON When: 8:00 pm Thursday, May 1, 2003 8:00 pm Friday, May 2, 2003 8:00 pm Saturday, May 3, 2003 More Dates Price: User reviews: Be the first to post a review Event Profile Written by Titus Maccius Plautus, a Roman clown actor and comedian of the day, The Brothers Menaechmus tells the story of two twin brothers, separated at birth, who unknowingly cross paths later in life. Filled with characters of loose morals and flim-flam artists, Brothers was actually a thinly veiled critique of Roman society, a society that immensely disliked being critcized. However, much like the fool was the only one who could tell the truth about the Emperor's new clothes, Plautus was able to get away with such criticism by couching it within the medium of theatre. The Brothers Menaechmus went on to become the basis for William Shakespeare's Comedy of Errors. The original, however, is much more simple and farcical than the Shakespearean comedy and is lighter in tone.

    17. The Brothers Menaechmus
    THE BROTHERS menaechmus. by Titus Maccius Plautus. Back to Index. THEBROTHERS menaechmus. by Titus Maccius Plautus. The Script. PROLOGUE.
    http://r.faculty.umkc.edu/rydbergcoxj/ws2001/en213/Downloads/Menaechimi.html

    THE BROTHERS MENAECHMUS
    by Titus Maccius Plautus
    brought to the stage by the Furman University Theater
    and the Classics faculty and students
    of Furman University
    January 31-February 3, 6-10, 1996
    Text and notes adopted from http://www.acs-classics.rhodes.edu/ACS/users/prior/MenaechmiFU.html
    The original site also contains photographs of the production

    About the Translation
    In the Fall of 1995, Dr. Rich Prior of the Furman Classics faculty struck a deal with Dr. Court Gilmour of the Furman Theater a new translation of a Roman comedy for the Theater to perform in its regular season. The Menaechmi was chosen and Dr. Prior offered roles to a few of his students to translate (specific credits below). Once the translations were complete, they were edited by Dr. Prior and again by Mr. John Scott Gray. Auditions were held and rehearsals began. After one or two 'read throughs', Drs. Prior and Gilmour collaborated to iron out awkward lines and scenes and embellish Plautus's work here and there and make the play more accessible to a modern audience. Therefore, the script which follows should be seen more as a working script than as a word for word translation of the original. Nevertheless, apart from the wholesale reworking of the prologue, no great violence has been done.

    18. T. Maccius Plautus: The Brothers Menaechmus
    The Brothers menaechmus. T. Maccius Plautus. Translated by EF Watling.Review date 19/3/1999 Publisher Penguin Translation 1965.
    http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Academy/6422/rev0225.html
    The Brothers Menaechmus
    T. Maccius Plautus
    Translated by E.F. Watling
    Review date: 19/3/1999
    Publisher: Penguin
    Translation: 1965 Of all Plautus' plays, the plot of this one is the best known to English speaking readers, as it is the basis for Shakespeare's Comedy of Errors . The major changes Shakespeare made were to increase the length of the play and the number of characters, making the brothers' servants twins as well as their masters and introducing the idea of the execution of Aegeon. Plautus' play has no such serious side and is much more purely farcical, much play being made over the way one brother steals a dress of his wife's to give it to his mistress (he smuggles it out of the house by wearing it with his own clothes). That really says all there is to say about this play; it is entertaining and funny, but has nothing serious to say. Return to list of reviews by author by submission date

    19. Riemann For Anti-Dummies Part 35
    It lacks power. Go back to the investigations of the Pythagoreans, Archytas,menaechmus and Plato, on the matter of doubling the line, square and cube.
    http://www.geocities.com/antidummy/part35.html
    Riemann For Anti-Dummies Part 35 MIND AS POWER GENERATOR Rene Descartes (1596-1630) was, for all intents and purposes, a Bogomil. The geometry that bears his name, is brainwashing. Anyone exposed to it, unless cured, will suffer from cognitive deficiency. Symptoms include impotence and an inability to distinguish fantasy from reality. Gottfried Leibniz, writing to Molanus, circa 1679, recognized the deleterious effects of Cartesianism, "Cartesians are not capable of discovery; they merely undertake the job of interpreting or commenting upon their master, as the Scholastics did with Aristotle. There have been many beautiful discoveries since Descartes, but, as far as I know, not one of them has come from a true Cartesian.... Descartes himself had a rather limited mind." Descartes' method is impotent. It lacks power. Go back to the investigations of the Pythagoreans, Archytas, Menaechmus and Plato, on the matter of doubling the line, square and cube. These discoveries demonstrated, the relationship between objects and the principles from which they are generated. Each principle

    20. Menaechmi: Menaechmus' Monologue
    menaechmus If you weren't mean, if you weren't stupid, if you weren'ta violent virago,what you see displeases your husband would be displeasing to you, too.
    http://www.monologuearchive.com/p/plautus_005.html
    MENAECHMI A monologue from the play by Titus Maccius Plautus NOTE: This monologue is reprinted from Plautus, vol. II . Trans. Paul Nixon. London: William Heinemann, 1917. MENAECHMUS: [in a lower tone as his wife goes back inside] And furthermore, that you may not watch me for nothing, I'll reward your diligence by taking a wench to dinner and inviting myself out somewhere. Hurrah! By Jove, at last my lecture has driven her away! [looks around] Where are your married gallants? Why don't they all hurry up with gifts and congratulations for my valiant fight? [showing a woman's mantle worn underneath his cloak] This mantle I just now stole from my wife inside there, and [gleefully] it's going to a wench. This is the way to doto cheat a cunning jailer in such clever style! I have taken booty from the enemy without loss to my allies! Purchase this play!

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