Marcus valerius martialis epigrams in dorian

  • Buy a copy of Selected Epigrams of Martial book by Marcus Valerius Martialis Poems and Stories Including " the Picture of Dorian Gray and 'De Profundis'.
  • The kaleidoscopic life of the imperial city Martial came to know thoroughly, both in its lighter and in its darker aspects.
  • Marcus Valerius Martialis.
  • Dialect, Diction, and Style in Greek Literary and Inscribed Epigram 3110498790, 9783110498790

    Table of contents :
    Preface
    Table of Contents
    Dialect and Diction
    Doing Doric
    Callimachus’ Doric Graces: 15 GP = 51 Pf
    Dialect and Imitation in Late Hellenistic Epigram
    The Language of Greek Skoptic Epigram of the I?II centuries AD
    Form and Design
    “Unplumbed Depths of Fatuity?” Philip of Thessaloniki’s Art of Variation
    Pentameters
    Epigrams in Epic? The Case of Apollonius Rhodius
    When Is a Riddle an Epigram?
    The ἀπὸ κοινοῦ Construction of
    Prepositions as a Feature of the
    Epigrammatic Style
    Style in Literary Epigram
    a) Sepulchral Style
    Archaic Epigram and the Seal of Theognis
    Words for Dying in Sepulchral Epigram
    b) Philosophical Style
    A Little-Studied Dialogue: Responses to Plato in Callimachean Epigram
    Style and Dialect in Meleager’s Heraclitus Epigram
    A Philosophical Death?
    c) Pastoral Style
    Novice Pastoral Eros and Its Epigrammatic Critics
    Pastoral Markers in Helle

  • marcus valerius martialis epigrams in dorian
  • Stertinia gens

    Ancient Roman family

    The gens Stertinia was a plebeian family of ancient Rome. It first rose to prominence at the time of the Second Punic War, and although none of its members attained the consulship in the time of the Republic, a number of Stertinii were so honoured in the course of the first two centuries of the Empire.[1]

    Praenomina

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    The main praenomina used by the Stertinii were Lucius, Gaius, and Marcus, the three most common of all praenomina. There are also instances of Quintus and Publius, which likewise were very common names.

    Columbarium of the Stertinii

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    Along the Via Labicana is the Columbarium of the Stertinii, a tomb discovered in 1912, containing various Stertinii, and members of their household, including freedmen and their wives.[2] The tomb had a capacity of at least one hundred and sixty niche burials, organized in a grid, each containing a cinerary urn. Beneath many of the niches were in

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