GENERAL
Browse by Subjects
New Releases
Coming Soon
Chases's Calendar
ACADEMIC
Textbooks
Browse by Course
Instructor's Copies
Monographs & Research
Reference
PROFESSIONAL
Education
Intelligence & Security
Library Services
Business & Leadership
Museum Studies
Music
Pastoral Resources
Psychotherapy
Paperback
$38.00
Add to GoodReads
Classics of Roman Literature
Harry E. Wedeck
Sprung from a small pastoral colony on the banks of the Tiber, the Romans became the masters of the universe. They were a more earthy, indeed a more pragmatic and realistic people, than the Greeks. They absorbed Greece, and built their empire on the foundations of that conquered nation. What they contributed to the West is primarily the concept of colonial administration. They codified law. They built—aqueducts and forts, bridges and military highways, across Europe, from Hadrian’s Wall to the garrison town of Lambaesis in North Africa, from the Danube to the Asiatic frontiers. They subjugated most of the nations of Europe and Asia Minor, and after their military conquests they offered the
Pax Romana
.
This treasury is an anthology, in English translation, of the most distinctive literary achievements of the Romans, in the fields of drama, philosophy, history, satire, oratory and analogous categories.
The passages selected are of such a nature as to be complete in themselves or so self-contained as to be readily understandable.
Some of the versions have long been standard renderings; in other instances, the editor has himself contributed a translation. In its totality, this chrestomathy should confirm the enduring impact made by Roman civilization, and furnish evidence of the heritage that they have bequeathed to us.
Details
Details
Rowman & Littlefield Publishers / Philosophical Library
Pages: 568
978-1-4422-3380-5 • Paperback • January 1963 •
$38.00
• (£29.00)
- Currently out of stock. Copies will arrive soon.
Subjects:
Literary Collections / Ancient, Classical
,
Fiction / Classics
,
History / Ancient / Rome
Classics of Roman Literature
Paperback
$38.00
Summary
Summary
Sprung from a small pastoral colony on the banks of the Tiber, the Romans became the masters of the universe. They were a more earthy, indeed a more pragmatic and realistic people, than the Greeks. They absorbed Greece, and built their empire on the foundations of that conquered nation. What they contributed to the West is primarily the concept of colonial administration. They codified law. They built—aqueducts and forts, bridges and military highways, across Europe, from Hadrian’s Wall to the garrison town of Lambaesis in North Africa, from the Danube to the Asiatic frontiers. They subjugated most of the nations of Europe and Asia Minor, and after their military conquests they offered the
Pax Romana
.
This treasury is an anthology, in English translation, of the most distinctive literary achievements of the Romans, in the fields of drama, philosophy, history, satire, oratory and analogous categories.
The passages selected are of such a nature as to be complete in themselves or so self-contained as to be readily understandable.
Some of the versions have long been standard renderings; in other instances, the editor has himself contributed a translation. In its totality, this chrestomathy should confirm the enduring impact made by Roman civilization, and furnish evidence of the heritage that they have bequeathed to us.
Details
Details
Rowman & Littlefield Publishers / Philosophical Library
Pages: 568
978-1-4422-3380-5 • Paperback • January 1963 •
$38.00
• (£29.00)
- Currently out of stock. Copies will arrive soon.
Subjects:
Literary Collections / Ancient, Classical
,
Fiction / Classics
,
History / Ancient / Rome
ALSO AVAILABLE