The article is an attempt at studying the image of Hannibal as presented in Punica. The aim of the paper is to sketch a portrait of the Carthaginian in Punica (with the image preserved both in historiography and in poetic epithets in mind), which would be a literary realisation of historiographic matter, with variatio typical for poetry, which was extended, shortened and mixed by Silius. The following review also looks at the topic of cruelty, which was a feature attributed to Hannibal himself as well as to Carthaginians in general, and that of death – demonstrated by such actions as (not) burying the bodies of Roman consuls or utilising bodies of the dead to build a bridge
Silius’s representation of dynasty, parricide, and the imagery of the ensis and sceptrum in the Puni...
The aim of this article is to reveal how the adjectives fatifer, mortifer, and letalis function in t...
This thesis examines the ways in which Hannibal in Livy’s Ab Urbe Condita may be simultaneously read...
Ce travail vise à préciser l’importance que Silius Italicus donne dans ses Punica au personnage d’Ha...
Petronius when calling Hannibal “a lizard” not only alludes to the symbolic system built upon the c...
Review of A. Augoustakis and N. Bernstein (trr.), Silius Italicus’ Punica: Rome’s War with Hannibal ...
A comparison of the description of Hannibal's shield in the Punica with its Virgilian counterpart se...
The aim of this volume is to study Silius’ poem as an important step in the development of the Roman...
This thesis examines Hannibal Barca and his role in the Second Punic War while scrutinizing his batt...
Title from first page of PDF file (viewed November 29, 2010)Includes bibliographical references (p. ...
This commentary, the first detailed commentary on book 17 in any language, explores the way Silius p...
SILI ITALICI PUNICORUM LIBER NONUS. Introduction and Commentary The present dissertation is a Co...
In Silius Italicus' Punica, the city of Capua has a complex identity. This article analyses Capua's ...
This thesis is a detailed commentary on the eighth book of Silius Italicus’ epic poem the Punica, li...
In this paper I sought to determine whether or not Hannibal Barca had a grand strategy to deal with ...
Silius’s representation of dynasty, parricide, and the imagery of the ensis and sceptrum in the Puni...
The aim of this article is to reveal how the adjectives fatifer, mortifer, and letalis function in t...
This thesis examines the ways in which Hannibal in Livy’s Ab Urbe Condita may be simultaneously read...
Ce travail vise à préciser l’importance que Silius Italicus donne dans ses Punica au personnage d’Ha...
Petronius when calling Hannibal “a lizard” not only alludes to the symbolic system built upon the c...
Review of A. Augoustakis and N. Bernstein (trr.), Silius Italicus’ Punica: Rome’s War with Hannibal ...
A comparison of the description of Hannibal's shield in the Punica with its Virgilian counterpart se...
The aim of this volume is to study Silius’ poem as an important step in the development of the Roman...
This thesis examines Hannibal Barca and his role in the Second Punic War while scrutinizing his batt...
Title from first page of PDF file (viewed November 29, 2010)Includes bibliographical references (p. ...
This commentary, the first detailed commentary on book 17 in any language, explores the way Silius p...
SILI ITALICI PUNICORUM LIBER NONUS. Introduction and Commentary The present dissertation is a Co...
In Silius Italicus' Punica, the city of Capua has a complex identity. This article analyses Capua's ...
This thesis is a detailed commentary on the eighth book of Silius Italicus’ epic poem the Punica, li...
In this paper I sought to determine whether or not Hannibal Barca had a grand strategy to deal with ...
Silius’s representation of dynasty, parricide, and the imagery of the ensis and sceptrum in the Puni...
The aim of this article is to reveal how the adjectives fatifer, mortifer, and letalis function in t...
This thesis examines the ways in which Hannibal in Livy’s Ab Urbe Condita may be simultaneously read...