Lucan depicts the character of Caesar as a monstrous man, always inclined to anger. If we compare some peculiar descriptions of Caesar in the Bellum Civile with the representation by Seneca of Ira personified, we can detect some interesting connections between these two poetic figures. In fact, it is possible to argue that Lucan was inspired by Seneca’s Ira, when he created the literary character of Caesar, who seems to be the personification of Ira itself
The paper focuses on Seneca the Elder’s Controversia 10, 5. The text concerns the charge to the pain...
The theme of the tyrant and the concatenation of his scelera is investigated in several passages fro...
Introduzione, testo, traduzione e commento del dialogo De constantia sapientis di Seneca, con attenz...
The presence of the rhetorical model of Alexander the Great has been long recognized as an important...
In describing Scipio Pius’ suicide (ep. 24.9-11) Seneca contrasts the charachter’s indolent life wit...
In the description of the Pompeian victims after the battle of Farsalus, in the seventh book of Luca...
Abstract – In Die fröhliche Wissenschaft Nietzsche states that to Brutus “Shakespeare consecrated hi...
Seneca’s 114th Letter to Lucilius contains a series of quotations from Maecenas’ prose. These fragme...
Silius' Hannibal seems to be clearly influenced by Lucan's Caesar (bur also by Virgil's Aeneas, ofte...
In Seneca’s tragedies the tyrant does not figure with the same pre-eminence that he would go on to a...
In f. 472 of Seneca's Phaedra (uacuum sine ullis classibus stabit mare) a brilliant conjecture of Ri...
In un famoso aneddoto attribuito a Prodico di Ceo, il giovane Eracle si trova a dover scegliere fra ...
Il contributo indaga l’epos lucaneo ricostruendo i contesti in cui compaiono nel poema meritum e de...
This paper elaborates on the early development of a ‘canon’ of Roman tyrants in imperial Rome. Testi...
The eighth book of Lucan's bellum ciuile opens with the loss of Pompeius fleeing from the Thessalian...
The paper focuses on Seneca the Elder’s Controversia 10, 5. The text concerns the charge to the pain...
The theme of the tyrant and the concatenation of his scelera is investigated in several passages fro...
Introduzione, testo, traduzione e commento del dialogo De constantia sapientis di Seneca, con attenz...
The presence of the rhetorical model of Alexander the Great has been long recognized as an important...
In describing Scipio Pius’ suicide (ep. 24.9-11) Seneca contrasts the charachter’s indolent life wit...
In the description of the Pompeian victims after the battle of Farsalus, in the seventh book of Luca...
Abstract – In Die fröhliche Wissenschaft Nietzsche states that to Brutus “Shakespeare consecrated hi...
Seneca’s 114th Letter to Lucilius contains a series of quotations from Maecenas’ prose. These fragme...
Silius' Hannibal seems to be clearly influenced by Lucan's Caesar (bur also by Virgil's Aeneas, ofte...
In Seneca’s tragedies the tyrant does not figure with the same pre-eminence that he would go on to a...
In f. 472 of Seneca's Phaedra (uacuum sine ullis classibus stabit mare) a brilliant conjecture of Ri...
In un famoso aneddoto attribuito a Prodico di Ceo, il giovane Eracle si trova a dover scegliere fra ...
Il contributo indaga l’epos lucaneo ricostruendo i contesti in cui compaiono nel poema meritum e de...
This paper elaborates on the early development of a ‘canon’ of Roman tyrants in imperial Rome. Testi...
The eighth book of Lucan's bellum ciuile opens with the loss of Pompeius fleeing from the Thessalian...
The paper focuses on Seneca the Elder’s Controversia 10, 5. The text concerns the charge to the pain...
The theme of the tyrant and the concatenation of his scelera is investigated in several passages fro...
Introduzione, testo, traduzione e commento del dialogo De constantia sapientis di Seneca, con attenz...