This study examines the linguistic practice of two political satires(Misopogon or Beard - Hater and Caesars) written by Flavius Claudius Julianthe Emperor. Its purpose is to describe the way that Julian organizes the coherence and intertextuality of his texts and to draw conclusions about the text, the context of the satires and Julian’s political character.
The so called Epitome de Caesaribus, whose author is unknown, is a short historical work, written be...
Julius Caesar’s military achievements, described in his Gallic War, are monumental; so are the atroc...
Language and Communication as an Object of Juvenal’s Satires – Ancient Roman Satire addresses a vari...
This study examines the rhetorical practice of two rhetorical letters(Letter to Themistius the philo...
This project focuses primarily on the Greek imperial panegyrics of the Roman Emperor Julian (r. 355-...
The A.D. 362/3 crisis in Antioch is usually interpreted as an economic or ideological crisis, and Ju...
This dissertation is a study in the narrative of Caesar's Commentarius de Bello Civili. Although the...
This thesis argues that the characters of Titurius Sabinus and Quintus Cicero, as depicted by Caesar...
The works of the continuators of Caesar have often been overlooked as literary texts. Those few scho...
The aim of this study is to examine what rhetorical themes and features are present in the speeches ...
This paper seeks to analyze the methods of Procopius of Caesarea and reconcile the apparent contradi...
In this article, we analyse Emperor Julian’s search for imperial models in the past in his work The ...
For many centuries, Julius Caesar was a name that evoked strong feelings among educated people. Some...
This report seeks to bring better understanding specifically to the rhetoric of the Bellum Africum a...
The extant life of Julius Caesar by Suetonius begins with the dictator Sulla predicting that Caesar ...
The so called Epitome de Caesaribus, whose author is unknown, is a short historical work, written be...
Julius Caesar’s military achievements, described in his Gallic War, are monumental; so are the atroc...
Language and Communication as an Object of Juvenal’s Satires – Ancient Roman Satire addresses a vari...
This study examines the rhetorical practice of two rhetorical letters(Letter to Themistius the philo...
This project focuses primarily on the Greek imperial panegyrics of the Roman Emperor Julian (r. 355-...
The A.D. 362/3 crisis in Antioch is usually interpreted as an economic or ideological crisis, and Ju...
This dissertation is a study in the narrative of Caesar's Commentarius de Bello Civili. Although the...
This thesis argues that the characters of Titurius Sabinus and Quintus Cicero, as depicted by Caesar...
The works of the continuators of Caesar have often been overlooked as literary texts. Those few scho...
The aim of this study is to examine what rhetorical themes and features are present in the speeches ...
This paper seeks to analyze the methods of Procopius of Caesarea and reconcile the apparent contradi...
In this article, we analyse Emperor Julian’s search for imperial models in the past in his work The ...
For many centuries, Julius Caesar was a name that evoked strong feelings among educated people. Some...
This report seeks to bring better understanding specifically to the rhetoric of the Bellum Africum a...
The extant life of Julius Caesar by Suetonius begins with the dictator Sulla predicting that Caesar ...
The so called Epitome de Caesaribus, whose author is unknown, is a short historical work, written be...
Julius Caesar’s military achievements, described in his Gallic War, are monumental; so are the atroc...
Language and Communication as an Object of Juvenal’s Satires – Ancient Roman Satire addresses a vari...