Already studied in the perspective of his Latin translations from Greek, the Renaissance scholar Ianus Pannonius’ translation of the episode from Book VI of the Iliad, the Diomedis et Glauci congressus, deserves attention as a part of a series of Renaissance translations of Homer. Pannonius’ forerunners in translating the Iliad were Leonzio Pilato, Leonardo Bruni, Lorenzo Valla; his contemporaries were Niccolo della Valle, Orazio Romano and Carlo Marsuppini. Later translators include Angelo Poliziano, Andrea divo, Eoban Hess and Rajmund Kunić. The aim of this article is to determine a possible relationship between the translation by Pannonius and other Latin Iliads and to point out classical influences other than those already noted by earl...
In the fifteenth century Epictetus' Encheiridion was translated into Latin by Niccolô Perotti and by...
Translation has been a part of Latin literature since its beginning with the Odusia of Livius Andron...
Plutarch authored an extensive oeuvre, which, in the Renaissance (ca. 1400– 1670), was thought to be...
Already studied in the perspective of his Latin translations from Greek, the Renaissance scholar Ian...
Already studied in the perspective of his Latin translations from Greek, the Renaissance scholar Ian...
The paper offers a critical edition of Janus' translation, a comparison of this translation with Cic...
It is easy to underestimate Divus’ translation of Homer: his achievement may easily be taken for gra...
As the large argument of the conference is the book as medium and an object of efforts of printers, ...
This thesis examines the literary context of Dares Phrygius’ De Excidio Troiae Historia and Dictys C...
This article provides the first philological analysis and interpretation of the ode to Plato written...
The edited book explores the relationship between Herodotus and Homer and the reason why Herodotus w...
Presenze omeriche e oraziane negli Elegiarum libri quattuor di Jan Kochanowski. L’Iliade e i Carmina...
We owe many aspects of Western culture to the Greeks; yet it was the Romans who took the fi rst step...
A brief commentary prepared by Fred W. Jenkins, PhD, Professor and Associate Dean for Collections an...
This article examines the place of Homer in the proto-byzantine society through the papyrological do...
In the fifteenth century Epictetus' Encheiridion was translated into Latin by Niccolô Perotti and by...
Translation has been a part of Latin literature since its beginning with the Odusia of Livius Andron...
Plutarch authored an extensive oeuvre, which, in the Renaissance (ca. 1400– 1670), was thought to be...
Already studied in the perspective of his Latin translations from Greek, the Renaissance scholar Ian...
Already studied in the perspective of his Latin translations from Greek, the Renaissance scholar Ian...
The paper offers a critical edition of Janus' translation, a comparison of this translation with Cic...
It is easy to underestimate Divus’ translation of Homer: his achievement may easily be taken for gra...
As the large argument of the conference is the book as medium and an object of efforts of printers, ...
This thesis examines the literary context of Dares Phrygius’ De Excidio Troiae Historia and Dictys C...
This article provides the first philological analysis and interpretation of the ode to Plato written...
The edited book explores the relationship between Herodotus and Homer and the reason why Herodotus w...
Presenze omeriche e oraziane negli Elegiarum libri quattuor di Jan Kochanowski. L’Iliade e i Carmina...
We owe many aspects of Western culture to the Greeks; yet it was the Romans who took the fi rst step...
A brief commentary prepared by Fred W. Jenkins, PhD, Professor and Associate Dean for Collections an...
This article examines the place of Homer in the proto-byzantine society through the papyrological do...
In the fifteenth century Epictetus' Encheiridion was translated into Latin by Niccolô Perotti and by...
Translation has been a part of Latin literature since its beginning with the Odusia of Livius Andron...
Plutarch authored an extensive oeuvre, which, in the Renaissance (ca. 1400– 1670), was thought to be...