An evenhanded reimagining of the Greek conqueror’s life.
This book offers a fresh perspective on the reign of Alexander the Great. It re-examines Alexander’s military victories and personality while also exploring the impact of his campaigns on the people he conquered. Alexander’s story, Stephen...
What the Roman poet Horace can teach us about how to live a life of contentment
What are the secrets to a contented life? One of Rome's greatest and most influential poets, Horace (65-8 BCE) has been cherished by readers for more than two thousand years not only for his wit, style, and reflections...
Read More about How to Be Content: An Ancient Poet's Guide for an Age of Excess (Ancient Wisdom for Modern Readers)"Strikingly relevant" Taylor Lorenz], The Editors is a thriller that reveals the battles behind the internet's most contested information source: Wikipedia.
Aim for Neutrality. We Need Better Sources. Anonymity is Fundamental. Keep Developing.
The editors know these principles. The editors follow...
Read More about The EditorsThis open access monograph sheds new light on the epic by focusing on its importance as a vector for ideas about Africa and Africans between the 14th and 20th centuries. In Italy and abroad, the 14th-century poet Petrarch's Italian verse has secured his place in literary history. Yet his greatest...
Read More about Petrarch's Africa and Its Afterlives: Race, Nation, and Empire (Bloomsbury Neo-Latin Series: Studies in Early Modern Latin)Martin Luther wrote a number of Latin poems, mostly using traditional classical metres, over the course of his career. He used them to praise friends, insult adversaries and express his faith in times of distress. Up until now, Luther's Neo-Latin poetry has largely fallen through the disciplinary...
Read More about The Latin Verse of Martin Luther: Texts, Translations and Commentary (Bloomsbury Neo-Latin Series: Early Modern Texts and Anthologies)Since ancient times, land has had a defining influence on human culture, from the political and the social to the agricultural, the metaphysical and the creative. In both Augustan Rome and contemporary Southern Africa, the land question is ever present in the art and literature which engage with the...
Read More about Vergil and the Land (Trends in Classics - Pathways of Reception #13)William Dillingham's Aegyptus Triumphata (1680) takes as its subject the plagues of Egypt, the crossing of the Red Sea, and Moses' consequential hymn of thanksgiving to God (Exodus 7-15). This, the first edition of the poem, introduces it to the scholarly community. Balancing accessibility with...
Read More about William Dillingham's Aegyptus Triumphata: Edited with Introduction, Translation and Commentary (Bloomsbury Neo-Latin Series: Early Modern Texts and Anthologies)Providing the first edited text, translation and commentary of two Renaissance dream-narrative satires, this edition sheds light on the period's literary history and reception of classical texts. Cleophilus' De coetu poetarum(first printed 1483-1485) and Iustus Lipsius' Somnium (first printed 1581)...
Read More about Cleophilus' de Coetu Poetarum and Iustus Lipsius' Somnium: Dreaming of the Literary Tradition (Bloomsbury Neo-Latin Series: Early Modern Texts and Anthologies)In the first full-scale edition of Thomas Gray's Latin poetry, the Latin text and facing English translation are complemented by a detailed introduction and comprehensive commentary that situate Gray's Latin verse in relation to his vernacular poetry, epistolary correspondence, and, especially, his...
Read More about The Latin Poetry of Thomas Gray: Edited with Introduction, Translation and Commentary (Bloomsbury Neo-Latin Series: Early Modern Texts and Anthologies)Christian Wedsted (1720-57) was a Moravian missionary, scribe and translator. Alongside his formal duties, he also composed a significant
amount of Latin poetry. Here presented together for the first time alongside English translations are the 40 Latin poems that Wedsted composed during his time...
