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         Livy:     more books (100)
  1. Latin prose exercises based upon Livy, book XXI: and selections for translation into Latin, with parallel passages from Livy by Adoniram Judson Eaton, Livy Livy, 2010-08-03
  2. Selections from the First Five Books of Livy'S Roman History: With the Twenty-First and Twenty-Second Books Entire by Livy, 2010-01-10
  3. Livy: Reconstructing Early Rome by Gary B. Miles, 1997-02
  4. Rome and Her Kings: Extracts from Livy I (Latin Edition) by W. D. Lowe, C. E. Freeman, 1999-01-01
  5. Livy, Books 21-25: The Second Punic War (1883) by Livy, 2009-04-02
  6. Livy, his historical aims and methods by P. G Walsh, 1967
  7. Livy: Book XXXIX (Classical Texts)
  8. Two Centuries of Roman Prose: Extracts from Cicero, Nepos, Sallust, Livy, Petronius, Seneca, Pliny and Tacitus by Eberhard Christoper Kennedy, 2002-01-28
  9. The prince, and other works,: Including Reform in Florence, Castruccio Castracani, On fortune, Letters, Ten discourses on Livy; (University classics) by Niccolò Machiavelli, 1946
  10. Rome and Her Kings: Extracts from Livy I by Livy, 1998-12
  11. The Infinitive Construction In Livy (1906) by Howard Vernon Canter, 2010-09-10
  12. Livy: The Hannibalian War... by Livy, 2010-03-03
  13. Livy: Books 21 And 22 (1893) by Livy, 2008-10-27
  14. The Twenty-Second Book of Livy. With Explanatory and Grammatical Notes and a Vocabulary of Proper Names by Livy, 2010-03-27

81. Public Life
Public Life. 173. Women demonstrate and obtain repeal of the Oppian law. Rome, 195BC (livy, History of Rome 34.1, exc. Late 1st cent. BCearly 1st cent. AD L).
http://www.uky.edu/ArtsSciences/Classics/wlgr/wlgr-publiclife173.html

82. The Trouble With Livy
The Trouble with livy. It takes a certain kind of woman to wear a dress like that,Olivia. . Oh, thought Tasha, livy doesn't want to play. Too bad. Hee hee. .
http://www-personal.umich.edu/~airyn/older_stuff/olivia-story.html
The Trouble with Livy
"It takes a certain kind of woman to wear a dress like that, Olivia." "Why, thank you!" with a smug, self-satisfied smile. "I didn't say that you were that kind of woman, mind you." Turning on a silver lame' heel, Olivia silently slithered away into the crowd, a contemptuous and enraged expression on her tight, heavily made-up face. "Oh," thought Tasha, "Livy doesn't want to play. Too bad. Hee hee." She retracted her mental claws and turned to thoughts of finding another playmate for the night, one more suitable for different kinds of fun. Something....male. Expensive suits made soft swooshing noises throughout the room. A dark, confident man posed by the mantle, a curly lock casually (yet carefully) thrown across his eyes. He pouted and sighed, looking studiously bored. "Ok, Careful Man, come and play with me." She caught his eye, slowly stroked her own breast. He raised an eyebrow, and stood up straighter, The Careful Facade momentarily cracked in astonishment. A very confident smile replaced the pout - a smile like what a lion must feel when he has his prey in his jaws at last. She turned and without looking over her shoulder, slipped into an adjoining room through huge doors of carved mahogany. How Very. The taut pull of garters atgainst her thighs, the tight confinement of her skirt, the feel of the blouse against her hardened nipples... all these controlled the way she moved. She felt free and abandoned by their constraint. She walked to the center of the room, to the design in the middle of the Oriental rug. There he was, silhouetted in the doorway, sweating pretension, confidence, lust, and a little too much scotch. The shadows in the respectable room grew as he shut the door, his backlit shape disappearing. Only the glow of the orange streetlights through the thin drapes illuminated the room.

83. Religion In Livy
Religion in livy Mnemosyne, Supplements, 127. DS Levene. (you canalways remove it later). This book examines the use that livy made
http://www.brill.nl/product.asp?ID=2487

84. OUP: Dawn Of The Roman Empire: Livy
....... The Dawn of the Roman Empire Books 31-40. livy. New translation from the most up-to-datetext available of livy's all-encompassing history of Rome.
http://www.oup.co.uk/isbn/0-19-283293-X
VIEW BASKET Quick Links About OUP Career Opportunities Contacts Need help? oup.com Search the Catalogue Site Index American National Biography Booksellers' Information Service Children's Fiction and Poetry Children's Reference Dictionaries Dictionary of National Biography Digital Reference English Language Teaching Higher Education Textbooks Humanities International Education Unit Journals Law Medicine Music Oxford English Dictionary Reference Rights and Permissions Science School Books Social Sciences World's Classics UK and Europe Book Catalogue Help with online ordering How to order Postage Returns policy ... Description
The Dawn of the Roman Empire - Books 31-40
Livy Translated by J. C. Yardley , Professor of Classics, University of Ottawa, and with introduction and notes by Waldemar Heckel , Professor of Ancient History, University of Calgary
0-19-283293-X
Publication date: 6 July 2000
Oxford Paperbacks 654 pages, 4 maps, 196mm x 129mm
Series: Oxford World's Classics
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85. Livy
encyclopediaEncyclopedia livy, liv'E Pronunciation Key. livy (Titus Livius),59 BC–AD 17, Roman historian, b. Patavium (Padua), probably of noble family.
http://www.factmonster.com/ce6/people/A0830050.html

Encyclopedia

Livy E
Pronunciation Key
Livy (Titus Livius), 59 B.C. A.D. 17, Roman historian, b. Patavium (Padua), probably of noble family. He lived most of his life in Rome. The breadth of his education is apparent in his evident familiarity with the ancient Greek and Latin authors. His life work was the History of Rome from its founding in 753 B.C. The narrative comes to an end with Drusus (9 B.C. See P. G. Walsh, Livy: His Historical Aims and Method (1961); T. A. Dorey, ed., Livy
Livorno
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86. Livy Goodman, Rutgers College Class Of 1944
NEW BRUNSWICK HISTORY DEPARTMENT ORAL HISTORY ARCHIVES OF WWII INTERVIEWWITH livy GOODMAN, An met. livy Goodman Okay, how they met?
http://fas-history.rutgers.edu/oralhistory/goodman.html
NEW BRUNSWICK HISTORY DEPARTMENT:
ORAL HISTORY ARCHIVES OF WW-II
INTERVIEW WITH LIVY GOODMAN An Interview with Livy Goodman, for the Rutgers Oral History Archives of World War II. Interview conducted by Tara Liston and Barbara Tomblin in New Brunswick, New Jersey, on May 10, 1996. Transcript by Nicole Porcaro, Melanie Cooper, Eve Snyder and G. Kurt Piehler. Permission to quote from this transcript must be obtained from the Rutgers Oral History Archives of World War II. The Rutgers Alumni Association has bestowed upon this Rutgers College Alumnus the title of Loyal Son of Rutgers for his years of dedication to improving the quality of the University.
Tara Liston: This begins an interview with Livy Goodman on May 10, 1996 at Rutgers University in Van Dyck Hall with Tara J. Liston and ... Barbara Tomblin: Barbara Tomblin. TL: We are going to start this interview by talking about your parents and how they met. Livy Goodman: Okay, how they met? TL: Or your father or where he grew up ... And ... then he was moved around, oh, I think about once a year, a year or a year and a half or so, I know they lived in Worcester, Massachusetts for a while, then they were in Passaic, New Jersey where my sister was born. Went to Cleveland, where I was born, and then came back to, let's see, from Cleveland, when I was about eighteen months old we moved to Verona, New Jersey. Then when I was probably about four years old we moved to Lynchburg, Virginia. These were YMCA jobs, with the boy's secretary work. And I went to pre-school, Virginia didn't have kindergarten in those days, we went to a Miss Sally's Day School for pre-school, and then went to, I guess I began first grade, I probably attended first grade in Lynchburg. Then he got a job in Paterson, New Jersey, we moved up to Wyckoff, New Jersey, where I entered public school in grade three. ... Must have gone to first and second grade in Lynchburg and then the third grade in Wyckoff, where we stayed.

87. OUP USA: Livy's Exemplary History
Classical Studies or Browse by Subject $75.00 (04) 0198152744 Add to My Basket 2001In Stock S H Standard, livy's Exemplary History JANE D. CHAPLIN, Middlebury
http://www.oup-usa.org/isbn/0198152744.html

Classical Studies

or Browse by Subject
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Livy's Exemplary History
JANE D. CHAPLIN, Middlebury College, Vermont

The idea that it is possible to learn from history is fascinating, but also complex. What exactly can you learn from the past? Does it repeat itself? If it does, how can you prevent repetition of evil and ensure repetition of good? Livy's History of Rome is all about people learning or failing to learn from the past so in many ways his work is an extended exploration of this problem. In this book Dr Chaplin starts from Livy's programmatic claim that history offers examples of good and bad conduct. Where previous studies have focused on the meaning of exemplary episodes and characters in isolation, this treatment traces the way historical figures try to interpret the past to their advantage. In doing so, the book demonstrates Livy's awareness of the shifting relevance of history and argues that a narrative organized around exempla allowed Livy, poised between the collapse of the Republic and the foundation of the Empire, to make the Romans' past meaningful for their future.
256 pp.; 0-19-815274-4

88. Livy Unseens
Practice Unseen Passages from livy. Remember that in the exam, the livy passagewill be approximately 120 words long and you have 45 minutes to translate it.
http://www.gwc.org.uk/HotPot/classics/S6AHLatin/Livylinkspage.html
Practice Unseen Passages from Livy Remember that in the exam, the Livy passage will be approximately 120 words long and you have 45 minutes to translate it.
On this page, the word length of each of the passages is given, so that you can work out how much time to allocate. N.B. If any of the following pages do not display correctly on your browser, go to "view" and view the page at 90%.

89. Livy Book One
Study Questions for livy livy Preface Book 1.121 (p.33-56) Sample Test QuestionsMiscellaneous from livy Book 1 Genealogy of Romulus Seven Kings of Rome
http://www.cofc.edu/~fennoj/RomCiv/Livy1.htm
Study Questions for Livy
Sample Test Questions

Miscellaneous from Livy Book 1
Genealogy of Romulus
Seven Kings of Rome The House of Tarquin
Preface (p.33-34)
Livy aimed to write a complete history of Rome: Ab urbe condita (=From the Foundation of the City) . Of the 142 books or volumes which he wrote, only one-fourth have survived (books 1-10, 21-45), though we do have rough summaries of nearly the entire work.
Livy began writing about 29 BC, when, after decades of bloody civil war, Octavian/Augustus, (later known as the first emperor), had just begun to consolidate his reign.
How does Livy characterize the Romans of the present? of the past? What is the cause of this change?
Given the qualities of Livy's contemporaries, does it make sense for him to consider Rome "the greatest nation in the world"? Does Livy, like most historians, make "extravagent claims"?
What pleasure does Livy gain from studying antiquity? (p.33)
Why should this historian be anxious when writing about his contemporaries? As you read Livy, can you find any hints about his attitude toward Augustus and his reign? Would Augustus be part of the problem? part of the solution? What does Livy expect his Roman readers to gain from his history? (p.34)

90. A.B.E. Marketing >> KSI¡¯KI >> SZUKAJ >> AUTOR :: "livy"
saur Jestesmy wylacznym przedstawicielem wydawnictwa KG.SAUR wiecej . KSIAZKI SZUKAJ AUTOR livy . wszedzie w wynikach wyszukiwania.
http://www.abe.com.pl/html/polish/search.php?autname=livy

91. Daniel J. Livy, PhD: Curriculum Vitae
Daniel J. livy, Ph.D. Assistant Professor Phone 780.492.7596 Email dlivy@ualberta.ca.Areas of Interest Developmental Neuroscience, Teratology.
http://www.med.ualberta.ca/anatomy/staff/dlivycv.htm
Daniel J. Livy, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor
Phone: 780.492.7596
E-mail: dlivy@ualberta.ca Areas of Interest: Developmental Neuroscience, Teratology
Publications
If you have any questions or comments about this website,
contact the Division of Anatomy ( anatomy@med.ualberta.ca Last Modified: February 10, 2003

92. Welcome To Art Edge Home Page
Voyageurs Mise à jour 04 aoutt 2002. Experimental and poetical workgroup. Works remain the property of their authors.All rights reserved.
http://artedge.lautre.net/
Voyageurs DigiMarc

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