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         Pliny The Younger:     more books (101)
  1. The Letters of the Younger Pliny,First Series-Volume 1Keil Heinrich by Keil Heinrich, 2009-07-14
  2. The Letters of Pliny by Pliny the Younger, 2007-02-06
  3. The epistles of Pliny the Younger. Translated from the original Latin. With explanatory notes. In two volumes. ...Volume 1 of 2 by the Younger Pliny, 2010-06-10
  4. The Letters of Pliny The Younger by Pliny The Younger, 2008-12-24
  5. The epistles of Pliny the Younger. Translated from the original Latin. With explanatory notes. In two volumes. ...Volume 2 of 2 by the Younger Pliny, 2010-06-10
  6. Haunted House: Supernatural, Ghost, Poltergeist, Demon, Paranormal, Soul, Violence , Tragedy, Religion , Suicide, Exorcism, Legend , Plot device , Gothic ... fiction, Plautus, Pliny the Younger, Lucian
  7. Letters From Calpurnia, Pliny's Wife A.D. 111-113 by Judith Harrington, 2006-12-29
  8. Letters of the Younger Pliny, First SeriesVolume 1. by JOHN B. FIRTH., 2009-06-01
  9. The Blood of Caesar: A Second Case from the Notebooks of Pliny the Younger [BLOOD OF CAESAR -OS] by Albert A., Jr.(Author) Bell, 2008-06-30
  10. Roman Augurs: Mark Antony, Pliny the Younger, Fabius Maximus, Sextus Julius Frontinus, Publius Licinius Crassus, Appius Claudius Pulcher
  11. Selections from the Letters of the Younger Pliny (French Edition) by Pliny, 2010-01-08
  12. The letters of Pliny the Younger. With observations on each letter; and an essay on Pliny's life, ... by John, Earl of Orrery. ...Volume 1 of 2 by the Younger Pliny, 2010-06-10
  13. The Letters of Pliny the Younger, Selected and Edited With a Companion to Pliny's Letters by Helen H. Tanzer, 1924-01-01
  14. The Letters of Pliny the Younger (1); With Observations on Each Letter ; and an Essay on Pliny's Life, Addressed to Charles Lord Boyle by Pliny, 2009-12-19

61. TPCN - Great Quotations (Quotes) By Pliny The Younger To Inspire And Motivate Yo
pliny the younger. Q U O T E S T O I N S P I R E Y O U, Great quotesto inspire, empower and motivate you to live the life of your
http://www.cyber-nation.com/victory/quotations/authors/quotes_plinytheyounger.ht
Pliny The Younger Q
U
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T
E
S
T
O
I
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S P I R E Y O U Great quotes to inspire, empower and motivate you to live the life of your dreams and become the person you've always wanted to be!
Focus
I t is better to excel in any single art than to arrive only at mediocrity in several, so moderate skill in several is to be preferred where one cannot attain to perfection in any. List By Author : A B C D ... Z Display By Subject : A B C D ... Press here or the BACK BUTTON on your browser to return to the previous page... or choose from the following options: Are You Looking For More Great Quotes? Check Out The Ultimate Success Quotations Library Over 43,000 Quotes. Download Your FREE Evaluation Program... And Learn How You Can Make Your Writing And Speeches More Powerful! Go Here To Download Your FREE Ultimate Quotations Screen Saver! You Can Use Tony Robbins' Personal Power Program To Achieve Your Dreams! How To Double Your Internet Business Within The Next 97 Days... Guaranteed! ... Return To Victory City Directory And Check Out Other Fabulous Places! If you have any technical questions about this site, please send your email to webmaster@cybernation.com

62. A.B.E. Marketing >> KSI¡¯KI >> SZUKAJ >> AUTOR :: "pliny The Younger"
saur Jestesmy wylacznym przedstawicielem wydawnictwa KG.SAUR wiecej . KSIAZKI SZUKAJ AUTOR pliny the younger .
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63. Pliny's Words
pliny the younger's Observations. His nephew, pliny the younger escaped thedestruction of Pompeii and left a written account of the eruption.
http://www.mcli.dist.maricopa.edu/tut/final/pliny.html
Pliny the Younger's Observations
In 79 AD, Pliny the Elder died during the eruption of the volcano Vesuvius. His nephew, Pliny the Younger escaped the destruction of Pompeii and left a written account of the eruption. As you read the letter below, listen to this audio version read by a well-known actor: Now came the dust, though still thinly. I look back: a dense cloud looms behind us, following us like a flood poured across the land. "Let us turn aside while we can still see, lest we be knocked over in the street and crushed by the crowd of our companions." We had scarcely sat down when a darkness came that was not like a moonless or cloudy night, but more like the black of closed and unlighted rooms. You could hear women lamenting, children crying, men shouting. At last the cloud thinned out and dwindled to no more than smoke or fog. Soon there was real daylight. The sun was even shining, though with the lurid glow it has after an eclipse. The sight that met our still terrified eyes was a changed world, buried in ash like snow. We returned to Misenum and took care of our bodily needs, but spent the night dangling between hope and fear. Fear was the stronger, for the earth was still quaking and a number of people who had gone mad were mocking the evils that had happened to them and others with terrifying prognostications. We still refused to go until we heard news of my uncle, although we had felt danger and expected more. You will read what I have written, but will not take up your pen, as the material is not the stuff of history. You have only yourself to blame if it seems not even proper stuff for a letter. Farewell.

64. [Pliny The Younger] Plinius Caecilius Secundus, Caius: (Fell, John? Ed.:), Epist
Unsworth's Booksellers. pliny the younger Plinius Caecilius Secundus,Caius (Fell, John? ed.) Epistolae et Panegyricus, notis illustrata.
http://www.polybiblio.com/unsworth/13783.html
Unsworth's Booksellers
[Pliny the Younger] Plinius Caecilius Secundus, Caius: (Fell, John? ed.:) Epistolae et Panegyricus, notis illustrata. Oxonii [Oxford], e Theatro Sheldoniano, 1677. 8vo, pp. [xiv] 309 [ix], without first or last blank. Engraving of Sheldonian Theatre on title-page. Surface flaw to title-page removing two letters. Bound in contemporary tan calf, blind-stamped rules and decoration to covers, rubbed, red morocco label, ownership initials dated 1726 to title-page, early notes and doodling to recto and verso of final leaf, edges mottled red. This Oxford university press edition of Pliny’s letters was printed “ad usum tironum” (for the use of students). Its unnamed editor (probably the great John Fell, Dean of Christ Church, and a major figure in the Oxford Press’s development) decided (as he explains in the preface) to present the text unadorned, without copious notes. Nothing critical is ever added, although there is some linited discussion of sense at the bottom, and occasional recourse for readings to a Westminster School MS. Was the editor otherwise too busy to compile notes for his students or was he simply making a purist statement?, Wing P 2577. Madan 3156. This item is listed on Bibliopoly by Unsworth's Booksellers ; click here for further details.

65. Pliny The Younger, Panegyricus Liber Trajano Dictus
George Bayntun. pliny the younger Panegyricus Liber Trajano DictusLugduni Batavorum ex officina Hackiana 1675. Cum Annotationibus
http://www.polybiblio.com/bayntun/ebc182.html

66. Encyclopædia Britannica
pliny the younger Encyclopædia Britannica Article. MLA style pliny the younger. Encyclopædia Britannica 2003 Encyclopædia Britannica Premium Service.
http://www.britannica.com/eb/article?eu=61958

67. Pliny The Younger On Christ
Pliny's Letter to Trajan It is my practice, my lord, to refer to you allmatters concerning which I am in doubt. Trajan's Response to Pliny
http://www.mc.maricopa.edu/~tomshoemaker/handouts/pliny.html
Pliny's Letter to Trajan: It is my practice, my lord, to refer to you all matters concerning which I am in doubt. For who can better give guidance to my hesitation or inform my ignorance? I have never participated in trials of Christians. I therefore do not know what offenses it is the practice to punish or investigate, and to what extent. And I have been not a little hesitant as to whether there should be any distinction on account of age or no difference between the very young and the more mature; whether pardon is to be granted for repentance, or, if a man has once been a Christian, it does him no good to have ceased to be one; whether the name itself, even without offenses, or only the offenses associated with the name are to be punished. Meanwhile, in the case of those who were denounced to me as Christians, I have observed the following procedure: I interrogated these as to whether they were Christians; those who confessed I interrogated a second and a third time, threatening them with punishment; those who persisted I ordered executed. For I had no doubt that, whatever the nature of their creed, stubbornness and inflexible obstinacy surely deserve to be punished. There were others possessed of the same folly; but because they were Roman citizens, I signed an order for them to be transferred to Rome. Soon accusations spread, as usually happens, because of the proceedings going on, and several incidents occurred. An anonymous document was published containing the names of many persons. Those who denied that they were or had been Christians, when they invoked the gods in words dictated by me, offered prayer with incense and wine to your image, which I had ordered to be brought for this purpose together with statues of the gods, and moreover cursed Christnone of which those who are really Christians, it is said, can be forced to dothese I thought should be discharged. Others named by the informer declared that they were Christians, but then denied it, asserting that they had been but had ceased to be, some three years before, others many years, some as much as twenty-five years. They all worshipped your image and the statues of the gods, and cursed Christ.

68. Reflections On Great Literature: Pliny (the Younger)
pliny the younger is one of the most powerful men of his time in Trajan's Rome (especiallyif we take his own word for it), a man of many positions and more
http://www-personal.umich.edu/~lahtid/literature/roman/pliny/letters.htm
Pliny (the Younger) Letters, books I-VI 97-109 AD (A wealthy lawyer reveals his personality and attitudes, and the way of life in Imperial Rome.) Please comment on this page in my guestbook CONTENTS: Reflection Summary Tidbits of Significance Read this when... ... Find this book Reflection Many of us are acquainted with, or at least have heard of, a certain species of lawyer, politician, or businessman. At first one notices the more grating aspects of his personality. He is near the top of his game, and success has gone a little to his head. He knows a lot of people, many of whom are famous, and makes this fact well known. He loves to talk of his success stories, his valuable properties, praise he has received, and difficult decisions or tight places from which he has emerged victorious. He is sensible of the fact that his reputation is what keeps him successful, and he has become entrained on reputation to such an extent that the development of it is the single guiding force in his life, the basis upon which he makes all significant choices. Take this image, transfer it back two thousand years, and with remarkable consistency across time, space, and culture, we have the lawyer and public official Pliny (the nephew of the other famous Pliny, whom we call the Elder, who wrote the long

69. Pliny The Younger
Translate this page Archeologhia. Il futuro dell'Archeologia. Precedente, Scrivici. C.PLINII CAECILII SECVNDI OPERA. Epistularum Libri Decem. Liber I, Liber
http://www.archeologhia.com/fonti_latine/Plinio il vecchio/pliny.html
Archeologhia
Il futuro dell'Archeologia Precedente Scrivici
C. PLINII CAECILII SECVNDI OPERA Epistularum Libri Decem Liber I Liber II Liber III Liber IV ... Panegyricus

70. Pliny The Younger
Translate this page Archeologhia. Il futuro dell'Archeologia.
http://www.archeologhia.com/fonti_latine/Plinio il vecchio/pliny.ep4.html
Archeologhia
Il futuro dell'Archeologia Precedente Scrivici
C. PLINII CAECILII SECVNDI EPISTVLARVM LIBER QVARTVS C. PLINIUS ATTIO CLEMENTI SUO S. C. PLINIUS ARRIO ANTONINO SUO S. C. PLINIUS SOSIO SENECIONI SUO S. (1) Varisidium Nepotem valdissime diligo, virum industrium rectum disertum, quod apud me vel potentissimum est. Idem C. Calvisium, contubernalem meum amicum tuum, arta propinquitate complectitur; est enim filius sororis. (2) Hunc rogo semestri tribunatu splendidiorem et sibi et avunculo suo facias. Obligabis me, obligabis Calvisium nostrum, obligabis ipsum, non minus idoneum debitorem quam nos putas. (3) Multa beneficia in multos contulisti: ausim contendere nullum te melius, aeque bene unum aut alterum collocasse. Vale. C. PLINIUS IULIO SPARSO SUO S. (1) Aeschinen aiunt petentibus Rhodiis legisse orationem suam, deinde Demosthenis, summis utramque clamoribus. (2) Quod tantorum virorum scriptis contigisse non miror, cum orationem meam proxime doctissimi homines hoc studio, hoc assensu, hoc etiam labore per biduum audierint, quamvis intentionem eorum nulla hinc et inde collatio, nullum quasi certamen accenderet. (3) Nam Rhodii cum ipsis orationum virtutibus tum etiam comparationis aculeis excitabantur, nostra oratio sine aemulationis gratia probabatur. An merito, scies cum legeris librum, cuius amplitudo non sinit me longiore epistula praeloqui. (4) Oportet enim nos in hac certe in qua possumus breves esse, quo sit excusatius quod librum ipsum, non tamen ultra causae amplitudinem, extendimus. Vale.

71. Plinius Minor, Gaius Plinius Secundus Minor, Pliny The Younger, Pline Le Jeune,
Translate this page Timeline of the Life of pliny the younger / University of Michigan Erstelltvon Michelle M. Biggs. Feedback. Bearbeitet von Christoph
http://www.ub.unibas.ch/kadmos/latin/autoren/Plinius_Minor.html
Plinius minor
In den Katalogen der UB Basel Originaltexte
  • Works (Opera) / The IntraText Digital Library
    Ohne Angabe der Quelle Opera (Opera) / The Latin Library
    Credits
    Opera (Epistulae) / Bibliotheca Augustana
    Ohne Angabe der Quelle
Lateinisch-Deutsch
  • Epistulae (Epistulae. Auswahl) / Vox Latina Gotingensis
Englisch
  • Epistles (Epistulae. Lib. 1-6) / Electronic Text Center, University of Virginia Library
    Basiert auf: Pliny's Epistles in ten books / Pliny ; done into English by several hands. - [S.l.], 1723 Letters (Epistulae. Auswahl) / VRoma
Informationen und Ressourcen
  • C. Plinius Caecilius Secundus / Lateinische Literaturgeschichte
    Kurze Darstellung von Leben und Werk in Deutsch
    Verfasst von Erich Schweizer-Ferrari / Biographisch-Bibliographisches Kirchenlexikon Kurzer Lexikonartikel mit Bibliographie in Deutsch Verfasst von Marco Frenschkowski Plinius minor / Bibliographia Latina Selecta Bibliographie in Lateinisch Erstellt von M.v.d. Poel

72. Bookshare.org - Books By Author
Title. Please log in. Books by pliny the younger. Here is a list of our books by pliny the younger . There are 2 books by this author in our collection.
http://www.bookshare.org/web/BooksByAuthor.html?author_id=821

73. TSEsample
Brides, benefits of marriage, Grooms, benefits of marriage, Dowry, Upper class politicalcampaigns, Political campaigns, pliny the younger, _Letters_, Matrona
http://www.indexstudents.com/tsesampl.htm
IndexStudents Home Page Term Selection Exercises Frequently Asked Questions Index Evaluation Exercise ... Topic of the Week
Term Selection Exercises
Sample Page Thanks for stopping by to check out a sample TSE. This particular one is from exercise 9 ("Marriage in Ancient Rome"). Check out the article and make your own selections. Then check back here to compare your results with those of six other indexers or index students. Para. A B C D E F free and freely dissolvable marriage, definition
Marriage, Roman
marriage, expectations of marriage, definition of
ideal marriage lifetime commitment
marriage, forms of marriage, expectations
no civil ceremony first marriage of elite couples, revelry Catullus' poems ribald jokes nut scattering marriage, definition
Civil ceremony,
Marriage, Roman, civil ceremony, Catullus, Wedding celebration, Upper class weddings
marriage agreement first marriage ceremonies Catullus' poems
wedding ceremonies wedding celebrations marriage agreement ceremonies Catullus, poem describing marriage

74. The Ecole Glossary
The Ecole Initiative The Ecole Glossary. pliny the younger. pliny the younger (c61113 CE) was an accomplished Roman orator, letter writer, and public official.
http://www2.evansville.edu/ecoleweb/glossary/pliny.html
The Ecole Glossary
Pliny the Younger Pliny the Younger (c CE ) was an accomplished Roman orator, letter writer, and public official. He was adopted by his uncle, Pliny the Elder, at which time he took the name of Gaius Plinius Caecilius Secundus. He wrote and published nine books of letters from to . He became governor of Bithynia in Asia Minor in , compiling a tenth book of letters while in office, though these were not published until after his death. Letter 96 [ DOC ] was written to the Emperor Trajan and concerned the question of how Pliny should treat those who were known to be Christians and were, therefore, members of a secret society, an act prohibited by imperial edict. Letter 97 [ DOC ] was written by Trajan to Pliny. Trajan responded that while it was true that the Christians were guilty of membership in a secret group, they should only be punished when formal charges were filed, something that Trajan's policies discouraged. This correspondence indicates that neither Pliny nor Trajan regarded the Christians as a serious threat to the Roman Empire. Jennifer Bridges

75. Untitled
pliny the younger C. Plinius Caecilius Secundus was born in AD 61 or62 in Comum, a Roman colony in Italia Transpadana (north Italy
http://www.sas.upenn.edu/~norena/pliny.html
PLINY THE YOUNGER C. Plinius Caecilius Secundus was born in A.D. 61 or 62 in Comum, a Roman colony in Italia Transpadana (north Italy beyond the Po river, Regio XI in the Augustan division of the peninsula). Although the Caecilii seem to have been reasonably wealthy, Pliny's father does not stand on record as having achieved any distinction, political or literary. Instead it was to his uncle and adoptive father, C. Plinius Secundus, that Pliny owed his standing. Pliny the Elder was a Roman equestrian who enjoyed a distinguished if not brilliant career. After holding a series of equestrian military commands on the Rhine frontier (c. 48-58), obtained with the support of Q. Pomponius Secundus (cos. 41), Pliny withdrew from public life during the latter part of Nero's reign. Under the Flavians Pliny resumed his career, securing the procuratorship of Gallia Belgica, which gave him financial responsibility for the armies on the Rhine. Later he served in some official capacity in the capital in a position that entailed daily visits to the emperor Vespasian, perhaps as praefectus vigilum (in charge of the fire-brigade). Pliny's career culminated in the command of the imperial fleet stationed at Misenum on the bay of Naples. It was in this last post that Pliny died in 79, getting too close to the erupting Mt. Vesuvius in his desire to examine the natural phenomenon up-close and help the inhabitants of the nearby towns.

76. Latin 307W-01 Syllabus, The Letters Of Pliny The Younger, Dr. Ann Thomas Wilkins
Duquesne University. The Letters of pliny the younger. LATIN 30701. Dr. Ann ThomasWilkins. 115-205 MWF. College Hall 524. 412-396-6145. Office Hours Tutoring.
http://www.classics.duq.edu/departmenthtml/spring/latin307_aw.html
Duquesne University
The Letters of Pliny the Younger
LATIN 307-01
Dr. Ann Thomas Wilkins
1:15-2:05 MWF College Hall 524 Course Objectives: Pliny's letters, written to friends, family, and political figures such as the Emperor Trajan, give us personal insight into imperial Rome, the genre of epistolography ("letter writing"), and Pliny himself. As you read these letters, keep in mind the goals for the course
  • to read and study imperial prose and epistolography; to increase your reading and translation skills as well as your understanding of grammar and syntax, and to continue building your working vocabulary; to increase your understanding of antiquity and of classical scholarship as a discipline
  • Textbooks: A. N. Sherwin-White, editor, Fifty Letters of Pliny . We will be working with texts on the web as well. I assume you have access to a Latin dictionary. Requirements: Class sessions will consist primarily of discussion, paraphrasing, and translation of previously assigned letters. Please prepare for each class, but do not fall into the trap of preparing solely for translation. We will read, translate, or paraphrase each letter and discuss grammar and syntax as well as content. (Note that you must not write translations or interlinear vocabulary in your text; neither may you write down the translations we do in class!). We are a small group, and we will share discussion of the letters informally. I have chosen to approach Pliny's letters topically. My choice of topics to consider is subjective; there are as many schemes of determining what to study as there are readers of Pliny. Furthermore, the boundaries between topics are often not clearly defined, and many letters could be placed in one or more categories. Needless to say, we don't have time to read all the letters. Those I have chosen represent a sampling of Pliny's work.

    77. Pliny The Younger
    C. Plinii Caecilii Secundi Opera. Epistulae Selectae. Liber I, Liber II,Liber III, Liber IV, Liber V. Liber VI, Liber VII, Liber VIII, Liber IX,Liber X.
    http://www.fotomarburg.de/projekte/OvidServ/text/chp/pliny.html
    C. Plinii Caecilii Secundi Opera Epistulae Selectae Liber I Liber II Liber III Liber IV Liber V Liber VI Liber VII Liber VIII Liber IX Liber X Panegyricus
    To the Library
    To the Classics Homepage

    78. Egypt: Who's Who Of Ancient Egypt - Egyptian People, Queens And Family: Pliny Th
    list of important, but sometimes forgotten, Egyptian people throughout the historyof Egypt and the roles they played in Egypt's development pliny the younger.
    http://www.touregypt.net/who/plinyty.htm
    Pliny the Younger
    Roman Emperors Pliny the Younger was an author who attests, in a letter to the emperor Trajan about a grant of citizenship for a therapist named Harpocras, that citizenship was granted to some Egyptians, though far from open-handedly. He states in his letter that , since he was an Egyptian, Pliny should have obtained for him Alexandrian citizenship, then Roman. Since he didn't realize that there was a difference, he merely wrot to the emperor that Trajan was a freedman of an alien woman and that his patron had died.
    Return to the Who's Who List
    Design, Layout and Graphic Art by Jimmy Dunn , an InterCity Oz, Inc. Employee

    79. Pliny The Younger
    pliny the younger 'pliné Roman Senator. QUICK SKETCH. pliny the younger alsowrote, both his adopted uncle's biography and his own autobiography.
    http://www.ancientroute.com/people/Pliny2.htm
    Gaius Plinius Caecilius Secundus
    PLINY the Younger
    'plin-é
    Roman Senator Born: Died: CE Heritage: Italian Comum Faith: Pagan Father: Mother:
    Spouse:
    Children: QUICK SKETCH Pliny the Younger also wrote, both his adopted uncle's biography and his own autobiography. He was a distinguished senator and statesman, a friend of Tacitus, Seutonius, and Martial. We know him best for the description of the eruption which buried Pompeii and killed his uncle, Pliny the Elder. Ref. book:
    Ref. files: Comum, Herculaneul, Martial, Pliny the Elder, Pompeii, Seutonius, Tacitus, Vesuvius, volcano Rodney R. Baird

    80. Select Bibliography -- Pliny
    AC Andrews, pliny the younger, Conformist, CJ 34, (1938)14354. Kehoe, DennisP., Approaches to Economic Problems in the Letters of pliny the younger.
    http://www.ets.uidaho.edu/luschnig/Roman Letters/Pbib.htm
    Select Bibliography for Latin 496 1. General
    • Jerome Carcopino, Daily Life in Ancient Rome , London 1941. D. R. Dudley, The World of Tacitus G. Kennedy, The Art of Rhetoric in the Roman World Beryl Rawson, The Family in Ancient Rome: New Perspectives , Cornell, 1986. Gordon Williams, Change and Decline: Roman literature in the early Empire , Berkeley, 1978.
    2. Pliny
    • A.N. Sherwin-White, The Letters of Pliny A Historical and Social Commentary . Oxford 1966. A. C. Andrews, "Pliny the Younger, Conformist," CJ R. T. Bruère, "Tacitus and Pliny's Panegyricus," CP Fishwick, Duncan, "Pliny and the Christians," AJAH W. E. Forehand, "Natural Phenomena as Images in Pliny Ep . 6.20," CB F. Gamberini, Stylistic Theory and Practice in the Younger Pliny, (Olms) Hildesheim, Zurich, New York, 1983. J. Goetzl "Variatio in the Plinian Epistle," CJ W. C. Helmbold, "Pliny's Muses," CP Hooper, Finley and Matthew Schwartz, Roman Letters: History from a Personal Point of View Kehoe, Dennis: "Allocation of Risk and Investment on the Estates of Pliny the Younger,"

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