.:Nonsensical Blog By Monk:.: 06/27/2004 - 07/03/2004 The Fall of Troy released by Online Medieval and Classical Library, whichwas written by Quintus Smyrnaeus sometime in the mid of the 4th century. http://nbxmonk.blogspot.com/2004_06_27_nbxmonk_archive.html
Extractions: @import url("http://www.blogger.com/css/blog_controls.css"); @import url("http://www.blogger.com/dyn-css/authorization.css?blogID=7205430"); @import url(http://www.blogger.com/css/navbar/main.css); @import url(http://www.blogger.com/css/navbar/2.css); BlogThis! NBxM is an entertainment blog contents links to other sites. Topics include arts, digital arts, humors, flash animations, literature, poetry and artists' online portfolios. Strange guy who most of the time could not pronounce his name right! View my complete profile NBxMonk email Monk Other Blogs dmaREVOLUTION Monk Fav Blogs Sign Monk's Book View Monk's Book var sc_project=308088; var sc_partition=1; Monk Feed Vote for Monk! Blog Search Engine Excerpts from "Women of Classical Mythology: A Biographical Dictionary" by Robert E. Bell and from an essay in "Companion to Literary Myths, Heroes, and Archetypes" by Ed. Pierre Brunel. Helen , the face that launched a thousand ships, was a tantalizing enigma from the very first. She was flesh and blood certainly, but she was also immortal, since her father was none other than Zeus. Her mother was the beautiful Leda, queen of Sparta, who was ravished by the father of the gods in the form of a swan. Leda's husband was Tyndarecus, who later the same night, unaware of his feathered predecessor, also impregnated his wife. She produced two eggs, one of which yielded Helen and Polydeuces and the other of which contained Castor and Clytemnestra.
This Is Project Gutenberg This List Has Been Downloaded From The P.J. Pierre-Joseph, 1809-1865 Pyle, Howard, 1853-1911 Quintus, Smyrnaeus,4th century Rabelais, Francis, circa 1494-?1553 Raleigh, Walter Alexander, http://www.informika.ru/text/books/gutenb/gutind/TEMP/authors9809a1.txt
TROY - LoveToKnow Article On TROY This was abridged in Latin prose, probably in the 4th century, The matterof-factform of narration recalls the poem of Quintus Smyrnaeus. http://90.1911encyclopedia.org/T/TR/TROY.htm
Extractions: TROY AND TROAD 7. To " Mycenaean " Troy succeeded a small unfortified settlement, which maintained itself all through the Hellenic age till the Homeric enthusiasm of Alexander the Great called a city again into being on Hissarlik. 8. The Hellenistic Ilion, however, has left comparatively little trace, having been almost completely destroyed in 85 B.C. by Fimbria. Portions of fortifications erected by Lysimachus are visible both on the acropolis (west face chiefly) and round the lower city in the plain. A small Doric temple belongs to the foundation of this city, and a larger one, probably dedicated to Athena, seems to be of the Pergamene age. Of its metopes, representing Helios and a gigantomachia, important fragments have been recovered. Coins of this city are not rare, showing Athena on both faces, and some inscriptions have been recovered proving that Hellenistic Ilion was an important municipality. 9. Lastly about the Christian era, arose a Graeco-Roman city, to which belong the theatre on the south-east slope of the hill and the ornate gateway in the same quarter, as well as a large building on the south-west and extensive remains to north-east. This seems to have sunk into decay about the 5th century A.D. BIBLIOGRAPHY.J. F. Lechevalier, Voyage de la Troade (1802); Choiseul-Gouffier, Voyage pittoresque (1809); Dr Hunt and Professor Carlyle, in Walpole's Travels (1817); O. F. v. Richter, Wallfahrten im Morgenlande (1822); W. M. Leake, Journal of a Tour in Asia Minor (1824); Prokesch v. Osten, Denkwiirdigkeiten aus dem Orient (1836); C. Fellows, Excursion in Asia Minor (1839); C. Texier, Asie Mineure (1843); R. P. Pullan, Principal Ruins of Asia Minor (1865); P. B. Webb, Topographic de la Troade (1844); H. F. Tozer, Highlands of Turkey (1869); R. Virchow, Landeskunde der Troas, in Trans. Berlin Acad. (1879); H. Schliemann, Troy (1875); Ilios (1880); Troja (1884); Reise der Troas (1881); W. Dorpfeld, Troja (1892) and Troja und Ilios (1902); C. Schuchhardt, Schliemann's Excavations (Eng. trans., 1891); P. Gardner, New Chapters in Greek History (1892). (D. G. H.)
4Reference || Quintus Smyrnaeus Quintus Smyrnaeus. Quintus Smyrnaeus, Greek epic poet, probably flourishedin the latter part of the 4th century AD. He is sometimes http://www.4reference.net/encyclopedias/wikipedia/Quintus_Smyrnaeus.html
Extractions: Front Page Encyclopedias Dictionaries Almanacs ... Quotes Quintus Smyrnaeus Quintus Smyrnaeus Greek epic poet, probably flourished in the latter part of the 4th century AD . He is sometimes called Quintus Calaber , because the only manuscript of his poem was discovered at Otranto in Calabria by Cardinal Bessarion in . According to his own account (xii. 310), he tried his hand at poetry in his early youth, while tending sheep at Smyrna (present-day Izmir ). His epic in fourteen books, known as Posthomerica , takes up the tale of Troy at the point where Homer 's Iliad breaks off (the death of Hector ), and carries it down to the capture of the city by the Greeks. The first five books, which cover the same ground as the Aethiopis of Arctinus of Miletus , describe the doughty deeds and deaths of Penthesileia the Amazon , of Memnon , son of the Morning, and of Achilles ; the funeral games in honour of Achilles, the contest for the arms of Achilles and the death of Ajax . The remaining books relate the exploits of Neoptolemus Eurypylus and Deiphobus , the deaths of Paris and Oenone , the capture of Troy by means of the wooden horse , the sacrifice of Polyxena at the grave of Achilles, the departure of the Greeks, and their dispersal by the storm. The poet has no originality; in conception and style his work is closely modelled on Homer. His materials are borrowed from the cyclic poems from which
Loeb Classical Library/Complete Catalog By Author active from the mid5th to the mid-4th century, are presented in this finalvolume of Loeb Greek Quintus Smyrnaeus. The Fall of Troy Series No. http://www.hup.harvard.edu/loeb/author.html
Extractions: by Author A B C D ... Z This is the complete index of Loeb volumes, alphabetized by author (or by title, when there is no primary author). Each entry contains a short description of the volume where available, and a link to more complete information. Use the A-Z links above or use the "Find in Page" function of your Web browser to navigate the author index. You may also search the Harvard University Press site to find specific Loeb volumes. Leucippe and Clitophon Leucippe and Clitophon , written in the 2nd century A.D. , is exceptional among the ancient romances in being a first-person narrative: the adventures of the young couple are recounted by the hero himself. The colorful story Clitophon tells us includes shipwrecks, apparent deaths, attacks by pirates and brigands, abductions, and other frights and obstacles. Love triumphs in the end. Achilles Tatius' style is notable for descriptive detail and for his engaging digressions.
Quintus Smyrnaeus Bibliography Quintus of Smyrna, Quintus Smyrnaeus, Posthomerica, Ta meth Homeron, Variations on a Rhetorical Theme in the Fourth century AD. http://www.gltc.leidenuniv.nl/index.php3?c=154
TROY Activities For Transmission Of Troy Stories Diane Thompson Euhemerus was a fourththird century BC Greek who explained that he had found Go to The Fall of Troy by Quintus Smyrnaeus, which continues the story of http://novaonline.nvcc.edu/eli/Troy/transques.html
Extractions: TROY Activities for Transmission of Troy Stories Diane Thompson, NVCC , ELI 1. Read The Trojan War , Chapter 8: "Transmission of Troy Stories to the Middle Ages," (126-137). 2. Explore the links on the Transmitting Troy to the 12th Century page. 3. Read through all the Activity questions before selecting Activities to work with. Notice that some of the Activities are quite easy and may only require reading one text, while others are far more difficult, and may require reading more than one text or doing online research plus reading texts. Select Activities that interest you and are appropriate to the time you have to spend on them. You will not get a higher grade because you select more difficult Activities. Select one or two of these Activities; make a copy of the Activity question to begin your response. Post your Activity to the Blackboard Transmission Forum. Read "The Demise of Paganism" by James O'Donnell and then think about some of the gods and their activities in Homer. Do you think that Christians would have had problems with Homer? Where would they have the problems? Be specific, giving examples and explaining why these things might be especially troubling to Christians who had not yet conquered the pagan world. Review The Trojan War , Chapter 8: "Transmission of Troy Stories to the Middle Ages," (126-137).
Britain In Print In the fourth century AD the Roman Emperor Constantine moved the capital from Rome including The Fall of Troy by Quintus Smyrnaeus, a short Latin Iliad, http://www.britaininprint.net/learning/study_tools_8_4.php
Extractions: While Homer's Iliad and Odyssey continued to be read, taught and loved in the Greek-speaking eastern Roman Empire, they were increasingly ignored in the west. As knowledge of the Greek language declined in Europe, and Latin became more widespread, the Latin Aeneid became the dominant Troy story in Europe.
University Of Wales, Lampeter - Department Of Classics Finally the course moves into the fourth century AD and back into Greek epic to Way, AS (1989), Quintus Smyrnaeus The Fall of Troy, Harvard Loeb. http://www.lamp.ac.uk/classics/postgrad_modules/myth_in_greek.htm
Alfred Tennyson, By Andrew Lang (chapter10) Of Scott, the most chivalrous literary figure of the century, Quintus Calaber,more usually called Quintus Smyrnaeus, is a writer of perhaps the fourth http://etext.library.adelaide.edu.au/t/tennyson/alfred/lang/chapter10.html
Blemmye Or Nobades (30 BC - 650 AD) - DBA 63 period (5th century), including use of Byzantinestyle horse armor. Quintus Smyrnaeus later hawked the dead orator s speeches in Athens and Rome. http://www.fanaticus.org/DBA/armies/dba63.html
Extractions: (DBA 63) In the second century A.D., the Nobades (e.g. Nobatae, Nobadae) emerged from the west to occupy the west bank of the Nile in northern Kush (Lower Nubia) . One of several well-armed bands of horse and camel-borne warriors who sold protection to the Kings of Meroitic Kush; eventually the Nobades intermarried and established themselves among the Meroitic people as a military aristocracy. During this period, the Meroitic Kush kingdom contracted because of the northward expansion of Axum, a powerful Abyssinian state. Around 350 AD, an Axumite army captured and destroyed Meroe, ending that kingdom's independent existence. By 375 AD, the Nobades had their own well-established kingdom of Ballana (Nobatia) to the north near the third cataract of the Nile River (and near the modern Sudanese border). The Blemmye were a fierce nomadic people from the mountainous regions near Nubia's Eastern Desert. Known to the Arabs as the Bedja, their raids are mentioned in Kushite annals as early as the fourth century BC. They preyed on the ancient trade route connecting the Nile Valley to the Africa interior, which supplied Egypt and Rome with a wide variety of exotic goods including frankincense, myrrh, ivory, ebony and other exotic woods, precious oils, resins and gums, panther and leopard skins, monkeys, dogs, giraffes, ostrich feathers and eggs, and pygmies. In the first century AD, they began a series of constant raids against Kushite and Romano Egyptian garrison-towns and were eventually able to occupy much of southern Egypt and Lower Nubia.
Alfred Tennyson By Andrew Lang: Chapter 10 Quintus Calaber, more usually called Quintus Smyrnaeus, is a writer of perhapsthe fourth century of our era. About him nothing, or next http://www.online-literature.com/andrew_lang/alfred_tennyson/10/
Herodotus= Setting Forth Of The Persian Wars, 4 Quintus Smyrnaeus s (fourth century AD) treatment of the myth, found in theclassical period only on black and red-figure vases, is faithful to the http://www.msu.edu/~tyrrell/Amazons2.htm
Extractions: Herodotus Setting Forth of the Persian Wars 110) When the Hellenes fought against the Amazons (the Scythians call the Amazons Oiorpata, a name that means A slayers of men in Greek, for they call a man A oior and denote A to kill by A pata. ), the story at that time was that the Hellenes, after conquering them in a battle along the Thermodon River, sailed away, bringing in three ships as many of the Amazons as they could capture alive. The Amazons attacked the men at sea and cut them to pieces. But the Amazons did not understand ships or how to use rudders, sails, and oars. After they slaughtered the men, they were carried by both wave and wind. They arrived at Late Maiotis to a place called The Cliffs. (The Cliffs are in the land of the free Scyths.) There, the Amazons disembarked from the ships and proceeded by land into the inhabited regions. Chancing upon a heard of horses, they seized the animals and began plundering the territory of the Scythians from horseback. 111) The Scythians could not understand what was happening. They did not recognize the language or the clothes or the tribe but were perplexed over where the Amazons came from. They thought that the Amazons were men in early adulthood and commenced to engage them in battle. After the battle, however, they took possession of the bodies and learned in this way that they were women. Accordingly, they deliberated the issue and resolved not to try to kill them in any way but to send out the youngest men among them in as near a number to the Amazons as they could guess. They resolved that these men camp near the Amazons and do whatever they did. If the Amazons chased them, they were not to fight but to withdraw. Whenever the Amazons stopped, they were to return and camp near the Amazons. The Scythians formed these resolutions because they wanted to produce children by the Amazons.
The Trojans And Their Allies It seems that in one of the earliest waves of the eighthcentury migrations Indiana University Press, 1966), and the Posthomerica of Quintus Smyrnaeus. http://www.varchive.org/nldag/trojally.htm
Extractions: The Trojans and their Allies The eighth century before the present era, starting in -776, was, together with the beginning of the seventh, a period of great natural upheavals. These changes in nature moved entire nations to migrations in the hope that beyond the horizon Fertile lands, not damaged by unchained forces of nature, awaited the conquerors. A few decades afterwards these same nomads were to destroy the short-lived Phrygian kingdom. The tradition of how Gordias, the first king of the Phrygians in their new domicile, selected the pile of his new capital, Gordion, is a well-known legend. Under Midas, the son of Gordias, the Phrygian kingdom reached the peak of its power; He reigned, according to the chronicle of Hieronymus, preserved by Eusebius, from -742 to -696; But eastern Anatolia was not yet pacified, and continuing disturbances brought Sargon several more times to the defense of his northeastern frontier; he finally met his death there in battle in -705. The Phrygian kingdom in Asia Minor had an ephemeral existence.
Extractions: by Andrew Lang In the year 1889 the poet's health had permitted him to take long walks on the sea-shore and along the cliffs, one of which, by reason of its whiteness, he had named "Taliessin," "the splendid brow." His mind ran on a poem founded on an Egyptian legend (of which the source is not mentioned), telling how "despair and death came upon him who was mad enough to try to probe the secret of the universe." He also thought of a drama on Tristram, who, in the Idylls, is treated with brevity, and not with the sympathy of the old writer who cries, "God bless Tristram the knight: he fought for England!" But early in 1890 Tennyson suffered from a severe attack of influenza. In May Mr Watts painted his portrait, and "Divinely through all hindrance found the man."
Loeb Classical Library 3.2.39 Quintus Smyrnaeus; 3.2.40 Sallust; 3.2.41 Seneca the Elder Volume IIElegiac Poetry of the Fourth century, Iambic Poets (including http://www.algebra.com/algebra/about/history/Loeb-Classical-Library.wikipedia
Extractions: Over US$225,000 has been donated since the drive began on 19 August. Thank you for your generosity! The Loeb Classical Library is a series of books, today published by the Harvard University Press , which present important works of ancient Greek and Latin Literature in a way designed to make the text accessible to the broadest possible audience, by presenting the original Greek or Latin text on each left-hand leaf, and a fairly literal translation on the facing page. They represent the Everyman's Library of Antiquity , the canon of our Classical heritage spanning fourteen centuries of epics and lyric poetry; tragedy and comedy; history, travel, philosophy, and oratory; medical writers, geographers and mathematicians. The Loeb Classical Library also extends to cover those Church fathers who made particular use of pagan culture. Origin Reception Volumes published Greek ... various, edited by Kirsopp Lake
Loeb Classical Library - Art History Online Reference And Guide 3.2.74 Quintus Smyrnaeus 3.2.75 Sallust 3.2.76 Seneca the Elder Volume IIElegiac Poetry of the Fourth century, Iambic Poets (including Archilochus and http://www.arthistoryclub.com/art_history/Loeb_Classical_Library
Loeb Classical Library: Information From Answers.com Volume II Elegiac Poetry of the Fourth century, Iambic Poets (includingArchilochus and Semonides), Quintus Smyrnaeus. L019) The Fall of Troy http://www.answers.com/topic/loeb-classical-library
Extractions: showHide_TellMeAbout2('false'); Business Entertainment Games Health ... More... On this page: Wikipedia Mentioned In Or search: - The Web - Images - News - Blogs - Shopping Loeb Classical Library Wikipedia Loeb Classical Library The Loeb Classical Library is a series of books, today published by the Harvard University Press , which present important works of ancient Greek and Latin Literature in a way designed to make the text accessible to the broadest possible audience, by presenting the original Greek or Latin text on each left-hand leaf, and a fairly literal translation on the facing page. They represent the Everyman's Library of Antiquity , the canon of our Classical heritage spanning fourteen centuries of epics and lyric poetry; tragedy and comedy; history, travel, philosophy, and oratory; medical writers, geographers and mathematicians. The Loeb Classical Library also extends to cover those Church fathers who made particular use of pagan culture. The series was conceived and initially funded by James Loeb . The first volumes were published by William Heineman and company in 1912, already in their distinctive green (for Greek text) and red (for Latin) hardcover bindings, which are instantly recognizable today. Since then scores of new titles have been added, and the earliest translations have been revised several times. (In recent years, this has included the removal of earlier editions'
ALA: Section IX: Funerary Texts When the walls of Aphrodisias were built in the midfourth century, followingthe line of the For e?sa, first attested in Quintus Smyrnaeus, cf. http://insaph.kcl.ac.uk/ala2004/narrative/sec-IX.html
Extractions: Section: I II III IV ... XII Document Contents Epitaphs with bullion penalties Epitaphs in verse Other epitaphs IX.1 Aphrodisias in the Roman period was, like any other city of the time, ringed by graveyards; since burial within cities was not permitted except in the most exceptional circumstances, necropoleis developed immediately outside the city. When the walls of Aphrodisias were built in the mid-fourth century, following the line of the city boundary, they incorporated a good deal of material from funerary monuments outside the city; as a result, although no necropolis at Aphrodisias has yet been extensively excavated, we possess many funerary inscriptions of the Roman period from this re-used material (see, for example, CIG MAMA , 532-97). They are mostly expressed in recurring formulae, which, while reflecting forms current elsewhere in Asia Minor, use terms particular to Aphrodisias, just as other cities and areas have their own funerary terminology.