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         Manilius:     more books (100)
  1. Manili Astronomicon liber II by Marcus Manilius, Heathcote William Garrod, 2010-09-08
  2. Manilius and his Intellectual Background by Katharina Volk, 2009-04-15
  3. Five Books of Manilius by M. Manilius, 1953-01-01
  4. A New Edition of Manilius, Book 1 by Ellis Robinson, 2009-07-17
  5. THE FIVE BOOKS OF M. MANILIUS, Containing a System of the Ancient Astronomy and Astrology: Together with the Philosophy of the Stoicks. Done into English Verse. With Notes [by Thomas Creech]. by Marcus Manilius, 1697
  6. 1st-Century Poets: Ovid, Zhang Heng, Marcus Manilius, Lucan, Statius, Pomponius Secundus, Gaius Valerius Flaccus, Silius Italicus, Sabinus
  7. Ancient Roman Astrologers: Marcus Manilius, Julius Firmicus Maternus, Nigidius Figulus, Paulus Alexandrinus, Lucius Taruntius Firmanus
  8. Jurist Der Antike: Bias Von Priene, Demosthenes, Antiphon, Isaios, Drakon, Tribonianus, Zaleukos, Manius Manilius, Stephanos (German Edition)
  9. Die Astrologie des M. Manilius in 5 Büchern / Astronomicon. by Manilius,
  10. Stace, Martial, Manilius, Lucilius Junior, Rutilius, Gratius Faliscus, Némésianus Et Calpurnius (French Edition) by Marco Manilio, 2010-06-04
  11. The Five Books of M Manilius Containing a System of the Ancient Astronomy and... by Marcus Manilius, 1697
  12. Five Books of M. Manilius by M. Manilius, 2010-09-10
  13. Manilius M. Astronomika. Science horoscopes / Maniliy M. Astronomika. Nauka o goroskopakh by unknown, 2000
  14. Berber: Augustine of Hippo, Berber People, Tertullian, Apuleius, Couscous, Mauretania, Marcus Manilius, Numidia, Marcus Cornelius Fronto, Arius

41. Manilius (Manlius Or Mallius) (Marcus Or Caius) Quotes
manilius (Manlius or Mallius) (Marcus or Caius) quotes, Searchable and browsable database of quotations with author and subject indexes.
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i Topics Authors Proverbs ... Quote-A-Day Main Menu Topics Authors Proverbs Today in History ... Contact Sponsor 1 Quotes for 'Manilius (Manlius or Mallius) (Marcus or Caius)' in the Database.
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Letter "M" Experience is always sowing the seed of one thing after another. [Lat., Semper enim ex aliis alia proseminat usus.]
Topic: Experience
Source: Astronomica (I, 90)
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42. Manilius Quotes
manilius quotes and quotations, quotes by manilius.
http://www.saidwhat.co.uk/quotes/favourite/manilius
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Manilius
Being born, we die; our end is consequent on our beginning
Manilius quote

Time stands with impartial law
Manilius quote

Labour is itself a pleasure
Manilius quote

We are dying from our very birth, and our end hangs on our beginning
Manilius quote

We are always beginning to live, but are never living
Manilius quote
Every one is in a small way the image of God Manilius quote All things obey fixed laws Manilius quote Experience is always sowing the seed of one thing after another Manilius quote
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43. Manilius Astronomica
manilius Astronomica (1st century CE). For I shall sing of God, silentminded monarch of nature, who, permeating sky and land and sea, controls with uniform
http://www.roanoke.edu/religion/Maclean/RELG211/ManiliusAstronomica.htm

44. L'astronomie Et La Poesie : Manilius
Même son nom est incertain, mais il s agit probablement de Marcus manilius ; dans les premiers livres, l auteur est anonyme mais les derniers livres
http://pages.infinit.net/noxoculi/manilius.html
Nox Oculis
Marcus Manilius (I er Astronomica (extraits)
    Now Constellations, Muse, and signs rehearse,
    In order, let them sparkle in thy verse.
    Those which obliquely round the burning Zone,
    And bear the Summer and the Winter Sun,
    Those first: then those which roll a different way
    Which Nights serene disclose, and which create
    The steady Rules, and fix the Laws of Fate.
    First Aries, glorious in his Golden Wool,
    Looks back and wonders at the mighty Bull,
    Whose back-parts first appear: He bending lies
    With Threat'ning Head, and calls the Twins to rise, They clasp for fear , and mutually embrace; And next (to) the Twins with an unsteady pace Bright Cancer rolls: then Leo shakes his mane : And following Virgo calms his rage again : Then Day and Night weigh'd in Libra's Scales, Equal awhile, at last the Night prevails, And longer grown the heavier scale inclines And draws bright Scorpio from the Winter signs : Him Centaur follows with an aiming Eye His Bow full drawn and ready to let fly : Next narrow Horns the twisted Caper shows

45. Wiki Manilius
Manius manilius, consul; Marcus manilius, Roman poet and astrologer; Gaius manilius, The article manilius is part of the Wikipedia encyclopedia.
http://wapedia.mobi/en/Manilius
Wiki: Manilius Face taxes? Wage garnished? Call us (Ad) Manilius may refer to one of the following: Category: Disambiguation In other languages: fr The article "Manilius" is part of the Wikipedia encyclopedia. It is licensed under the terms of the GNU FDL modified: 2007-08-17 20:04:42 Ads by Google SharePoint Dummy - SharePoint Experts - www.thesug.org/dummy Home Wapedia: For Wikipedia on mobile phones

46. The Five Books Of M. Manilius: Containing A System Of Ancient Astronomy & Astrol
The Five Books of M. manilius Containing a System of Ancient Astronomy Astrology, Together with the Philosophy of the Stoics; M. manilius.,.
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M. MANILIUS.,
US$ 40.00 Offered by: Sacred Science Institute - Book number: 184
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47. Astronomica - MANILIUS
Astronomica; manilius. Offered by Thornton s Bookshop.
http://www.antiqbook.co.uk/boox/thor/TM0065.shtml
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MANILIUS Astronomica
. Translated by G. P. Goold "Perhaps the most ingenious.. of Latin poets [is here translated by] a distinguished Latinist, deeply versed in celestial lore.. [Manilius] is faithfully conveyed in a style both lucid and elegant." D. R. Shackleton Bailey, Classical Philology Astronomica is the earliest treatise we have on astrology. Here Manilius provides an account of celestial phenomena and the signs of the Zodiac. He also gives witty character sketches of persons born under particular constellations. Explanatory notes, 24 drawings, and two star charts are included. 1977/revised 1992/3rd printing/510pp. / 1 map/2 star-charts/index ORDER REF: PUB30 - 99516 3 (Bi-lingual Text - Loeb Classical Library volume 469 hardback in fine D/J.
GBP 15.95 = appr. US$ 32.35 Offered by: Thornton's Bookshop - Book number: TM0065
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48. Manilius - Wikipedia
Translate this page Marcus manilius was een Romeins dichter die zijn hoogtepunt bereikte tijdens de regering van Keizer Tiberius. Over zijn persoon zijn er verder géén details
http://nl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manilius
Manilius
Uit Wikipedia, de vrije encyclopedie
Ga naar: navigatie zoeken Marcus Manilius was een Romeins dichter die zijn hoogtepunt bereikte tijdens de regering van Keizer Tiberius . Over zijn persoon zijn er verder g©©n details bekend. Hij schreef een didactisch gedicht over astrologie in 5 boeken, getiteld Astronomica (voor de Latijnse tekst: klik hier Het onderwerp sluit dus aan bij de traditie van Aratus . In de eerste drie boeken bespreekt Manilius de schepping, de sferen van de sterrenhemel, de tekens van de dierenriem en het trekken van de horoscoop. In zijn vierde boek beschrijft hij de invloed van de dierenriemtekens op degenen die onder een bepaald sterrenbeeld geboren zijn. Hij gelooft daarbij in een goddelijke Rede die de kosmos leidt: men zou Manilius dus een Sto¯cijnse tegenhanger van de epicurist Lucretius kunnen noemen. Manilius behandelt zijn onderwerp met enthousiasme. Moeilijke vaktechnische stof weet hij goed in hexametrische verzen uit te drukken. Daarnaast bewijst hij, vooral in verschillende excursen, over dichterlijk talent te beschikken, dat hem verheft boven het gewone peil van de po«zie uit zijn tijd. Van de Astronomica verscheen in 1914 een vertaling van de hand van Dr. J. van Wageningen (E.J. Brill, Leiden).

49. Serta Romana: Lucretius, Catullus, Tibullus, Propertius, Ovidius, Manilius, Pers
Serta Romana Lucretius, Catullus, Tibullus, Propertius, Ovidius, manilius, Persius, Lucanus, Martialis.; WOLTJER, J.. Offered by AntiKeer.
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WOLTJER, J. Serta Romana: Lucretius, Catullus, Tibullus, Propertius, Ovidius, Manilius, Persius, Lucanus, Martialis.
EUR 11.50 = appr. US$ 16.8475
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50. Marcus Manilius: Information And Much More From Answers.com
manilius, Marcus , fl. AD 10, Roman poet. Of his didactic poem on astrology, the Astronomica, five books remain.
http://www.answers.com/topic/marcus-manilius
BodyLoad('s'); Results for Marcus Manilius On this page: Select Article Columbia Ency. Quotes By Wikipedia Or search: - The Web - Images - News - Blogs - Shopping Columbia Encyclopedia
Manilius, Marcus
mənĭl ēəs ) , fl. A.D. 10, Roman poet. Of his didactic poem on astrology, the Astronomica, five books remain. These may or may not have constituted the whole work. ADVERTISEMENT Home Business Entertainment Food ... More... InitForm('lookup1','autodiv1','down'); Library Arts Business Entertainment Food ... Quotes By Marcus Manilius Quotes We begin to die as soon as we are born, and the end is linked to the beginning. Quotes by Marcus Manilius supplied by Quotations Book Wikipedia Marcus Manilius Marcus Manilius
(fl. 1st century AD) was a Roman poet astrologer , and author of a poem in five books called Astronomica The author is neither quoted nor mentioned by any ancient writer. Even his name is uncertain, but it was probably Marcus Manilius; in the earlier books the author is anonymous, the later give Manilius, Manlius, Mallius. The poem itself implies that the writer lived under Augustus or Tiberius , and that he was a citizen of and resident in Rome . According to Richard Bentley he was an Asiatic Greek; according to F. Jacob an African. His work is one of great learning; he had studied his subject in the best writers, and generally represents the most advanced views of the ancients on

51. Hamlet, Prince Of Denmark By Stephen Roth
The best evidence for that speculation is the passage below, from Marcus manilius firstcentury Astronomicon, a Latin astronomical/astrological discourse
http://princehamlet.com/manilius.html
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Astronomicon
In Appendix E of The Undiscovered Country I suggest that Alderamin in the constellation Cepheus might be the star Bernardo refers to ("yond same star that's westward from the pole") in Act I, Scene I. The best evidence for that speculation is the passage below, from Marcus Manilius' first-century Astronomicon, a Latin astronomical/astrological discourse in verse that was rediscovered in the 1400s and published in various editions, including three important ones edited by Joseph Scaliger in 1579, 1590, and 1600. (Appendix E has more information on Scaliger.) This passage (from Book V, lines 449-485 in Goold's edition) describes the characteristics of people born with Cepheus rising. (Rising signs were/are believed to predict a person's outward character, distinct from their inner self, which is determined by their sun sign.) The section reads like it was written to describe Shakespeare.

52. Manilius, Marcus Quotes
Marcus manilius (fl. 1st century AD) was a Roman poet, astrologer, and author of a poem in five books called Astronomica. · Can we improve this biography?
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53. History Of Roman Literature Vergil Appendix
Note I._Imitations of Virgil in Propertius, Ovid, and manilius._ In all these points manilius is a little less strict than Ovid, _e.g._ (i.
http://ancienthistory.about.com/cs/rome/a/histromlit222ap.htm
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54. Star Lore Of The Constellations: Auriga The Charioteer
manilius treats the figures as separate constellations, describing the Charioteer as a skilled, enthusiastic, and reckless driver, racing across the heavens
http://www.skyscript.co.uk/auriga.html
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Study in the Fixed Stars by Deborah Houlding

Notable stars in Auriga: Epoch 2000 Longitude Name Nature Mag. Position Lat. Dec. 21 Gem 51 Capella Body of Goat 29 Gem 55 Menkalinan 1.9 (v) Shoulder of Charioteer
Auriga is depicted by a charioteer who holds a goat in his left arm and some suckling kids in his lap. The chariot is not shown but is represented by the reins held in his right hand.
This strange mythological mix is very ancient and believed to be of Mesopotamian origin. Latin authors claim it represents the lame son of Vulcan and Minerva who invented the chariot as a means of transportation. The goat in his arms was described by Aratus as "the holy Goat which, as legend tells, gave the breast to Zeus". This is Amalthea, (also linked to the myth of Capricorn ), which not only nurtured Zeus but protected him through the aegis (literally 'goat-skin') that constituted his cloak and shield. Manilius treats the figures as separate constellations, describing the Charioteer as a skilled, enthusiastic, and reckless driver, racing across the heavens with his spirited team of horses.
The main star of the group is in the body of the goat: the 1st magnitude white star Capella 'the Little She-Goat' which is the 6th brightest star in the sky. In classical times it was noted for its association with floods and storms. Pliny referred to its as 'the Rainy Goat-starre' whilst Aratus spoke of how the goat often saw men 'storm-tossed' at sea. Ptolemy reports all the bright stars of Auriga to be of the nature of Mars and Mercury, but it is possible that he was thinking only of the figure of the Charioteer, and did not intend this association to extend to Capella. Other authors claim that Capella is of the nature of Mercury and the Moon, which does seem more fitting to the traits described by its influence.

55. Manilius
Translate this page A. Reek, Interpretationen zu den Astronomica des manilius, mit besonderer Berücksichtigung der philosophischen Partien, diss. Marburg 1977.
http://www.let.kun.nl/~m.v.d.poel/bibliografie/manilius.htm
ultima renovatio/ last update 16.04.2004 MANILIUS #Bibliographia #Editiones #Indices #Studia docta ... #Bibliographia
R. Helm, Nachaugusteische nichtchristliche Dichter I, 1925-1942, in : Lustrum I (1956), pp. 121-318 (129-157).
E. Romano, Recenti studi su Manilio, in : Cultura e scuola 18 (1979) (no. 72), pp. 39-58.
#Editiones

J. v. Wageningen, transl., Leiden 1914.
J. v. Wageningen, Teubner 1915.
J. v. Wageningen, comm., Amsterdam 1921.
A.E. Housman, 5 voll., c. comm., Cambridge 1937 (2 voll., Hildesheim 1972).
A.E. Housman, ed. minor, Cambridge 1937.
G.P. Goold, Loeb 1977.
G.P. Goold, Teubner, Leipzig 1985; ed. corr., 1998. E. Flores, R. Scarcia et Simonetta Feraboli, 2 voll., vol. 1: l. 1-2, vol. 2: l. 3-5, c. transl. et comm., Milaan 1996-2001. E. Flores, R. Scarcia et Simonetta Feraboli, . D. Liuzzi, l. 2, c. transl., Galatina 1991. D. Liuzzi, l. 3, c. transl., Lecce 1988. #Indices M. Wacht, Concordantia in Manilii Astronomica, Hildesheim 1990. M. - M. Manzino, Concordanze degli Astronomica di Manilio, 2 voll., Genua 1991-1992. P.J. del Real Francia, Lexicon Manilianum / curavit, Hildesheim 1998.

56. 149 B.C. « Third Punic War
Censorinus and manilius lay siege to Carthage, expecting a quick victory A Carthaginian night raid on manilius’ camp causes immense panic among the
http://thirdpunicwar.wordpress.com/149-bc/
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    149 B.C.
    The following timeline includes some of the more important events that took place during the first year of the Third Punic War, with references to relevant passages within our principal ancient sources. Since this project has been permanently designated as a work-in-progress, suggestions for improvement (including corrections and other helpful remarks) would be greatly appreciated. YEAR: 149 B.C. CONSULS: L. Marcius Censorinus and M. Manilius 149, Part I: The Final Days of Peace Marcus Porcius Cato delivers his final De Bello Carthaginiensi oration, arguing that Carthage could not be trusted and poses a real and present danger to Rome; the powerful speech virtually eliminates any remaining opposition to war (Plutarch, Cato the Elder 27; Livy, Periochae 49.2-3; Quintilian, Institutio Oratoria 9.3.31 [possible fragment of the speech]; Gellius 9.14.10 [possible fragment of the speech])

57. Astrology In Ancient Rome: Poetry, Prophecy And Power
There has been some good European scholarship on manilius in recent years, Housman liked to say that manilius great talent was doing sums in
http://fathom.lib.uchicago.edu/1/777777122543/
About the Digital Collection: History of Fathom Technical Information Home Browse the Archive ... Search by Keyword Astrology in Ancient Rome: Poetry, Prophecy and Power by David Wray y main focus will be on an ancient Roman long poem and a set of questions surrounding it. The poem is a didactic (instructional) work on astrology. Its title is Astronomica , and it was written in the first and second decades of the first century of our era by a poet named Marcus Manilius, of whose life we know nothing whatsoever. Greatly admired by such modern figures as Goethe and Leibniz, the Astronomica is a poem that literally almost no one reads today, not even specialists in Latin literature. There are several reasons for this, but certainly one reason lies in the nineteenth and twentieth century view of astrology as "pseudo-science" and an embarrassing blemish on the faces of our classical forebears, whose images were to be kept as shiny and clean as possible. There has been some good European scholarship on Manilius in recent years, especially by Italian scholars, but in English there is still no book-length study. Unknown as Manilius is, I suspect that many of you have heard his name recently, in the Tom Stoppard play

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