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  1. Avianus or Avienus (the MSS give both forms), Roman fabulist (fl. c. 400 ce). He dedicated his 42 fables in elegiacs to one Theodosius, who is commonly held to be *Macrobius (Macrobius Ambrosius Theodosius); it is possible (though not more) that he is the Avienus who appears in the latter's Saturnalia (who is certainly not the geographical ...

  2. rose. Referring to the Crow's inability to tip the jar over, Avianus wrote (line 5), 'postquam nulla viam virtus dedit'. Now, as so often in Avianus, this is an absurdly artificial and inappropriate phrase for the context. This is usually I Robinson Ellis, The Fables of Avianus (Oxford, 1887), pp. xi-xxxix, L. Hervieux,

  3. This paper provides an account of the little-read late Latin fables of Avianus, and argues that their imagery reflects contemporary representations of criminal punishment. (PDF) The Failure of Fable: Art and Law in Avianus | James Uden - Academia.edu

  4. Maschek, D. 2021. How the Romans Conquered and Built their World, and Why This Matters, Review of N. TERRENATO, The Early Roman Expansion into Italy, and P. J. E. DAVIES, Architecture and Politics in Republican Rome, JRA 34, 314–330.

    • Dominik Maschek
  5. Mar 26, 2021 · 2021-03-26 00:10:30 Associated-names White, Horace, 1834-1916 Boxid IA40074917 Camera Sony Alpha-A6300 (Control) Col_number COL-658 Collection_set printdisabled External-identifier urn:oclc:record:1435724981 Foldoutcount 0 Identifier

  6. Study U.S. History online free by downloading OpenStax's United States History textbook and using our accompanying online resources.

  7. Search within document. William Abbott Oldfather, New Manuscript Material for the Study of Avianus, Transactions and Proceedings of the American Philological Association, Vol. 42 (1911), pp. 105-121.

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