Yahoo Canada Web Search

Search results

  1. He wrote nine epistles to seven churches: To the Romans one, To the Corinthians two, To the Galatians one, To the Ephesians one, To the Philippians one, To the Colossians one, To the Thessalonians two; and besides these to his disciples, To Timothy two, To Titus one, To Philemon one.

  2. De Viris Illustribus, meaning "concerning illustrious men", represents a genre of literature which evolved during the Italian Renaissance in imitation of the exemplary literature of Ancient Rome.

  3. Apr 22, 2024 · This collection of very short biographies was at one time attributed to Aurelius Victor. It is now generally agreed that it cannot have been written by him; but it has often been combined with the De Caesaribus to create a brief summary of all ancient Roman history.

  4. The De Viris Illustribus was first published with the Caesars by Antonius Gryphius at Lyons in 1566 and Th. Pulmann at Antwerp, in 1574. They were followed by Casaubon, and his edition, as others of those mentioned on p. xxvii of Volume I, contains the fragments.

  5. The phrase 'de viris illustribus' translates to 'on illustrious men' and refers to a genre of Roman literature that focuses on the lives and achievements of notable figures in Roman history.

  6. The text of W. K. Sherwin, Deeds of Famous Men (De viris illustribus) (1973) is not an improvement. 23 For the chronology and structure of the DVI, see my article in TAPA 108 (1978) 217-241.

  7. People also ask

  8. This ‘freedom’ coupled with concerns about canonicity expressed in the De viris illustribus helps us understand why there was such complexity in the notion of ‘the New Testament’ canon, and such a willing to make use of the ‘apocrypha’, in the period between the fifth and the ninth centuries.

  1. People also search for