Aulus Gellius (c. 125 – after 180 AD) was a Roman author and grammarian, who was probably born and certainly brought up in Rome. He was educated in Athens, ...
Aulus Gellius was a Latin author remembered for his miscellany Noctes Atticae (“Attic Nights”), in which many fragments of lost works are preserved.
Aulus Gellius var en romersk forfatter og grammatiker, muligvis af afrikansk oprindelse, sandsynligvis født og i alle fald opdraget i Rom.
Han studerede grammatik og retorik i Rom og filosofi i Athen, hvorefter han vendte tilbage til Rom, hvor han... Wikipedia
A discussion of the jurist Sextus Caecilius and the philosopher Favorinus about the laws of the Twelve Tables.
Bedømmelse
(9)
It was perfectly set up, had a nice balance of stories and historical translations, and provided a good grammatical review for a book that was not strictly ...
Aulus Gellius, a well-educated nobleman, is best known today for a collection of observations titled Noctes Atticae, a project he began during the long winter ...
There was with us there at the time a young student of philosophy, of the Stoic school according to his own account, but intolerably loquacious and presuming.
26. aug. 2013 · Aulus Gellius was a scholar of the 2nd century CE who lived in Rome apart from a visit to Greece, the author of a miscellany in twenty books and some four ...
5. okt. 2006 · One of the most useful texts that had been there and nowhere else, at least in full, was Aulus Gellius' Noctes Atticae.
The Vestal is called “Amata” when taken by the chief pontiff, because there is a tradition that the first one who was chosen bore that name.