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Curtius and wrote
* The Roman historian Quintus Curtius Rufus wrote Historiae Alexandri Magni.
Hardy wrote quickly, often adapting plays from French, foreign and classical sources ( Ovid, Lucian, Plutarch, Xenophon, Quintus Curtius Rufus, Josephus, Miguel de Cervantes, Jorge de Montemayor, Boccaccio, François de Rosset ).
In 1826 François Pouqueville, French diplomat and archaeologist, who wrote the Voyage en Grèce ; in 1851 Ernst Curtius the German archaeologist and historian who speculated about its location ; in 1879 Julius Smith, the director of Athens Observatory, issuing a study comparing the Aegeion earthquake which occurred 26 December 1861 with an earthquake which might have destroyed Helike ; in 1883 Spiros Panagiotopoulos, the mayor of Aegeion city, wrote about the ancient city ; in 1912 the Greek writer P. K. Ksinopoulos wrote The City of Aegeion Through the Centuries, and in 1939 Stanley Casson, an English art scholar and army officer who studied classical archaeology and served in Greece as liaison officer, addressed the problem.
As joint editor with Curtius of The Studies in Greek and Latin Grammar, he wrote an article for this work on “ Nasilis Sonans ,” in which he defended theories so radical that Curtius afterward disclaimed them.

Curtius and pages
For example, Alfonso halted his army in pious respect before the birthplace of a Latin writer, carried Livy or Caesar on his campaigns with him, and his panegyrist Panormita even stated that the king was cured of an illness when a few pages of Quintus Curtius Rufus ' history of Alexander the Great were read to him.

Curtius and European
Ernst Robert Curtius ( April 14, 1886 – April 19, 1956 ) was a German literary scholar, philologist, and Romance language literary critic, best known for his 1948 study Europäische Literatur und Lateinisches Mittelalter, translated in English as European Literature and the Latin Middle Ages.
Curtius saw European literature as part of a continuous tradition that began with the Greek and Latin authors and continued throughout the Middle Ages ; he did not acknowledge a break between those traditions, a division that would separate historical periods from each other and support a set of national literatures without connections to each others.

Curtius and Latin
* Quintus Curtius ' Histories of Alexander the Great ( Loeb edition, Latin )
* Quintus Curtius ' Histories of Alexander the Great in Latin at The Latin Library
Medieval Latin rhetoric in the use of commonplaces, metaphors, turns of phrase, or, to employ the term Curtius prefers, topoi ".

Curtius and Ages
* Curtius in McCrindle, Op cit, p 192, J. W. McCrindle ; History of Punjab, Vol I, 1997, p 229, Punajbi University, Patiala, ( Editors ): Fauja Singh, L. M. Joshi ; Kambojas Through the Ages, 2005, p 134, Kirpal Singh.

Curtius and English
* Scriptores Historiae Augustae, Vita Gallieni Duo & Vita Divi Claudii, Loeb Classical Library, 1921 – 1932 ( English translation ), on-line at Lacus Curtius
For an English translation, see Lacus Curtius.
* Livius: Quintus Curtius Rufus ; biographical note and some excerpts in English

Curtius and translation
His translation from Quintus Curtius, La Vie d ' Alexandre ( posthumously published in 1653 ) deserves notice as an application of the author's own rules.
Translation of Roman authors produced also some works: Baranyai Decsi János translated Sallustius ' Catalina and Jughurta's war in the late 16th century and a decade later appeared the translation of Curtius Rufus ' Aleaxander's life in Debrecen.

Curtius and ),
He edited Quintilian's Institutio Oratoria ( 1831 ), Cicero's Verrines and De officiis ( 1837 ), and Curtius.
* Curtius Wachsmuth, Otto Hense, ( 1884 ), Ioannis Stobaei Anthologium, Volume 1-2
* Curtius Wachsmuth, Otto Hense, ( 1894 ), Ioannis Stobaei Anthologium, Volume 3
* Curtius Wachsmuth, Otto Hense, ( 1909 ), Ioannis Stobaei Anthologium, Volume 4
* Curtius Wachsmuth, Otto Hense, ( 1912 ), Ioannis Stobaei Anthologium, Volume 5
* Curtius Wachsmuth, Otto Hense, ( 1923 ), Appendix-Index of Authors
Literary sources are Alexander's propagandist Arrian ( Anabasis Alexandri 2. 3 ) Quintus Curtius ( 3. 1. 14 ), Justin's epitome of Pompeius Trogus ( 11. 7. 3 ), and Aelian's De Natura Animalium 13. 1.
* Jean Curtius, also known as Jean De Corte and Juan Curcio ( 1551-1628 ), a industrialist from Liége
* Ernest Robert Curtius ( 1886 – 1956 ), German scholar, philologist
* Ernst Curtius ( 1814 – 1896 ), German archaeologist, historian
* Georg Curtius ( 1820 – 1885 ), German philologist
* Jacob Curtius ( died 1594 ), Imperial Pro-Chancellor for Emperor Rudolph II, astronomer, mathematician and instrument maker
* Janus Henricus Donker Curtius, ( 1813 – 1879 ), the last Dutch chief of Dejima, Japan
* Julius Curtius ( 1877 – 1948 ), German politician
* Ludwig Curtius ( 1874 – 1954 ), archaeologist
* Theodor Curtius ( 1857 – 1928 ), German chemical scientist
* Curtius ( crater ), a lunar crater
* Quintus Curtius Rufus ( 1st century AD ), historian
Mitt in the 1930s was Ludwig Curtius ), the rest of the academy agreed this figure is Agrippa.
* Julius Curtius ( DVP ), Minister of Economics
), Q. Curtius Rufus: Historiae ( Berlin ; New York: Walter De Gruyter, 2009 ) ( Bibliotheca Teubneriana ).

Curtius and following
It may have been dedicated by Curtius Dentatus following his victory over the Sabines.

Curtius and on
A strong and convincing modern perspective, based on Curtius, is that Darius was forced to move camp to terrain that favored Alexander because Alexander was fighting defensively due to a recommendation by his war council and Parmenion.
German Chancellor Heinrich Brüning and Foreign Minister Julius Curtius, both eager for Franco-German reconciliation, were under siege on all quarters: they faced a very weak economy which made meeting government payroll a weekly miracle, and private bankruptcies and constant lay-offs had the communists on a short fuse.
* Platner and Ashby entry on the tomb on Lacus Curtius site
Both Quintus Curtius Rufus and Arrian refer to Alexander himself meeting with a tribe of fish-eating savages while on his Indian campaign.
Curtius then became Otfried Müller's companion in his exploration of the Peloponnese, and on Müller's death in 1840 he returned to Germany.
In 1776, the exhibition moved to the Palais Royal and, in 1782, Curtius opened a second exhibit, the Caverne des Grands Voleurs, a precursor to the later chamber of horrors, on Boulevard du Temple.
Curtius, on the contrary, represents him as breaking out into violent invectives against the ambition of Perdiccas, and abruptly quitting the assembly, in order to excite the soldiery to a tumult.
It was, however, regarded with some veneration by the ancient Romans, and the story most often repeated is that told by Livy ( vii. 6 ): Rome, facing a peril which an oracle had stated would be overcome only when the City threw into the chasm what she held to be most dear, was saved by a young horseman named Marcus Curtius ( a member of the Curtia Gens ), who understood that it was the life of a brave Roman youth that the Romans held most dear, and who therefore plunged into it in full armour on his horse, whereupon the earth closed over him and Rome was saved.
* Lacus Curtius article on livius. org
By convention these features are identified on lunar maps by placing the letter on the side of the crater midpoint that is closest to Curtius.
According to Quintus Curtius Rufus 6, 000 fighting men were killed within the city and 2, 000 Tyrians were crucified on the beach.
From 1929 on, he studied in Bonn by Professor Erich Rothacker psychology and by professor Ernst Robert Curtius Romance studies.
* Servian Wall entry on the Lacus Curtius website
He also published commentaries on portions of Cicero ( especially the De finibus ), on Ausonius, Juvenal, Curtius Rufus, and other classical authors.
Curtius ' history of Alexander presents Bagoas as a vindictive schemer who revenges himself on a Persian noble named Orsines who failed to give him gifts by lying to Alexander about him, eventually succeeding in having him tried and executed.

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