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Juvenal and is
Epigram is associated with ' point ' because the European epigram tradition takes the Latin poet Martial as its principal model ; he copied and adapted Greek models ( particularly the contemporary poets Lucillius and Nicarchus ) selectively and in the process redefined the genre, aligning it with the indigenous Roman tradition of ' satura ', hexameter satire, as practised by ( among others ) his contemporary Juvenal.
" The view is expressed by the satirist Juvenal:
Juvenalian satire, named after the Roman satirist Juvenal ( late 1st century-early 2nd century CE ), is a type of satire that is more contemptuous and abrasive than the Horatian.
By 431, as a deacon, he occupied a sufficiently important position for Cyril of Alexandria to apply to him in order that Rome's influence should be thrown against the claims of Juvenal of Jerusalem to patriarchal jurisdiction over Palestine — unless this letter is addressed rather to Pope Celestine I.
In Welsh versions his name is Gweirydd, son of Cynfelyn, and his brother is called Gwydyr ; the name Arviragus is taken from a poem by Juvenal.
Juvenal is also highly critical of her in his Satire VI ( first translation by Peter Green and second translation from wikisource ):
* Berenice, 81 AD who first married her uncle Herod, king of Chalcis, and afterwards lived with her brother Agrippa, reputedly in an incestuous relationship, and subsequently married Polamo, king of Cilicia ; she is alluded to by Juvenal ; Bernice also had a common-law relationship with the Roman emperor Titus.
Information about Statius ' life is almost entirely drawn from his Silvae and a mention by the satirist Juvenal.
Some of Statius ' works, such as his poems for his competitions, have been lost ; he is recorded as having written an Agave mime, and a four line fragment remains of his poem on Domitian's military campaigns, the De Bello Germanico composed for the Alban Games in the scholia to Juvenal 4. 94.
The word " moneta " is where we get the words " money ", or " monetize ", used by writers such as Ovid, Martial, Juvenal, and Cicero.
There is evidence that this joke dates back to Roman times: Satire VI by Juvenal says that one cannot be happy while one's mother-in-law is still alive.
Satire is one of the few Roman additions to literature — Horace was the first to use satire extensively as a tool for argument, and Juvenal made it into a weapon.
The 2nd century Roman poet Juvenal, who may have served in Britain under Agricola, wrote in Satires that " arms had been taken beyond the shores of Ireland ", and the coincidence of dates is striking.
His best-known work, an edition of the thirteen Satires of Juvenal, is notable for an extraordinary wealth of illustrative quotations.
That Lodge is the " Young Juvenal " of Greene's Groatsworth of Wit is no longer a generally accepted hypothesis.
Simón Trinidad ( born July 30, 1950 ) is the alias of Juvenal Ovidio Ricardo Palmera Pineda, a high-ranking member of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia ( FARC ), and reputedly the first high-ranking member of that guerrilla group to be captured.
It is named after Juvenal, the Roman satirical poet.
A shadowy historical Arviragus is known only from a cryptic reference in a satirical poem by Juvenal, in which a giant turbot presented to the Roman emperor Domitian ( AD 81 – 96 ) is said to be an omen that " you will capture some king, or Arviragus will fall from his British chariot-pole ".

Juvenal and thought
Alternatively, the name may have been derived from the Roman poet Juvenal, who was thought also to have had the nomen Junius.

Juvenal and Statius
But the authors whom he quotes most frequently are Virgil, and, next to him, Terence, Cicero, Plautus ; then Lucan, Horace, Juvenal, Sallust, Statius, Ovid, Livy and Persius.
For the Alban Festival, Statius composed a poem on the German and Dacian campaigns of Domitian which Juvenal lampoons in his seventh satire.

Juvenal and type
Extant imagery rarely shows gladiators of the type with a net, yet the class is named for the device, and Juvenal uses the net to quickly identify a retiarius in his satires.

Juvenal and court
Juvenal savagely satirized the Domitianic court in his Satires, depicting the Emperor and his entourage as corrupt, violent and unjust.

Juvenal and poetry
In classical poetry the Tagus was famous for its gold-bearing sands ( Catullus 29. 19, Ovid, Amores, 1. 15. 34, Juvenal, Satires, 3. 55, etc.
In 1598, he published The Metamorphosis of Pigmalion's Image and Certaine Satyres, a book of poetry in imitation of, on the one hand, Ovid, and, on the other, the Satires of Juvenal.

Juvenal and fourth
Juvenal, for example, was fond of occasionally creating verses that placed a sense break between the fourth and fifth foot ( instead of in the usual caesura positions ), but this technique —- known as the bucolic diaeresis -— did not catch on with other poets.

Juvenal and satire
Juvenal, in his sixth satire, outright claims that they were lovers.
Juvenal, in his 15th satire, has given a lively description of a fight, of which he was an eye-witness, between the Ombitae and the inhabitants of Tentyra, who were hunters of the crocodile.
The first piece in which his peculiar powers were displayed was the first satire ( 1660 ), in imitation of the third satire of Juvenal ; it embodied the farewell of a poet to the city of Paris.
Persius strikes the highest note that Roman satire reached ; in earnestness and moral purpose he rises far superior to the political rancour or good natured persiflage of his predecessors and the rhetorical indignation of Juvenal.
He contributed a version of the eighth satire of Juvenal to the translation ( 1693 ) of the satires by John Dryden and others.
The serio-comic style became a rhetorical mainstay of the Cynics, and the Romans gave it its own genre in the form of satire, contributed to most notably by the poets Horace and Juvenal.

Juvenal and on
Pope's formal education ended at this time, and from then on he mostly educated himself by reading the works of classical writers such as the satirists Horace and Juvenal, the epic poets Homer and Virgil, as well as English authors such as Geoffrey Chaucer, William Shakespeare and John Dryden.
His principal works are translations of Strabo and of some of the Lives of Plutarch, a compendium of the Greek grammar of Chrysoloras, and a series of commentaries on Persius, Martial, the Satires of Juvenal, and on some of the writings of Aristotle and Cicero.
* See Mayor's note on Juvenal, Satire IV.
He was ordained deacon by Juvenal of Jerusalem on his visit to the Laura of Euthymus in 429 AD.
At that council Maximus II, his successor in the see of Antioch, obtained permission to assign Domnus a pension from the revenues of the church, and on his recall from exile Domnus returned to the monastic home of his youth, ending his days in the Laura of St. Euthymius, where in 452 AD, according to Theophanes, he afforded a refuge to Juvenal of Jerusalem when he was driven from his see ( Theophanes, p. 92 ).
) and the scholiasi on Juvenal ( vi.
He was born on September 12, 1924 in Bafatá, Guinea-Bissau, son of Cape Verdean father, Juvenal Lopes da Costa Cabral and Guinea-Bissauan mother Iva Pinhel Évora.
The 2nd century Roman poet Juvenal, in his satirical attack on the habits of Roman women, also complains about the pervasive influence of Chaldeans, despite their lowly social status, saying " Still more trusted are the Chaldaeans ; every word uttered by the astrologer they will believe has come from Hammon's fountain, ... nowadays no astrologer has credit unless he has been imprisoned in some distant camp, with chains clanking on either arm ".
The poem is loosely based on the Satires of Juvenal, and is a poem in heroic couplets, and though based on Juvenal, attains a Horatian satirical manner.
Already while at Oxford, he had begun work on his translation of Juvenal.
He also owned a large library, which contained not only religious works but also legal texts on canon law and works of classical authors such as Juvenal and Ovid.
When the country erupted into bloodshed following the death of President Juvenal Habyarimana ( no relation to the governor ) on 6 April 1994, only Butare was untouched, with the notable exception of the Nyakizu commune.
The Juvenalorden, or " Juvenal Order ", of 1907 was founded on the initiative of then student, later clergyman August Lindh, remembered for his widespread Swedish translation of the German student song O alte Burschenherrlichkeit ( in Swedish: Gamla klang-och jubeltid ), and with a tenuous connection to the original society in the form of the aging physician M. Aspelin, who had during his student days in Uppsala been introduced into the Juvenals by its principal figure, the poet and composer Gunnar Wennerberg ( 1817-1901 ) himself.
According to the account, Juvenal replied that, on the third day after her burial, Mary's tomb was discovered to be empty, only her shroud being preserved in the church of Gethsemane.

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