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Titus Livius

Auteur de Histoire romaine, livre I à V

841+ oeuvres 10,445 utilisateurs 108 critiques 17 Favoris

A propos de l'auteur

Very little is known about the life of Livy (Titus Livius) other than that he was born in Patavium (modern-day Padua) and lived most of his life in Rome. It is clear from his writings that he was familiar with ancient Greek and Latin literature and was, in fact, influenced by Cicero. Although Livy afficher plus produced several works on philosophy and literary criticism, his masterpiece and life work of 40 years was his "History of Rome", which covers a vast sweep of Rome's history from its origins to Livy's own time. Of the original 142 books that made up the work, only 35 are extant---Books 1--10 and 20--45---which treat the years 753--293 b.c. and 218--167 b.c. Fragments of others, however, do remain, and summaries exist of all but one. When he wrote the history, Livy, who extolled the virtues of discipline, piety, and patriotism, believed that Rome was in a state of decline and moral decay. Wealth and luxury, he wrote, had led to "the dark dawning of our modern day, when we can neither endure our vices nor face the remedies needed to cure them." According to modern standards, Livy was neither an impressive nor critical historian. He perpetuated many inaccuracies. This, however, does not greatly minimize the value of his writing. His acumen lay in his vibrant style, his keen eye for character, and his gift for dramatic composition. (Bowker Author Biography) afficher moins
Crédit image: from Wikipedia

Séries

Œuvres de Titus Livius

Histoire romaine, livre I à V (0027) 3,436 exemplaires
History of Rome, books 21-30 (0001) — Auteur — 1,331 exemplaires
History of Rome, books 31-45 (0001) 507 exemplaires
Ab urbe condita livres xxi, xxii (1881) — Auteur — 140 exemplaires
History of Rome, books 3-4 (1922) 112 exemplaires
History of Rome, books 8-10 (1926) 109 exemplaires
History of Rome, books 5-7 (1924) 105 exemplaires
Ab urbe condita : libri 1-5 [in Latin] (1914) — Auteur — 98 exemplaires
History of Rome, books 28-30 (1949) 83 exemplaires
History of Rome, books 31-34 (1935) 80 exemplaires
History of Rome, books 23-25 (1940) — Auteur — 75 exemplaires
History of Rome, books 43-45 (1951) 70 exemplaires
History of Rome, books 35-37 (1935) 64 exemplaires
History of Rome, books 38-39 (1936) 55 exemplaires
Ab urbe condita, libri XXI-XXV (1946) — Auteur — 51 exemplaires
Ab urbe condita : libri 31-35 [in Latin] (1965) — Auteur — 27 exemplaires
Livy Book 1: Commentary (2000) 27 exemplaires
History of Rome (1978) 27 exemplaires
Livy (1833) 18 exemplaires
Modern School Classics : Livy : Book 1 (1964) — Writer — 18 exemplaires
The History of Rome (1823) 17 exemplaires
History of Rome : Book 2 [in Latin] (0025) — Auteur — 15 exemplaires
Ab urbe condita, libri XXI-XXIII (2000) — Auteur — 14 exemplaires
History of Rome : Books 21-22 [in Latin] — Auteur — 14 exemplaires
History of Rome : Book 5 [in Latin] (1905) — Auteur — 13 exemplaires
Storia di Roma (1999) 12 exemplaires
Livy: Books I, XXI and XXII (1891) 11 exemplaires
Modern School Classics : Livy : Book 1 [wrong cover] (1969) — Writer — 11 exemplaires
Ab urbe condita, liber III (0025) — Auteur — 10 exemplaires
Livy, book XXI (1973) — Writer — 9 exemplaires
Selections from Livy (2012) 9 exemplaires
Livy : Book XXX (2004) — Writer — 9 exemplaires
Rome's strijd om het bestaan (1974) 7 exemplaires
Ab urbe condita. Liber I (1974) 7 exemplaires
Livy : Book XXII : Edited with introduction and notes (1998) — Writer — 7 exemplaires
Ab urbe condita, libri IV-VI (0025) — Auteur — 6 exemplaires
History of Rome, books 9-26 (2006) 6 exemplaires
11: Libri 39.-40. (2000) 5 exemplaires
Història de Roma. I 5 exemplaires
HISTORIA DE ROMA VII, (2008) 5 exemplaires
La Roma legendaria : libros I-V (1999) 5 exemplaires
Historia De La Antiguedad - Roma (1981) 5 exemplaires
ˆLa ‰saga di Annibale (1982) 5 exemplaires
L' amore al tempo dei misteri (1995) 5 exemplaires
Het ontstaan van Rome (1973) 5 exemplaires
Livy: History of Rome, books I-II (1919) 5 exemplaires
Livy Book IX (1918) 5 exemplaires
Livy, books VIII-X, IV 4 exemplaires
Livius - Het begin van de res publica (1975) — Auteur — 4 exemplaires
Ab urbe condita. Libro V (1988) 4 exemplaires
Modern School Classics : Livy : Book 2 (1963) — Writer — 3 exemplaires
Modern School Classics : Livy : Book 30 (1957) — Writer — 3 exemplaires
Historia de Roma III 3 exemplaires
Historia de Roma II 3 exemplaires
Historiens romains (1968) 3 exemplaires
Historia de Roma: livro I (1999) 3 exemplaires
Historia Romana (Spanish Edition) (1998) 3 exemplaires
HISTORIA DE ROMA VIII 3 exemplaires
Desde la fundacion de Roma (1998) 3 exemplaires
Romas eldste historie (2012) 3 exemplaires
Ab urbe condita (1979) 3 exemplaires
5 (2007) 3 exemplaires
3 (2007) 3 exemplaires
Ab urbe condita, 45 3 exemplaires
The History of Rome, Volume II (1883) 3 exemplaires
Modern School Classics : Livy : Books 23-24 — Writer — 2 exemplaires
Ab urbe condita, libri I-III (0025) — Auteur — 2 exemplaires
The Seven Kings of Rome (1926) 2 exemplaires
Livy Book XXII 2 exemplaires
Livy: Book XXII 2 exemplaires
Book One 2 exemplaires
Hannibal the scourge of Rome (1976) — Writer — 2 exemplaires
History of Rome, books 9-10 (1994) 2 exemplaires
Stories of Rome 2 exemplaires
Ab urbe condita, 43-44 2 exemplaires
Ab urbe condita - Libro XXI (1985) 2 exemplaires
Historia de Roma IV 2 exemplaires
Historia de Roma V 2 exemplaires
Historia de Roma VI 2 exemplaires
Historiarum decas III 2 exemplaires
Storie: libri XXXVI-XL (1980) 2 exemplaires
Histoire romaine (2003) 2 exemplaires
libri XXVI-XXVII 1 exemplaire
Early History Of Rome 1 exemplaire
Dějiny. VII. 1 exemplaire
The History of Rome. Volume Two (1929) 1 exemplaire
MARSEN OVER ALPANE 1 exemplaire
Antologia liviana 1 exemplaire
Ab Urbe Condita, deel 1 — Auteur — 1 exemplaire
Ab Urbe Condita, deel 2 — Auteur — 1 exemplaire
Libri 35.-36. 1 exemplaire
Libri 7.-8. 1 exemplaire
Libri 39.-40. 1 exemplaire
Libri 37.-38. 1 exemplaire
Libri 33.-34. 1 exemplaire
Passi scelti 1 exemplaire
Livy : Book II 1 exemplaire
Römische Geschichte. Buch XXI-XXIII (2014) — Auteur — 1 exemplaire
Ab Urbe condita liber 27. (2017) 1 exemplaire
Livy's history of Rome Volume 2 (2013) 1 exemplaire
Extracts from Livy 1 exemplaire
Römische Geschichte 1 exemplaire
Storie: libri XXI-XXV 1 exemplaire
Libertas 1 exemplaire
Le storie libro 21 1 exemplaire
Histoire romaine 1 exemplaire
Storie 1 exemplaire
A Escrita e o Sono (1996) 1 exemplaire
Roms kungatid 1 exemplaire
Rom och Hannibal 1 exemplaire
Roms historia 1 exemplaire
Exercitia Liviana 1 exemplaire
História de Roma 1 exemplaire
STORIE VOL. II 1 exemplaire
Roma Tarihi I 1 exemplaire
Roma Tarihi II 1 exemplaire
Libri 21.-22. (1998) 1 exemplaire
The History of Rome, Volume 1 (2010) 1 exemplaire
History of Rome Books XXi, XXII (1922) 1 exemplaire
Early History of Rome 1 exemplaire
Storia romana 1 exemplaire
Storie: libro 45. 1 exemplaire
Fondation de rome (La) (1999) 1 exemplaire
7: Libro settimo 1 exemplaire
Roman history (2009) 1 exemplaire
La prima Deca 1 exemplaire
History of Rome, books 5-6 (1993) 1 exemplaire
Antologia storica 1 exemplaire
Hannibal Victor : Selections from Livy XXI & XXII (1985) — Writer — 1 exemplaire
Le Storie Libro X 1 exemplaire
Leabhar XXVI (1975) 1 exemplaire
4: Libri 8.-10 1 exemplaire
Livy IV: Books VIII-X 1 exemplaire
Livy - Book 12 1 exemplaire
Storia romana vol. III (1935) 1 exemplaire
Libri al rogo (2008) 1 exemplaire
Livy in14 Volumes 1 exemplaire
Livy I, Books I-II 1 exemplaire
[Livy] 1 exemplaire
Storia di Roma. Libri XLI-XLII (1994) 1 exemplaire
Livres XXI et XXII 1 exemplaire
Las décadas 1 exemplaire
Hay's Livy 1 exemplaire
Livy Book 1 1 exemplaire
Livy Books 1 and 2 1 exemplaire
Livy XXI and XXII 1 exemplaire
XXX-XXXIII 1 exemplaire
Books I, XXI, XXII 1 exemplaire
Livy, Books I., Xxi., and Xxii. (2010) 1 exemplaire
Ab Urbe Condita, I 1 exemplaire
Ab Urbe Condita, II 1 exemplaire
Titus Livius 1 exemplaire
Book XXII (1982) 1 exemplaire
Storia di Roma vol II 1 exemplaire
Loeb volumes 1 exemplaire
Deca I, III, IV 1 exemplaire
Roma Tarihi I. Kitap (1992) 1 exemplaire
Roma Tarihi II. Kitap 1 exemplaire
Libri XXVI - XXX 1 exemplaire
The History Of Rome Vol VI (2004) 1 exemplaire
Decades de Tite-Live 1 exemplaire
Libri IV - VI 1 exemplaire
Books XXIII-XXV 1 exemplaire
[Livii Decas tertia] 1 exemplaire
Rom's Historie 1 exemplaire
Livy: Book V 1 exemplaire
Sagunto : Aníbal en Hispania (2018) 1 exemplaire
Livy Books 35-37 1 exemplaire
Teatro Moderno De Lisboa (2009) 1 exemplaire
Livy Books XXIII-XXV 1 exemplaire
Livy XXIV 1 exemplaire
Livy Books XL-XLII 1 exemplaire
História Romana 1 exemplaire
Historiarum libri 1 exemplaire

Oeuvres associées

Men at War: The Best War Stories of All Time (1942) — Contributeur — 289 exemplaires
The Mammoth Book of True War Stories (1992) — Contributeur — 87 exemplaires
Roman Readings (1958) 67 exemplaires
Lapham's Quarterly - The Future: Volume IV, Number 4, Fall 2011 (2011) — Contributeur — 23 exemplaires
Modern School Classics : Selections from five Roman authors (1942) — Contributeur — 16 exemplaires
Latijns leesboek [I. Hoofdwerk] (1920) — Contributeur — 2 exemplaires

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Cicero and Livy à Ancient History (Septembre 2007)

Critiques

Surely more myth than history, but nonetheless it is very enjoyable and filled with parables. My favorites are the stories of the first seven kings of Rome, Coriolanus, and the Capitoline geese. It is required reading for anyone attempting to understand the Romans and how they understood their past.
 
Signalé
Russell098 | 17 autres critiques | Mar 28, 2023 |
Livy begins his history of the Roman War with Carthage with the following passage: "I am now about to tell the story of the most memorable war in history: that, namely, which was fought by Carthage under the leadership of Hannibal against Rome." Thus asserts Livy at the start of the decade beginning in 222bc, books 21–30. He was certainly correct regarding ancient history. The Indo-Germanic and Semitic races were at war with one another over world dominance. The historian notes that the two had a hatred for one another that was as great as their armies, and that they were not only evenly matched but also knowledgeable of the enemy's battle strategies and potential might.

Livy never downplays the exploits of Hannibal, a 26-year-old who emerged as the protagonist of his tale. Ninety thousand soldiers, twelve thousand cavalry, and thirty-seven elephants crossed the Alps, and he made up any facts he could not find in existing records. After failing to stop the Carthaginians in Gaul, Scipio the father attempted again in the Italian plains, but each setback terrorized the imperial city. After Trebia and Lake Trasimene, Fabius Maximus's delay strategies were successful in keeping the invaders at bay for a while, but another consul, Varro, was impatient, which led to the ultimate Roman loss at Cannae (216 b.c.e.). Hannibal could have easily reached Rome if he had capitalized on his victory.

Book 25 covers a different stage of the conflict. A seventy-four-year-old mathematician named Archimedes' inventions of the catapult and grappling hooks, which lifted the prows of Roman ships attempting to attack the breakwater and sank them, kept Marcellus, who was besieging Syracuse, at bay for three years. Ultimately, though, the Romans discovered the gap in the defenses and took control of the island. This war is not over, but will continue until Scipio pursues Hannibal all the way to Zamma outside of Carthage where he will lead Rome to their ultimate victory.

I was impressed that Livy opened his narrative mentioning Hannibal by name. That is undoubtedly because he is the most engaging character in the story and likely the best General in spite of ultimately being defeated by Scipio Africanus. It is a narrative is full of great commanders, brutal and bloody warfare, shifting loyalties, superstitions and omens, and enough thrills to keep the reader both informed and entertained.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
jwhenderson | 6 autres critiques | Jun 27, 2022 |
From the founding myth of Rome, narrated so eloquently by Virgil in The Aeneid, augmented with the tale of Romulus and Remus, Livy tells of the history of the republic to the beginning of the fourth century BC. This is an account that presents prosaic events enlivened with exciting moments of wars, political changes, the evolution from a monarchy to a republic, and great speeches by characters both unfamiliar and, sometimes, larger-than-life. Livy himself was born in Padua in 59 BC and died in 17 AD (about 40 years after the death of Virgil).

The early years of Roman history include the myth of Aeneas and the historic rule by Numa Pompilius whose life was also chronicled by Plutarch. There are battles like that of Lake Regillus and rulers both good and bad, the latter best represented by Canuleius the demagogue. My favorite was Cincinnatus who was the epitome of the farmer-soldier- ruler and who assumed the consulship only to return to the farm when his moment in the limelight had ended.

The many battles and usual successes highlight a barbarity that provides a foundation for that which is evident in the later empire (see Tacitus for that history). There are also the political battles between the Patricians and Plebes for control of the republic. In some ways they reminded me of more recent political contretemps in our own republic. It may come as a surprise that after many difficulties and resultant growth in the power of Rome, near the end of this part of Roman history the city itself is sacked by the Gauls. It must be the memory of that which explains some of the ruthlessness of the Romans under Caesar in the last days of the Republic (see Caesar's Gallic Wars for that story).

Ultimately Livy's history is readable both because of his engaging prose style and his ability to enliven most of the more critical events of early Roman history. With interpolated speeches from primary leaders the book reminded me of Thucydides masterpiece on the Peloponnesian Wars.
… (plus d'informations)
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Signalé
jwhenderson | 17 autres critiques | Apr 30, 2022 |
Resumen de HISTORIA ROMANA . PRIMERA DECADA
Esta obra representa el intento de Tito Livio por consignar por escrito la total historia interna y externa de Roma, desde la fundación de la Ciudad hasta la muerte de Augusto. Pese a que hoy sólo se conserva la quinta parte de los 142 libros, el mutilado panorama de la Historia Romana alcanza a mostrarnos las épocas decisivas del periodo en que los republicanos sentaron las bases de la expansión territorial de los romanos, aquello en que se sustentaría el Imperio durante largos siglos.
Livio opta no por el seguimiento monográfico, sino por el camino de la interpretación y el análisis de los hechos, donde la razón no pelea con lo poético. Se inclina más que a reflejar los aspectos oscuros y truculentos de la historia, a representar la majestad y la nobleza de las acciones. Es ante todo un narrador y de los personajes, crear situaciones épicas y dramáticas.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
Gerardo.Pocovi5g | Aug 26, 2021 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
841
Aussi par
9
Membres
10,445
Popularité
#2,279
Évaluation
3.9
Critiques
108
ISBN
495
Langues
18
Favoris
17

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