Home
Archaeology
Astronomy
Biology
Books
Business
Chemistry
Coins
Computers
Conservation
Cooking
Earth Science
Farming
Economics
Finance
Games
Geography
Health Science
History by Date
Hobbies
Law
Mathematics
Medicine
Military Technology
Movies
Music
People
Pharmacology
Philosophy
Physics
Psychology
Religion
Science History
Technology
Sports
Television
Video
Visual Art
Privacy
Contact Us



Ennius

Initial paragraph removed--possible copyright infringement. Text that was previously posted here is only trivially different from text from this source:
http://www.bartleby.com/65/en/Ennius-Q.html (Columbia Encyclopedia article)

Please do not edit this page until the copyright issue is resolved, even if you are rewriting it (follow the instructions below).

This page is now listed on Wikipedia:Possible copyright infringements. To the poster: If there was permission to use this material under terms of our license or if you are the copyright holder of the externally linked text, then please so indicate on the talk page. If there was no permission to use this text then please rewrite the page at:

Talk:Ennius/temp

or leave this page to be deleted. Deletion will occur about one week from the time this page title was placed on the Wikipedia:Possible copyright infringements page. If a temp page is created, it will be moved here following deletion of the original.

It also should be noted that the posting of copyrighted material that does not have the express permission of the copyright holder is possibly in violation of applicable law and of our policy. Those with a history of violations may be temporarily suspended from editing pages. If this is in fact an infringement of copyright, we still welcome any original contributions by you.

Thanks, John Cowan

Ennius' more famous works include: the "Epicharmus", the "Euhemerus", the "Hedyphagetica", and "Saturae".

The "Epicharmus" presented an account of the gods and the physical operations of the universe. In it, the poet dreamed he had been transported after death to some place of heavenly enlightenment.

The "Euhemerus" presented a theological doctrine of a vastly different type in a mock-simple prose modeled on the Greek of Euhemerus of Messene and several other theological writers. According to this doctrine, the gods of Olympius were not supernatural powers still actively intervening in the affairs of men, but great generals, statesmen. and inventors of olden times commemorated after death in extraordinary ways.

The "Hedyphagetica" took much of its substance from the gastronomical epic of Archestratus of Gela, a work commonly with Epicureanism. The eleven extant hexameters have prosodical features avoided in the more serious "Annales".

The remains of six books of "Saturae" show a considerable variety of metres. There are signs that Ennius varied the metre sometimes even within a composition. A frequent theme was the social life of Ennius himself and his upper-class Roman friends and their intellectual conversation.

"The idle mind knows not what it wants." - Ennius

See: H. D. Jocelyn, The Tragedies of Ennius (1967); R. A. Brooks, Ennius and Roman Tragedy (1981); O. Skutsch, The Annals of Quintus Ennius (1985).


Copyright 2004. All rights reserved.