-
Famulus (possibly Fabulus,
Fabullus, or Amulius) was a
fresco painter famous for his work in the
Domus Aurea, Rome, that was
commissioned by Nero. Because...
- poet Catullus. The poem
belongs to the
literary genre of mock-invitation.
Fabullus is
invited to dine at the poet's home, but he will need to
bring all the...
-
attachment to the napkins, as they were a gift from two
close friends,
Fabullus and Veranius. In
comparison to Catullus's
other invective poetry, this...
- the two dinner-party
poems (12 and 13) both
mentioning a gift from or to
Fabullus.
Another balancing pair is 6 and 10,
which contrast the
mistresses (scorta)...
-
colonies on the part of
young Romans of that day were common:
compare Fabullus in
Catullus 28. In his
Victorian translation of Catullus, R. F. Burton...
- Exupereus,
Exuperius Faber, Fabi****, Fabiolus, Fabrici****, Fabulli****,
Fabullus, Facilis, Facundinus, Facundus, Fadus, ****us, Falco, Falconillus, Falx...
- the
features of the
baths was
mural designs by the
artist Famulus (or
Fabullus), both al
fresco and al stucco.
Before the
designs fell into disrepair...
-
Aquinus legatus legionis 68-69
Rhine frontier Tacitus, Histories, i.7
Fabius Fabullus legatus legionis 69-70
Rhine frontier Tacitus, Histories, iii.14 [...]...
- 89 Or the
following two
examples (in
translations by Mark Ynys-Mon):
Fabullus' wife B****a
frequently totes A friend's baby, on
which she
loudly dotes...
- position. From this poem it is
clear that Catullus's
friends Veranius and
Fabullus were kept
under an
equally close rein when they
accompanied Lucius Piso...