- The
Rhetorica ad
Herennium (Rhetoric for Herennius) is the
oldest surviving Latin book on rhetoric,
dating from the late 80s BC. It was
formerly attributed...
-
Rhetorica ad
Herennium.
Populus Rom****
Numantiam delevit Kartaginem sustulit Corinthum disiecit Fregellas evertit. (Anon.
Rhetorica ad
Herennium. IV. xxvii...
-
ancient Roman and Gr****
rhetorical treatises (in the
anonymous Rhetorica ad
Herennium, Cicero's De Oratore, and Quintilian's
Institutio Oratoria). Many memory...
-
repeating the last word in
successive phrases, for
example (from
Rhetorica ad
Herennium), "Since the time when from our
state concord disappeared,
liberty disappeared...
-
persons concerned, and
interest in the consequences. The 84 BC
Rhetorica ad
Herennium book of an
unknown author theorizes that the
conclusion is the most important...
- eat" is
commonly attributed to Socrates. A
quotation from
Rhetorica ad
Herennium IV.28 : "Esse
oportet ut vivas; non
vivere ut edas" ("It is necessary...
-
Gaius Herennius (otherwise unknown),
addressee of the book
Rhetorica ad
Herennium Marcus Herennius Picens (consul 34 BC)
Herennius Senecio (died c. 90)...
-
Elenchis (c. 350 BC)
Topics (c. 350 BC) De
Inventione (84 BC)
Rhetorica ad
Herennium (80 BC) De
Oratore (55 BC) A
Dialogue Concerning Oratorical Partitions...
- from that
ritual performed at
other times. For example, the
Rhetorica ad
Herennium, a
treatise by an
unknown author from
about 90 BC
details the execution...
-
memory which deal with the
subject at
length include the
Rhetorica ad
Herennium (Bk III), Cicero's De
oratore (Bk II 350–360), and Quintilian's Institutio...