- Britannica. Vol. 16 (11th ed.).
Cambridge University Press. p. 111. "Titi
Lucretii Cari De
rerum natura libri **** (Montaigne.1.4.4)".
Cambridge Digital Library...
- patrician, the gens
later included a
number of
plebeian families. The
Lucretii were one of the most
ancient gentes, and the
second wife of Numa Pompilius...
- Lucretius: De
rerum natura (1475–1494),
digitised codex at
Somni Titi
Lucretii Cari De
rerum natura libri ****,
published in
Paris 1563,
later owned and...
-
Princeps senatus.
Lucretius was a
member of the
patrician family of the
Lucretii Tricipitini, a
house whose members were
integral to the
founding of the...
- and
Twenty Attempts at an
Answer (2010), pp. 325–326, 365 n. 325. "Titi
Lucretii Cari De
rerum natura libri **** (Montaigne.1.4.4)".
Cambridge Digital Library...
- (1995). The
Western Canon.
Riverhead Books. ISBN 978-1573225144. "Titi
Lucretii Cari De
rerum natura libri **** (Montaigne.1.4.4)".
Cambridge Digital Library...
- rose to prominence. A
number of
patrician families such as the Horatii,
Lucretii,
Verginii and
Menenii rarely appear in
positions of
importance during the...
-
State University. p. 202. ISBN 9780940474475.
Retrieved 9 July 2015. "Titi
Lucretii Cari De
rerum natura libri **** (Montaigne.1.4.4)".
Cambridge Digital Library...
- 459.
Butterfield (2013), p. 89.
Kendall &
Wallis (2010), p. 191. "Titi
Lucretii Cari De
rerum natura Libri **** (Montaigne.1.4.4)".
Cambridge University...
-
According to
Roman tradition,
Lucretia (/luːˈkriːʃə/ loo-KREE-shə,
classical Latin: [ɫʊˈkreːtia]; died c. 510 BC),
anglicized as Lucrece, was a noblewoman...