- (Controversiae) and at
least one book on
fictitious speeches of
persuasion (
Suasoriae), his
effort was
ostensibly at the
request of his sons, and was ostensibly...
- (1974).
Suasoriae. Vol. 464.
Harvard University Press. p. 485. doi:10.4159/DLCL.seneca_elder-
suasoriae.1974.
Seneca the
Elder (1974).
Suasoriae. Vol. 464...
- B****us as a historian; however, the
fragments preserved in that writer's
Suasoriae (vi. 23)
relating to the
death of
Cicero are
characterized by an affected...
-
rhetorical declamation and may
derive from Ovid's
interest in
rhetorical suasoriae,
persuasive speeches, and ethopoeia, the
practice of
speaking in another...
-
lived in the
latter part of the
Augustan age. Silo is
mentioned in the
suasoriae of
Seneca the Elder.
Seneca wrote that he was a
pupil of the rhetorician...
- "De
Errore Profanarum Religionum" (1856)
edition of
Seneca the Elder's "
Suasoriae" (1857).
Lustrum (journal), the
successor to
Bursians Jahresbericht Chisholm...
-
around the
reign of Claudius. List of
Roman gentes Seneca the Elder,
Suasoriae, ii. p. 21 (ed. Bipontina). Smith, William, ed. (1870). "Abronius Silo"...
-
already become famous,
being quoted for
example in
Seneca the Elder's
Suasoriae: tuis verbis, Cicero,
utendum est: 'o tempora! o mores!'
videbis ardentes...
-
repetitive exercises in the
creation of
discourses on
historical subjects (
suasoriae) or on
classic legal questions (controversiae).
Although he is not commonly...
-
their necks for the
death blow by comrades: cf Cicero's
death in Seneca's
Suasoriae, 6.17.
Welch 2007, p. 17. Livy, 22.55–57.
Barton 1993, p. 15; Kyle 2007...