Romulus is a young demigod, impetuous, creative, violent, unhampered by scruples, exposed to the temptations of tyranny; Numa is a completely human old man, moderate, an organizer, peaceful, mindful of order and legality. 55 Myers (1994) 27. 46 I will limit myself, therefore, to a few
.neque in terris morabor),
Princeton
slingshot in line 218 recalls a bit of "pseudo-science taken on trust by
of Pythagoras' discourse, that he can assimilate "philosophy" to his
Woodman, T. (1992). We would like to show you a description here but the site won’t allow us. The complication here is that Pythagoras is quoted (by Ovid) as saying he is quoting the Delphic oracle. Storia del Pitagorismo nel mondo romano. as important, while the philosopher, represented by Pythagoras, proclaims
(“Numa Pompilius, who was brought to Rome from the fields where olives grow, was the first to realize that two months were missing from the year, whether he was taught by the Samian [Pythagoras], who believes that we can be reborn, or whether it was Egeria who told him.”) Later, in the Epistulae ex Ponto, in the midst of a catalogue of a familiar type in the exile poetry, Ovid adduces mythic examples of students who brought no harm to their teachers, ex Ponto 3.3.43-4: praemia nec Chiron ab Achille talia cepit,/ Pythagoreaeque ferunt non nocuisse Numam (“But Chiron got no such payment from Achilles, and they say that Numa did no harm to Pythagoras.”). … live your life and always cultivate friendships –on this charge the school of the Pythagorean sages died out. 61 Trist. Burkert (1961) 237 n.5 and Maltby
Abge am 12.12.16 um 17:48 Uhr . 36
Callimachus Iambus 1 (fr. never had any appeal in Rome and serious philosophy had a limited audience. exiled; and Sextius was credited with establishing a Pythagorean sect that,
Why Ausonius and Martianus Capella? observed correctly, the vehement attacks on it by Cicero, Dionysius, Livy,
Cap. thunderbolts now are tela . A very preliminary version of this paper was delivered at the Leeds
4 Kenney (1986) xviii. 77 Off. Metamorphoses. 2 C.L. preceding 14 books with a vast array of styles and genres; it is clear that
singuli�re
Ogilvie, Commentary on Livy, p. 89. 60-74: 146-159; 165-172; 176-185; 234-58 745-870 u.a. The narrator happens to be a philosopher; we are
33 Detailed documentation in Segl (1970) 43-4 and B�mer ad loc. Just
odd & even], and acknowledged the lady herself, a majestic, exalted, and awe-inspiring figure, to be in very truth the procreator of the gods. La meilleure citation de Pythagore préférée des internautes. 30 By B�mer ad loc. All things change; nothing dies: the soul wanders, going from here to there and from there to here, occupying whatever limbs it will, moving from beast to human and from human to beast and never dying. Its suggestive model is far more emphatically poetic:
Pythagoras." Secondly, Pythagoras had a Roman affiliation that was particularly suitable
Jenkinson.). At the time of the Trojan War I myself (as I recall) was once Panthous’ son, Euphorbus, whom the heavy spear of the lesser son of Atreus once impaled in the heart. dialogue with his Roman predecessors: with Ennius by recall of the earlier
ferryman, the frogs, and swamps, was at a low ebb among the Roman
A fictionalized portrayal of Pythagoras appears in Book XV of Ovid's Metamorphoses, in which he delivers a speech imploring his followers to adhere to a strictly vegetarian diet. . 52 See B�mer ad loc. Metamorphosen herauskristallisiert. By raising issues that are central to his work, Ovid appeals to the reader
in
Leonard, W.E. 4.2: erat enim illis (sc. 48 Primus may be a reference to the tradition that Pythagoras was the
195 devoid of the numerous connotations the term had acquired in previous
Ovidian closures bears revisiting. Pythagoricos) writings. We are looking at multiple appropriations and inversions from Lucretius. version in the Fasti (Book 1.337), does he attribute the origin of bloodless
März 43 v. the specific tenets of one philosophy or the other. Ovid's treatment of the
buys into the usual dichotomies-the main task for the interpreter of
54 Over time,
gusto. 15.66-72), but completely fails to develop. Philodemus and that fact is relevant to some of his characterizations in the
bring them back together. parody-such labels are too facile because the speech is more than
The poem or, , he tells us on several occasions, was the, . , which has destroyed its master who feared nothing of this kind!”; 2.9.75-6. Rather, the gibes of Horace and Laberius, just
17 On the Sextii, see Ferrero (1955) 360-78; cf. cosmogony does not fit the simple matrix of (mythological) poetry vs.
Latein Kl. until the last book, have been a long philosophical disquisition and a
Ovid's refusal to develop Pythagorean philosophy proper has been prepared
7.729: verum feminam Pythagoras, ut inter sapientes astabat, usque abacum consecutus, idemque iam artem, promere cupienti quandam lactei luminis facem officioso consistens munere praeferebat. For a review of scholarship on the problem, A. Storchi-Marino, “Il Pitagorismo romano. These nouns, being Greek, keep the s in the nominative”) [trans. cosmogony-is Ovid there indebted to philosophy rather than poetry? (“The critics call Ennius ‘another Homer’, both wise and accomplished in epic”), on which Porph. Green notes, “this poem is an expanded version of AP 9.359 (Possidipus 22 in Gow-Page, HE)26”, a celebrated epigram by Posidippus (c. 310-240 BC) on the proper path to choose in life. the ramifications. 18As R.P.H. G. Dumézil, Archaic Roman Religion, Chicago, 1970, p. 198-99: “The reigns of Romulus and Numa were conceived as the two wings of a diptych, each of them demonstrating one of two types, the two equally necessary but antithetical provinces of sovereignty. Portal de recursos electrónicos de ciencias sociales y humanidades, Catálogo de 552 revistas. Moreover, Ovid’s stylistic influence on both authors is well-known3, and both write enough about Pythagoras to offer fitting test-cases, as it were, to evaluate whether what I see as significant in Ovid’s representation is also of concern in later authors. Why do you fear the Styx? Doch so schön auch jede Lektüre ist – irgendwann steht wieder eine Klausur an. 7 Some
One of the most clamorous incidents in the tradition of the tale took place
Perhaps less improbable is the notion that the, can be brought into close relation with the poet’s work in exile, the, Indeed, Ovid’s sprawling epic on changing forms in myth and history was “published” in the very year of Ovid’s banishment (8 AD), and some consensus seems to be building that at least certain passages in the poem were revised during the period of the poet’s exile, , Chicago, 1970, p. 198-99: “The reigns of Romulus and Numa, A connection between Ovid as banished poet and Pythagoras as exiled philosopher has been suggested by Philip Hardie, and it would be worthwhile to pursue Hardie’s line of argument further. Hugo Magnus. Lateinischer Text: Übersetzung (89) Aurea prima sata est aetas, quae vindice nullo, sponte sua, sine lege fidem rectumque colebat. Ovidian polyphony is replaced by the monotone of Pythagorean
Uterque consocius crustulis memorialibus utitur. Rome
among a large public. tollite . 'Ovid' in E.J. By his times, pseudoscience and science
. From the temporal perspective of Ovid's readers, Numa was,
Ovid ist einer der „Abitur-Autoren“ und seine Metamorphosen bieten eine Fülle an interessanten Lektürethemen. freeze and harden rather than heat up.
38 Segl (1970) 45-7. Pythagoras permet aux géomètres et topographes d’offrir aux architectes, gestionnaires des terres et exploitants miniers des services à la hauteur de leurs exigences dans les secteurs du dragage, de l’agriculture, de la construction, etc. immortality (cf. Harris, Stahl, & Burge, 1977]. manner, alerts us to the fact that the material could be presented in other
B.C. One dimension, as we
we saw earlier, not part of the Roman mainstream or of Numa's legacy. provided the vera ratio is pointed out at the same time. In the episode itself Pythagoras appears as a committed vegetarian, a purveyor of metempyschosis –the theory of the eternal reincarnation of the soul– and, more generally, an ethical philosopher promoting the idea of perpetual change in the physical universe. Ovidio,' Materiali e Discussioni 23.55-97
O what a steadfast rule of speech!”). therefore, also recalls Homer, an aspect that is central to the
pantew, with the further remarks by M. L. West in CR 21 (1971) 330-1. rejected poetry. popular ideas, while in the second part he simply juxtaposes, rather than
London Bal, M. (1985). In Latin literature Numa becomes a sage and ethical reformer on the model of one of the greatest ethical reformers in the Greek (and Italian) tradition. bello pacis traduxit ad artes. Not surprisingly, we are dealing again with the
to consider each individual aspect, such as the philosophical coloring,
philosophical. It lies, to restate
Quis deum? In den Warenkorb. Pythagoras est une application performante qui permet de réaliser des présentations et calculs techniques dans les domaines de la topographie, cartographie, gestion de territoires, conception routière, relief et occupation du sol. For Ausonius the symbol serves to explain his nephew’s misfortune: Herculanus failed to choose the right path as a young man and met his downfall because of it. . Die Klostergelehrsamkeit zieht sich auf mystische Probleme zurck. In Martianus, Pythagoras’ intellect is intimately connected with divinity, again because his great knowledge of the liberal arts made him like a god. Ausonii Burdigalensis Opuscula Omnia. Matthew M. McGowan, « What distinguishes Ovid’s Pythagoras from the Pythagoras of Ausonius and Martianus Capella? de PYTHAGORE: ISBN: sur amazon.fr, des millions de livres livrés chez vous en 1 jour 12 Testimonia of continuing Roman interest in him include,
Green notes, “this poem is an expanded version of. Friedr. (“Pythagoras’ relative, the bean”), but see Hor. challenge he himself faced in stringing together a mass of often
(1.2), which preserves the legend of Pythag. 42 We should keep in mind, of course, that Ovid is
didactic
Roma e la filosofia greca dalle origini alla fine del
(“For on account of your translations, Pythagoras the musician and Ptolemy the astronomer are read as native Italians; Nicomachus the arithematician and Euclid the geometrist are heard as native Ausonians; Plato and Aristotle, masters of the divine and logic respectively, debate in the language of Romulus.”). Matthew M. McGowan, « What distinguishes Ovid’s Pythagoras from the Pythagoras of Ausonius and Martianus Capella? philosophy, we need to look only at Vitruvius.
another point to Ovid's ascent super astra: his deification will be even
for one of the main themes of the last book of the Metamorphoses, the
religionem pertinere existimabantur, a version followed by Lactantius (Div. 45 Cf. Vita Pythag. 15.153-75: O genus attonitum gelidae formidine mortis!/ quid Styga, quid tenebras et nomina uana timetis,/ materiem uatum, falsique pericula mundi?/ corpora, siue rogus flamma seu tabe uetustas/ abstulerit, mala posse pati non ulla putetis:/ morte carent animae semperque priore relicta/ sede nouis domibus uiuunt habitantque receptae./ ipse ego (nam memini) Troiani tempore belli/ Panthoides Euphorbus eram, cui pectore quondam/ haesit in aduerso grauis hasta minoris Atridae./ cognoui clipeum, laeuae gestamina nostrae,/ nuper Abanteis templo Iunonis in Argis./ Omnia mutantur, nihil interit: errat et illinc/ huc uenit, hinc illuc et quoslibet occupet artus/ spiritus eque feris humana in corpora transit/ inque feras noster, nec tempore deperit ullo,/ utque nouis facilis signatur cera figuris/ nec manet, ut fuerat, nec formas seruat easdem,/ sed tamen ipsa eadem est, animam sic semper eandem/ esse sed in uarias doceo migrare figuras./ ergo, ne pietas sit uicta cupidine uentris,/ parcite, uaticinor, cognatas caede nefanda/ exturbare animas, nec sanguine sanguis alatur. dictis is left entirely to the reader. concerned. (1967). 19 Cf. Allgemeinbildung. The passage is also part of Ovid's ongoing
MwSt. 241; Diog. 15 But what was it? Metamorphoses, transl. likes the traditional story, Plutarch is forced to restate, in he concluding
alert to the differences, too. Similarly, despite all the importance of love as a theme in the
Harris, Stahl, & Burge 1977]. (“A living race thunder-struck by the fear of an icy death! Ovide structure son récit pour créer l’attente et le suspense. Euphorbus (Met. 'Voci e istanze narrative nelle Metamorfosi di
2.213: Samius Pythagoras caelestes quosdam numeros replicabat (“The Samian Pythagoras was going over some heavenly numbers”.). Si la création de la statue va immédiatement de pair avec l’éveil de l’amour (v. 243-252), Ovide ménage une progression dans l’illusion amoureuse (v. 252-258), et dans les marques d’amour (v. 259-269). In Dumézil’s famous formulation, he is the priest-king of religious foundation and legal formulation to Romulus’ warrior-king of martial prowess and urban defense14. In Horace's
11, Gymnasium/FOS, Nordrhein-Westfalen 33 KB. others that credence in the actual mythology of the underworld, such the
Finally,
For Ausonius and Martianus are typical of and, to a large degree, determinative for the representation of Pythagoras as a mathematician, musician and, generally, ethical sage common in late-antique and medieval literature and art, . Voss. 20: De viro bono. reputed to have taught the Romans along with Lucanians, Messapians, and
This
ways. . public, and Ovid knew his audience. In this case, Pythagoras is adduced as a model for proper behavior, and while Ausonius’ admonition is clearly meant to be humorous, it nevertheless points to how one should behave and is thus in the strictest sense “ethical”. (1995) (edd.). Pytagorice atioasis (On a good man: Pythagorean precept); Ecl. cuncta fluunt, omnisque vagans formatur imago. 41 Similarly, Lucretius (2.700-703,
Due, O.S. Harris, Stahl, & Burge 1977]. 2.2; Festus p. 23 L.; cf. poetic on the other, as indicated especially in Ovid's cabinet of mirabilia
. cumulative argument. Metamorphosen. contrast to Lucretius' rationalist critique that denied the existence of
The mythological explanation is four times the length of the scientific one. J.R. . (1988), Anderson (1995), and Walter and Horn (1995). In turn, if the oracle is reciting the words of the god, we are privy to a dizzying … Segl, A. 43 Segl (1970) 57 with n.265; Crahay and Hubaux (1958) 286. Ovide bouffon of the 17th century (Moog-Gr�newald [1979] 124-56). quod secundum Pythagorae dogma anima Homeri in suum corpus uenisset. the underworld- applies equally to Vergil's brave remythologizing of Hades
A full explanation of the causes behind Ovid’s exile, it seems, has been trumped by history; for no solution to the problem, however ingenious, can lay claim to certainty and few have ever met with approval for long8.