Ouça e leia

Entre em um mundo infinito de histórias

  • Ler e ouvir tanto quanto você quiser
  • Com mais de 500.000 títulos
  • Títulos exclusivos + Storytel Originals
  • 7 dias de teste gratuito, depois R$19,90/mês
  • Fácil de cancelar a qualquer momento
Assine agora
br bdp devices

Heauton Timorumenos (The Self-Tormentor): 'I am human and I think nothing of which is human is alien to me''

Idiomas
Inglês
Format
Categoria

Poesia & Teatro

Publius Terentius Afer is better known to us as the Roman playwright, Terence.

Much of his life, especially the early part, is either unknown or has conflicting sources and accounts.

His birth date is said to be either 185 BC or a decade earlier: 195 BC. His place of birth is variously listed as in, or, near Carthage, or, in Greek Italy to a woman taken to Carthage as a slave. It is suggested that he lived in the territory of the Libyan tribe that the Romans called Afri, near Carthage, before being brought to Rome as a slave. Probability suggests that it was there, in North Africa, several decades after the destruction of Carthage by the Romans in 146 BC, at the end of the Punic Wars, that Terence spent his early years.

One reliable fact is that he was sold to P. Terentius Lucanus, a Roman senator, who had him educated and, impressed by his literary talents, freed him.

These writing talents were to ensure his legacy as a playwright down through the millennia. His comedies, partially adapted from Greek plays of the late phases of Attic Comedy, were performed for the first time around 170–160 BC. All six of the plays he has known to have written have survived.

Indeed, thanks to his simple conversational Latin, which was both entertaining and direct, Terence's works were heavily used by monasteries and convents during the Middle Ages and The Renaissance. Scribes often learned Latin through the copious copying of Terence's texts. Priests and nuns often learned to speak Latin through re-enactment of Terence's plays. Although his plays often dealt with pagan material, the quality and distinction of his language promoted the copying and preserving of his text by the church. This preservation enabled his work to influence a wide spectrum of later Western drama.

When he was 25 (or 35 depending on which year of birth you ascribe too), Terence travelled to Greece but never returned. It has long been assumed that he died at some point during the journey.

Of his own family nothing is known, except that he fathered a daughter and left a small but valuable estate just outside Rome.

His most famous quotation reads: "Homo sum, humani nihil a me alienum puto", or "I am human, and I think nothing human is alien to me."

© 2019 Stage Door (Ebook): 9781787806252

Tradutores: Henry Thomas Riley

Data de lançamento

Ebook: 12 de junho de 2019

Tags

    Outros também usufruíram...

    1. Phormio (The Scheming Parasite) Terence
    2. Phormio (The Scheming Parasite): 'I am human and I think nothing of which is human is alien to me'' Terence
    3. Hecyra (The Mother-in-Law): 'I am human and I think nothing of which is human is alien to me'' Terence
    4. Coriolanus William Shakespeare
    5. The Captavi: 'Patience is the best remedy for every trouble'' Plautus
    6. Mostellaria or, The Haunted House Plautus
    7. Among Thieves M. J. Kuhn
    8. The Improvisatrice & Other Poems by Letitia Elizabeth Landon Letitia Elizabeth Landon
    9. The Eyes of the Dragon Stephen King
    10. Hamlet William Shakespeare
    11. The Cyclops Euripides
    12. The Idiot Dostoevsky Fyodor
    13. Hindu Influence in Mesopotamia and Iran London Swaminathan
    14. Death’s Kiss: A Daidoji Shin Mystery Josh Reynolds
    15. Dragons of Dawn: Trilogy of Fantasy Prequels with a Steampunk Twist Brian Rathbone
    16. Darius the Great: Biography of the Persian Ruler during the Achaemenid Empire Kelly Mass
    17. Medieval England: An Enthralling Overview of the English Middle Ages Enthralling History
    18. Trilby George du Maurier
    19. Prickly Moses: Poems Simon West
    20. The Ancient Egyptian Old Kingdom: Exploring the Ancient Origins of The Egypts First Empire STACY DALTON
    21. On Airs, Waters, and Places Hippocrates
    22. Mythologies of the Ancient World, Sumerian and Akkadian Philosophy Ryan Moorhen
    23. The Sumerian Golden Age: Legends of the Anunnaki as Revealed by their Mysterious Discoveries RYAN MOORHEN
    24. Ember and Stone Megan O'Russell
    25. Babylon: Its Dynasty, Kings, and Downfall Kelly Mass
    26. Akhenaten the Nephilim God King: Exploring Temples, Divinity and Monuments of the 18th Dynasty RYAN MOORHEN
    27. The House of Tudor: An Enthralling Overview of the History of the Tudors Enthralling History