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         Plutarch:     more books (100)
  1. Plutarch's Lives Volume Two (Barnes & Noble Library of Essential Reading) (B&N Library of Essential Reading) by Plutarch, 2006-08-17
  2. The Age of Alexander: Nine Greek Lives (Penguin Classics, L286) by Plutarch, 1973-09-30
  3. Plutarch's Morals: ethical essays by Plutarch Plutarch, A R. 1848-1894 Shilleto, 2010-08-17
  4. The Children's Plutarch: Tales Of The Greeks (1910) by F. J. Gould, 2010-09-10
  5. Plutarch: Lives of Noble Grecians and Romans (Modern Library Series, Vol. 1) by Plutarch, 1992-09-05
  6. Alexander The Great: Selections From Arrian, Diodorus, Plutarch, And Quintus Curtius by Arrian, Diodorus Siculus, et all 2005-04-15
  7. Plutarch: Moralia, Volume VII, On Love of Wealth. On Compliancy. On Envy and Hate. On Praising Oneself Inoffensively. On the Delays of the Divine Vengeance. On Fate... (Loeb Classical Library No. 405) by Plutarch, 1959-01-01
  8. Plutarch's Morals: Ethical Essays by Plutarch Arthur Richard Shilleto, 2008-08-21
  9. Plutarch's Lives (Volume 2 of 2) by Plutarch, 2009-01-01
  10. Plutarch's Lives, Volume I by Plutarch, 2009-10-04
  11. Greek and Roman Lives (Giant Thrifts) by Plutarch, 2005-10-06
  12. The children's Plutarch: tales of the Romans by Frederick James Gould, William Dean Howells, et all 2010-07-31
  13. Plutarch's life of Lucius Cornelius Sulla by Hubert A Holden, 2009-11-24
  14. Plutarch's Lives Volume III. by Plutarch, 2009-10-04

21. Plutarch: Lives Of The Noble Grecians And Romans By Clough And Plutarch - Projec
Download the free eBook Plutarch Lives of the noble Grecians and Romans by Clough and Plutarch.
http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/674
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Plutarch: Lives of the noble Grecians and Romans by Clough and Plutarch
Help Read online Bibliographic Record Creator Clough, Arthur Hugh, 1819-1861 Creator Plutarch, 46-120? Title Plutarch: Lives of the noble Grecians and Romans Language English LoC Class PA: Language and Literatures: Classical Languages and Literature Subject Biography Subject Classics Subject Greece Subject Rome EText-No. Release Date
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22. Penn State S Electronic Classics Series Plutarch Page
From this site you can download works by Plutarch (46 120 Greek Biographer and Essayist) in Adobe s ® Acrobat ® Portable Document File format.
http://www2.hn.psu.edu/faculty/jmanis/plutarch.htm

23. Macedonia FAQ: Alexander By Plutarch
Alexander. (died B.C.E.) By Plutarch Written A.C.E. Translated by John Dryden. It being my purpose to write the lives of Alexander the king, and of Caesar,
http://faq.macedonia.org/history/alexander.plutarch.html
Alexander (died B.C.E.)
By Plutarch
Written A.C.E.
Translated by John Dryden Philip, after this vision, sent Chaeron of Megalopolis to consult the oracle of Apollo at Delphi, by which he was commanded to perform sacrifice, and henceforth pay particular honour, above all other gods, to Ammon; and was told he should one day lose that eye with which he presumed to peep through that chink of the door, when he saw the god, under the form of a serpent, in the company of his wife. Eratosthenes says that Olympias, when she attended Alexander on his way to the army in his first expedition, told him the secret of his birth, and bade him behave himself with courage suitable to his divine extraction. Others again affirm that she wholly disclaimed any pretensions of the kind, and was wont to say, "When will Alexander leave off slandering me to Juno?" Alexander was born the sixth of Hecatombaeon, which month the Macedonians call Lous, the same day that the temple of Diana at Ephesus was burnt; which Hegesias of Magnesia makes the occasion of a conceit, frigid enough to have stopped the conflagration. The temple, he says, took fire and was burnt while its mistress was absent, assisting at the birth of Alexander. And all the Eastern soothsayers who happened to be then at Ephesus, looking upon the ruin of this temple to be the forerunner of some other calamity, ran about the town, beating their faces, and crying that this day had brought forth something that would prove fatal and destructive to all Asia.

24. Bucephalus , Plutarch
Bucephalus, Plutarch. Philonicus the Thessalian brought the horse Bucephalus to Philip, offering to sell him for thirteen talents; but when they went into
http://1stmuse.com/alex3/bucephalus.html
Bucephalus, Plutarch
Return to index.
Send remarks or suggestions to: John J. Popovic

25. Mike Huckabee’s Weight Loss Scam « Plutarch’s Weblog
evidence put together at Plutarch’s Weblog is long and convincing, but here’s the summary of it We’ve considered a host of clinical …
http://plutarch01.wordpress.com/2007/12/11/new-121007-300pm/
@import url( http://s.wordpress.com/wp-content/themes/pub/classic/style.css?m=1199764848 ); var gaJsHost = (("https:" == document.location.protocol) ? "https://ssl." : "http://www."); document.write(unescape("%3Cscript src='" + gaJsHost + "google-analytics.com/ga.js' type='text/javascript'%3E%3C/script%3E"));
December 11, 2007
Filed under: Uncategorized Huckabee (This is a long article, you can read the summary here Mike Huckabee In June 2003, Mike Huckabee was an obscure and obese (290 lb.) Arkansas Governor. By June 2004, Huckabee lost 110 lbs., which he attributed to diet and exercise. This feat naturally attracted media attention as a human-interest story, to which Huckabee added a public policy angle by also touting his anti-obesity public health initiative called Healthy Arkansas . This program included public service spots featuring a newly trim Governor Huckabee assuring Arkansans that if he could lose weight, so could they. Huckabee was featured in a spate of articles and media appearances that gave him enough national awareness to launch his long-shot Presidential candidacy. According to the Washington Post Huckabee wrote a book about using diet and exercise for weight loss

26. Cicero By Plutarch
Read classic literature including Cicero by Plutarch at 4literature.net.
http://www.4literature.net/Plutarch/Cicero/
Books [ Titles Authors Articles Front Page ... FAQ
Cicero by Plutarch Buy more than 2,000 books on a single CD-ROM for only $19.99. That's less then a penny per book! Click here for more information. Read, write, or comment on essays about Cicero Search for books Search essays 75 AD CICERO 106-43 B.C. by Plutarch translated by John Dryden CICERO - IT is generally said, that Helvia, the mother of Cicero, was both well-born and lived a fair life; but of his father nothing is reported but in extremes. For whilst some would have him the son of a fuller, and educated in that trade, others carry back the origin of his family to Tullus Attius, an illustrious king of the Volscians, who waged war not without honour against the Romans. However, he who first of that house was surnamed Cicero seems to have been a person worthy to be remembered; since those who succeeded him not only did not reject, but were fond of that name, though vulgarly made a matter of reproach. For the Latins call a vetch Cicer, and a nick or dent at the tip of his nose, which resembled the opening in a vetch, gave him the surname of Cicero. Cicero, whose story I am writing, is said to have replied with spirit to some of his friends, who recommended him to lay aside or change the name when he first stood for office and engaged in politics, that he would make it his endeavour to render the name of Cicero more glorious than that of the Scauri and Catuli. And when he was quaestor in Sicily, and was making an offering of silver plate to the gods, and had inscribed his two names, Marcus and Tullius, instead of the third, he jestingly told the artificer to engrave the figure of a vetch by them. Thus much is told us about his name.

27. Plutarch
www.stoa.org/diobin/diobib?Plutarch - Similar pages The Total Solar Eclipse Described by PlutarchIn his dialogue On the face on the moon 2, the Greek biographer, historian and philosopher, Plutarch (ca. A.D. 45-120), gives a vivid description of a
http://www.stoa.org/dio-bin/diobib?Plutarch

28. Plutarch: Free Web Books, Online
Although Plutarch has sometimes been disparaged by later historians, he was not concerned with writing history, as such, but in exploring the influence of
http://ebooks.adelaide.edu.au/p/plutarch/
The University of Adelaide Library eBooks Help
Plutarch (46-120)
Biographical note
Greek historian, born at Chaeronea, Boeotia, in Greece, during the reign of the Roman Emperor Claudius. His most important work is Lives of the Noble Greeks and Romans , a series of biographies of famous men, arranged in tandem to illuminate their common moral virtues or failings. The Parallel Lives, as they are also called, contain 23 pairs of biographies, each pair containing one Greek Life and one Roman Life; as well as 4 unpaired single Lives. Although Plutarch has sometimes been disparaged by later historians, he was not concerned with writing history, as such, but in exploring the influence of character - good or bad - on the lives and destinies of famous men. The remainder of his surviving oeuvre is loosely grouped together under the misleading title of Moralia . It is an eclectic collection of over one hundred essays including On the decline of the Oracles On God's slowness to punish evil On peace of mind and Odysseus and Gryllus , a humorous dialog between Homer's Ulysses and one of Circe's enchanted pigs.

29. The Baldwin Project: Our Young Folks' Plutarch By Rosalie Kaufman
Fifty retellings from Plutarch s Lives skillfully adapted for children. Includes the conquests of Alexander the Great, how Demosthenes became an orator,
http://www.mainlesson.com/display.php?author=kaufman&book=plutarch&story=_conten

30. Plutarch - Crystalinks
Born in the small town of Chaeronea, in the Greek region known as Boeotia, probably during the reign of the Roman Emperor Claudius, Plutarch travelled
http://www.crystalinks.com/plutarch.html
Plutarch
Mestrius Plutarchus (ca. 46- 127) was a Greek historian, biographer, and essayist. Born in the small town of Chaeronea, in the Greek region known as Boeotia, probably during the reign of the Roman Emperor Claudius, Plutarch travelled widely in the Mediterranean world, including twice to Rome. He had a number of influential Roman friends, including Soscius Senecio and Fundanus, both important Senators, to whom some of his later writings were dedicated. He lived most of his life at Chaeronea, and was initiated into the mysteries of the Greek god Apollo. However his duties as the senior of the two priests of Apollo at the Oracle of Delphi (where he was responsible for interpreting the auguries of the Pythia or priestess/oracle) apparently occupied little of his time - he led a most active social and civic life and produced an incredible body of writings, much of which is still extant. Among his approximately 227 works, the most important are the Bioi paralleloi ( Parallel Lives ), in which he recounts the noble deeds and characters of Greek and Roman soldiers, legislators, orators, and statesmen, and the Moralia, or Ethica, a series of more than 60 essays on ethical, religious, physical, political, and literary topics. Life Plutarch was the son of Aristobulus, himself a biographer and philosopher. In 66-67, Plutarch studied mathematics and philosophy at Athens under the philosopher Ammonius. Public duties later took him several times to Rome, where he lectured on philosophy, made many friends, and perhaps enjoyed the acquaintance of the emperors Trajan and Hadrian. According to the Suda lexicon (a Greek dictionary dating c. AD 1000), Trajan bestowed the high rank of an ex-consul upon him. Although this may be true, a report of a 4th-century church historian, Eusebius, that Hadrian made Plutarch governor of Greece is probably apocryphal.

31. Plutarch's Lives Of The Noble Greeks And Romans
This English translation was published in the seventeenth century; it is commonly known as the Dryden Plutarch, although several hands worked on it.
http://www.bostonleadershipbuilders.com/plutarch/index.htm
Annotated by David Trumbull and Patrick McNamara.
Lives toward the end of his own long life ( c. A.D. 46- c. A.D. 120). Life of Alexander , "My design is not to write histories, but lives," a fair description of the work which is less biography than study in character and its consequences. Plutarch and the Issue of Character , by Roger Kimball, appeared in the December 2000 issue of The New Criterion and Plutarch's Exemplary Lives , by Lance Morrow appeared in the July 204 issue of Smithsonian magazine. International Plutarch Society
Lives in Traditional Parallel Order
[Click Here for the Lives in Alphabetical Order.]
THE GREEKS
Theseus legendary Lycurgus legendary Solon 639-559 B.C. Themistocles c. c. 459 B.C. Pericles 495-429 B.C. Alcibiades b. 450 B.C. Timoleon fl. 365-336 B.C. Pelopidas c. 410-364 B.C. Aristides d. c. 468 B.C. Philopoemen c. 250-182 B.C. Pyrrhus 319-272 B.C. Lysander d. 395 B.C. Cimon c. c. 450 B.C. Nicias c. 470-413 B.C. Eumenes c. 360-316 B.C. Agesilaus c. 444-360 B.C. Alexander 356-323 B.C. Phocion c.

32. Plutarch - MSN Encarta
Plutarch (ad 46?120), Greek biographer and essayist, born in Chaeronea in Boeotia. He was educated in Athens and is believed to have traveled to
http://encarta.msn.com/encyclopedia_761572487/plutarch.html
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Plutarch
Encyclopedia Article Find Print E-mail Blog It Multimedia 1 item Plutarch ad 46?-120), Greek biographer and essayist, born in Chaeronea in Boeotia. He was educated in Athens and is believed to have traveled to Egypt and Italy and to have lectured in Rome on moral philosophy. He frequently visited Athens and was a priest in the temple at Delphi. He spent the later years of his life at Chaeronea, where he held municipal office. Many of the treatises he wrote are probably based on his lecture notes. To his students, Plutarch was regarded as a genial guide, philosopher, and spiritual director. His extant works, written in a modified Attic, a so-called common dialect, fall into two principal classes: the didactic essays and dialogues, grouped under the title of Moralia; and the biographies of famous Greeks and Romans, generally known as Plutarch's

33. AO Plutarch Schedule - AmblesideOnline.org
Plutarch was a Greek writer who lived from 46 to 120 AD. To quote from the Philip s World History Encyclopedia, his bestknown work is his Parallel Lives,
http://www.amblesideonline.org/PlutarchSch.shtml

34. Plutarch - MSN Encarta
Plutarch (c. 46120), Greek biographer and essayist, born in Chaeronea in Boeotia. He was educated in Athens and is believed to have travelled to
http://uk.encarta.msn.com/encyclopedia_761572487/plutarch.html
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Plutarch
Encyclopedia Article Find in this article View printer-friendly page E-mail Multimedia 1 item Plutarch (c. 46-120), Greek biographer and essayist, born in Chaeronea in Boeotia. He was educated in Athens and is believed to have travelled to Egypt and Italy and to have lectured in Rome on moral philosophy. He frequently visited Athens and was a priest in the temple at Delphi. He spent the later years of his life at Chaeronea, where he held municipal office. Many of the treatises he wrote are probably based on his lecture notes. To his students, Plutarch was regarded as a genial guide, philosopher, and spiritual director. His extant works, written in a modified Attic, a so-called common dialect, fall into two principal classes: the didactic essays and dialogues, grouped under the title of

35. Plutarch & The Issue Of Character By Roger Kimball
Plutarch the issue of character by Roger Kimball.
http://www.newcriterion.com/archive/19/dec00/plutarch.htm
the issue of character
by Roger Kimball
Click to buy the book(s). What Histories can be found . . . that please and instruct like the Lives of Plutarch ? . . . I am of the same Opinion with that Author, who said, that if he was constrained to fling all the Books of the Antients into the Sea, PLUTARCH should be the last drowned.
L c. c. Julius Caesar Antony and Cleopatra Timon of Athens , or Coriolanus , the four plays for whose plots Shakespeare drew heavily upon the then-recently translated Plutarch. Perhaps you also, like me, dipped casually into the odd volume of Plutarch now and again, to find out more about Pericles, Cicero, Alexander the Great, or some other antique worthy. Probably, like me, you left it at that. us Doubtless there are many reasons: the shelf life of novelty, competing attractions, educational atrophy, the temper of the age. It seems clear, at any rate, that wholesale changes of taste are never merely matters of taste. They token a larger metamorphosis: new eyes, new ears, a new scale of values and literary-philosophical assumptions. It is part of the baffling cruelty of fashion to render mute what only yesterday spoke with such extraordinary force and persuasiveness. It is part of the task of criticism to reanimate those voices, to provide that peculiar medium through which they might seem to speak in the way their best, their most ardent hearers understood them. P IV Life of Johnson I prefer to do without the company and remembrance of books, for fear they may interfere with my style. . . . But it is harder for me to do without Plutarch. He is so universal and so full that on all occasions, and however eccentric the subject you have taken up, he makes his way into your work and offers you a liberal hand, inexhaustible in riches and embellishments. It vexes me that I am so greatly exposed to pillage by those who frequent him. I cannot be with him even a little without taking out a drumstick or a wing.

36. Learning To Give - Quotes By Plutarch
Plutarch Quotes. Plutarch Greek essayist and biographer (A.D. 46A.D. 120) -More quotes about Perserverance; Socrates said he was not an Athenian
http://www.learningtogive.org/search/quotes/Display_Quotes.asp?author_id=496&sea

37. Online Library Of Liberty - Plutarch's Morals, 5 Vols.
The Online Library of Liberty is provided in order to encourage the study of the ideal of a society of free and responsible individuals by making freely
http://oll.libertyfund.org/?option=com_staticxt&staticfile=show.php?title=1753

38. Plutarch Quotes
Plutarch quotes,Plutarch, author, authors, writer, writers, people, famous people.
http://thinkexist.com/quotes/plutarch/
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39. Plutarch (c. 46 A.D. - 120 A.D.)
Plutarch, essentially a Greek provincial man of letters, withdrew to his native town, where he wrote voluminous works, devoted himself to local affairs,
http://www.usefultrivia.com/biographies/plutarch_001.html
PLUTARCH We know almost nothing about the life of the author of the most famous of all Lives PLUTARCH , essentially a Greek provincial man of letters, withdrew to his native town, where he wrote voluminous works, devoted himself to local affairs, and to his priesthood of Apollo at Delphi, and to the composition of his famous Parallel Lives . His work on Apophthegms is dedicated to the Emperor Trajan, who died A.D. 117. We know no more. The greatest of all biographers did not write his own life. Although we know so little of the facts of Plutarch's life, we know intimately the character of the man. He was a well-bred, well-trained, well-read, genial, just, and honourable moralist of the old school: somewhat garrulous, setentious, and credulous: but overflowing with interesting anecdote, a consummate master of lifelike portraiture, with a deep foundation of pure, simple, and humane morality. He was an enlightened and pious polytheist, verging on Monotheism of the Neo-Platonic kind; who, without much sympathy for modern Roman culture, and without much knowledge of the Roman Empire at its highest grandeur, devoted himself to elaborate a spontaneous scheme of practical ethics. His ethical writings, called in Latin Moralia , are amongst the most valuable pictures we possess of antique manners and thoughts. But they are surpassed by the

40. Cicero Book
Source Plutarch of Charonea, 46120 A.D. The Lives of the Noble Grecians and Romanes Compared Together. Translated out of Greek into French by James Amyot,
http://www.stoics.com/plutarch_1.html
Home Why Stoics Books FAQ ... Works Cited Plutarch's Lives Volume I Source: Plutarch of Charonea, 46-120 A.D. The Lives of the Noble Grecians and Romanes Compared Together . Translated out of Greek into French by James Amyot, Abbot of Bellozane, Bishop of Auxerre, and out of French into Englishe by Thomas North. Printed at the Shakespeare Head Press, Stratford-upon-Avon. Boston and New York: Houghton Mifflin, 1928. 8 volumes. Before using any portion of this text in any theme, essay, research paper, thesis, or dissertation, please read the Transcription conventions: Volume I p age numbers in angle brackets refer to the edition cited as the source. Words or phrases singled out for indexing are marked by plus signs. In the index, numbers in parentheses indicate how many times the item appears. I have allowed Greek passages to stand as the scanner read them, in unintelligible strings of characters. Table of Contents: Home Why Stoics Books FAQ ... Works Cited

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