Markou Antōninou autokratoros tōn eis eauton bib. 12.

Marci Antonini imperatoris De seipso et ad seipsum libri XII]

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Marco Aurelio: Markou Antōninou autokratoros tōn eis eauton bib. 12. (Latin language, 1643, Typis M. Flesher, sumptibus R. Mynne)

Microform, 343 pages

Latin language

Published April 28, 1643 by Typis M. Flesher, sumptibus R. Mynne.

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4 stars (5 reviews)

was born on April 26, A.D. 121. His real name was M. Annius Verus, and he was sprung of a noble family which claimed descent from Numa, second King of Rome. Thus the most religious of emperors came of the blood of the most pious of early kings. His father, Annius Verus, had held high office in Rome, and his grandfather, of the same name, had been thrice Consul. Both his parents died young, but Marcus held them in loving remembrance.

41 editions

Insightful and still very relevant

5 stars

Marcus Aurelius is a name I've often encountered - his words quoted at the beginning of novels or mentioned in passing by 'intellectual' characters - so, on spotting this reissued translation of his Meditations on NetGalley, I couldn't help but to request the book. Unsurprisingly for a work that's over eighteen centuries old, there are many translations in existence so I feel lucky that this very readable Martin Hammond translation was the one to find me. I accept the irony of a book reviewer who got a free ARC saying this, but I believe it is worth paying for this particular Aurelius-Hammond partnership. Yes, you can also get free Marcus Aurelius Meditations ebooks, but their reviews are dire!

This Penguin Classics edition begins with a lengthy essay by Diskin Clay that gives a lot of reasonably interesting background information about Aureliys, his life and times. It's admittedly nowhere near as …

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Subjects

  • Meditations.