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         Manilius:     more books (100)
  1. Lucubrationes Manilianae... (Latin Edition) by Paul Thomas, Janus De Manilio Woltjer, et all 2009-12-10
  2. Manili Astronomicon Liber II: Edidit H. W. Garrod ... (1911) by Marcus Manilius, 2009-06-25
  3. Astronomicon Ex Recensione Richardi Bentleii. Adjecta Est in Calce Cujusque Paginae Lection Vulgata (Italian Edition) by Marcus Manilius, 2010-04-20
  4. M. Manili Astronomicon Libri Qvinqve (Latin Edition) by Marcus Manilius, Johann Friedrich Jacob, 2010-02-13
  5. Astronomicon, Book 5 (1846) (Latin Edition) by Marcus Manilius, 2010-09-10
  6. M. Manilii Astronomicon, Volume 2 (Latin Edition) by Marcus Manilius, Richard Bentley, 2010-03-16
  7. ASTRONOMICON LIBRI QUINQUE. Josephus Scaliger Jul. Caes. F. Recensuit. Eiusdem Jos. Scaligeri Commentarius in Eosdem Libros, Castigationum Explicationes. by Marcus Manilius, 1590-01-01
  8. Marci Manilii Astronomicon Libri Quinque V1: Accessere Marci Tullii Ciceronis Arataea (1786) by Marcus Manilius, Alexandre Guy Pingre, 2008-10-27
  9. Essai Sur La Metaphysique Du Calcul Differentiel: Suivi D'Une Nouvelle Theorie (1850) (French Edition) by J. Manilius, 2010-05-23
  10. P. Virgilii Maronis Opera: P. Virgilii Maronis Culex, Ciris, Catalecta, Copa, Moretum. M. Manilii Astronomicon (Latin Edition) by Marcus Manilius, 2010-05-12
  11. Marci Manilii Astronomicon Libri Quinque;: Accessere Marci Tullii Ciceronis Arataea, (Latin Edition) by Marcus Manilius, Marcus Tullius Cicero, et all 2010-04-04
  12. P. Virgilii Maronis Opera: Accedit M. Manilii Astronomicon Cum Notitia Literaria, Studiis Societatis Bipontinæ (Lithuanian Edition) by Marcus Manilius, Marcus Virgil, 2010-01-01
  13. Het Leven Ende Martelie Vanden H. Quintinus Rooms-Borgher Ende Martelaer (1674) (Mandarin Chinese Edition) by Bauduyn Manilius Publisher, 2010-05-23
  14. M. Manilii Astronomica, Volume 1 (Latin Edition) by Marcus Manilius, 2010-01-11

21. Manilius
Translate this page manilius. A. Reek, Interpretationen zu den Astronomica des manilius, mit besonderer Berücksichtigung der philosophischen Partien, diss. Marburg 1977.
http://www.let.kun.nl/~m.v.d.poel/bibliografie/manilius.htm
ultima renovatio/ last update 16.04.2004 MANILIUS #Bibliographia #Editiones #Indices #Studia docta ... #Bibliographia
R. Helm, Nachaugusteische nichtchristliche Dichter I, 1925-1942, in : Lustrum I (1956), pp. 121-318 (129-157).
E. Romano, Recenti studi su Manilio, in : Cultura e scuola 18 (1979) (no. 72), pp. 39-58.
#Editiones

J. v. Wageningen, transl., Leiden 1914.
J. v. Wageningen, Teubner 1915.
J. v. Wageningen, comm., Amsterdam 1921.
A.E. Housman, 5 voll., c. comm., Cambridge 1937 (2 voll., Hildesheim 1972).
A.E. Housman, ed. minor, Cambridge 1937.
G.P. Goold, Loeb 1977.
G.P. Goold, Teubner, Leipzig 1985; ed. corr., 1998. E. Flores, R. Scarcia et Simonetta Feraboli, 2 voll., vol. 1: l. 1-2, vol. 2: l. 3-5, c. transl. et comm., Milaan 1996-2001. E. Flores, R. Scarcia et Simonetta Feraboli, . D. Liuzzi, l. 2, c. transl., Galatina 1991. D. Liuzzi, l. 3, c. transl., Lecce 1988. #Indices M. Wacht, Concordantia in Manilii Astronomica, Hildesheim 1990. M. - M. Manzino, Concordanze degli Astronomica di Manilio, 2 voll., Genua 1991-1992. P.J. del Real Francia, Lexicon Manilianum / curavit, Hildesheim 1998.

22. Manilius Astronomica
manilius Astronomica (1st century CE). For I shall sing of God, silentminded monarch of nature, who, permeating sky and land and
http://www.roanoke.edu/religion/Maclean/RELG211/ManiliusAstronomica.htm
Manilius Astronomica (1st century CE)
Who, Great Pompey, after your victory over the forces of Mithridates, your recovery of the seas from piracy, and your three triumphs gained from campaigns which traverses the earth, would have believed that, when you could now represent yourself as another styled the Great, you were destined to perish on Egyptian shores with but fire of shipwrecked wood to burn your corpse and remnants of an upcast barque to make your pyre? Who can experience such changes of fortune except by fate’s decree? When after his victory and happy settlement of civil strife he was administering the laws of peace, even he who was born of heaven and was to heaven restored could not escape the violence so oft foretold: before the eyes of the assembled senate he obliterated with his own blood the evidence of the plot and the list of the conspirators which he held in his hand: all this so that fate could prevail (4.50-62). Let man’s merits, therefore, possess glory all the greater, seeing that they owe their excellence to heaven; and , again, let us hate the wicked all the more, because they were born for guilt and punishment. Crime, whencesoever sprung, must still be reckoned crime. This, too, is sanctioned by fate, that I should thus expound the rule of fate (4.114-18). Selections from the translation of G. P. Goold (Loeb Classical Library; Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1977).

23. Manilius
manilius. Despite its modest size, this crater is prominent under all illuminations. A low angle of light, when it is near the terminator
http://www.inconstantmoon.com/img_mani_ac.htm
manilius Despite its modest size, this crater is prominent under all illuminations. A low angle of light, when it is near the terminator , its sharp, terraced walls show strong relief, whilst around the full moon its rays of ejecta become very bright. Photo: António Cidadão . His Home Page of Astrophotography includes stereograms, animations, and "Seven Craters a Week" from his forthcoming photographic lunar atlas. Inconstant Moon

24. Menelaus & Manilius
menelaus manilius. These two craters are in many ways like twins. Apart from their very similar names (manilius is named after
http://www.inconstantmoon.com/img_mene_ac.htm
These two craters are in many ways like twins. Apart from their very similar names (Manilius is named after a Roman poet, Menelaus after a Greek astronomer) and sizes (Manilius, to the west, is six mles wider), each is a sharp, class 1 feature, with central peaks and a 100 mile radius ray system (roughly equal to their separation) and is very prominent around the full moon. Photo: António Cidadão . His Home Page of Astrophotography includes stereograms, animations, and "Seven Craters a Week" from his forthcoming photographic lunar atlas. Inconstant Moon

25. Marcus Manilius - Encyclopedia Article About Marcus Manilius. Free Access, No Re
encyclopedia.thefreedictionary.com/manilius manilius, Marcus , fl. Related content from HighBeam Research on Marcus manilius.
http://encyclopedia.thefreedictionary.com/Marcus Manilius
Dictionaries: General Computing Medical Legal Encyclopedia
Marcus Manilius
Word: Word Starts with Ends with Definition Marcus Manilius (fl. 1st century AD) was a Roman poet Poets are authors of poems. Poets are often regarded as imaginative thinkers or writers.
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Click the link for more information. , and author of a poem in five books called Astronomica The author is neither quoted nor mentioned by any ancient writer. Even his name is uncertain, but it was probably Marcus Manilius; in the earlier books the author is anonymous, the later give Manilius, Manlius, Mallius. The poem itself implies that the writer lived under Augustus Augustus (plural Augusti) is Latin for "majestic" or "venerable". Although the use of the

26. Manilius

http://perso.wanadoo.fr/guy.jacquesson/dico/manilius.html
GLOSSAIRE des NOMS
Manilius
Auguste , auteur de l'Astronomie

27. Imago Mundi - Marcus Manilius
manilius.
http://www.cosmovisions.com/Manilius.htm
Dictionnaire biographique Les gens Manilius August e stronomicon, librement suspendue dans l'espace : " Dieu la fit, dit-il, fecitque cadendo
Undique ne caderet. Nec vero tibi natura admiranda videri
Pendentis terrae debet, cum pendeat ipse
Mundus et in nullo ponat vestigia fundo
L'auteur de l' Astronomicon , que ce soit le fabuliste Hygin L' Astronomicon re fois par J. Regiomontanus Scaliger , Paris, 1579, par Richard Bentley
Astronomicon , I, 162-163. A B C D ... Z

28. Astronomica - Manilius
Translate this page Jun. 2003. Astrologie Magazin Sternwelten. Astronomica. Astrologie - Astronomica - manilius - 534 Seiten (1990) - Reclam - ISBN 3150086345. Von Max Attems.
http://www.sternwelten.at/bu_astronomica.shtml
Sternwelten
Startseite Stand vom: 08. Jun. 2003
Astronomica
Astrologie - Astronomica - Manilius - 534 Seiten (1990) - Reclam - ISBN: 3150086345 Von Max Attems Quis coelum posset nisi coeli munere nosse,
Et reperire Deum, nisi qui pars ipse Deorum est?
Man. 2.115f.
Aus dem Anhang:
Weiteres ...
Lehrbuch der klassischen Astrologie

Geschichte der Astrologie

Astrologie - Von Babylon zur Urknalltheorie

Allgemein
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Inhaltsverzeichnis
Astro - Bücher AstroLinks ... Kalendar Astrologie Astronews Grundlagen Horoskopie Geschichte ... Wochenspruch Horoskope A-Z Astrologen Ereignisse Habsburg ... Politiker Kontakt Autoren FAQ Impressum Mediadaten ... Weblog Suche in Sternwelten: Add Astrolinks Kommentar Veranstaltungskalendar Quelle: Online Magazin Sternwelten

29. Kemp Lies About Manilius And Greek Pigmentation
Kemp Lies about manilius and Greek Pigmentation. Read Kemp s lie here Arthur Kemp alleges So, the manilius quote translates directly
http://www.geocities.com/dienekesp/kempslies/manilius.html
Kemp Lies about Manilius and Greek Pigmentation
Read Kemp's lie here Arthur Kemp alleges: So, the Manilius quote translates directly as " the foreign nations who have dark complexions " - and, not, as Pontikos' downright silly and feeble explanation goes, those who get sweaty working out in a gym!
The Truth
It appears that Arthur Kemp has become a Latinist, but for the moment, let us see how a real Latinist translates the passage in question (Astronomica / Manilius ; with an English translation by G. P. Goold Cambridge, Mass. : Harvard University Press, 1977) perque coloratas subtilis Graecia gentes
gymnasium praefert vultu fortisque palaestras (Astronomica, 4.720-721) Quick-witted Greece proclaims in the tanned faces of its peoples the gymnasium and the manly wrestling-schools. There is not much more that needs to be said. Clearly, scholarly opinion agrees with me and disagrees with Kemp. Kemp also attempts to "prove" that gentes means "foreigners" in this passage. gentes is of course the plural of gens ] which has multiple meanings, including "race, nation, people" and

30. Astrology House Systems - © Dr Shepherd Simpson
Development of House Systems in Astrology after the Time of Marcus manilius. (b) Stations. (c) Lots. 03 House Systems after the Time of manilius.
http://www.geocities.com/astrologyhouses/housesystems.htm
Development of House Systems in Astrology after Classical Astrology
Definition: Astrological Houses The development of Houses and Houses Systems since Classical times. Houses and house systems seem to have taken a long and obscure road since the time of the early Classical Astrologers. Nowadays, some astrologers ignore houses completely as being too tainted by uncertainty to use. In this they follow the tradition of Claudius Ptolemy, the "Father of Classical Astrology", who in his seminal work, Tetrabiblos , appears to have had little time for houses at all. He ignores them, from which fact various astrological commentators have concluded that he considered houses meaningless mysticism. It is certainly true that houses are purely a symbolic description of the heavens, whereas the positions of the stars and the planets are measurable concrete things. For others of us, houses remain very important. This presents us with a problem, as unfortunately, in modern times, three classes of house system exist: ecliptic-based, time-based and space-based and these yield at least

31. Poem By Manilius
Poem by manilius (first century BC) Translated by Thomas Creech and published in 1670. Now Constellations, Muse, and signs rehearse
http://www.cyberwitch.com/wychwood/Observatory/manilius.htm
Poem by Manilius
(first century B.C.)
Translated by
Thomas Creech and published in 1670 "Now Constellations, Muse, and signs rehearse,
In order, let them sparkle in thy verse. (1)
Those which obliquely round the burning Zone,
And bear the Summer and the Winter Sun,
Those first: then those which roll a different way
Which Nights serene disclose, and which create
The steady Rules, and fix the Laws of Fate. First Aries, glorious in his Golden Wool, (2)
Looks back and wonders at the mighty Bull, (3) Whose back-parts first appear: He bending lies With Threat'ning Head, and calls the Twins to rise, (4) They clasp for fear , and mutually embrace; And next (to) the Twins with an unsteady pace Bright Cancer rolls: then Leo shakes his mane: (5) And following Virgo calms his rage again: (6) Then Day and Night weigh'd in Libra's Scales, (7) Equal awhile, at last the Night prevails, And longer grown the heavier scale inclines And draws bright Scorpio from the Winter signs: (8) Him Centaur follows with an aiming Eye (9) His Bow full drawn and ready to let fly: Next narrow Horns the twisted Caper shows, (10)

32. New Dome Near Manilius?
home page Observing the manilius region Preliminary report about The suspected rille appears as a diagonal line located to the south of the crater manilius.
http://www.glrgroup.org/domes/manilius.htm

Observing the Manilius region

Preliminary report about the presence of the rille and an unlisted dome
by Raffaello Lena, KC Pau, Piergiovanni Salimbeni, Cristian Fattinnanzi, F. J. Bellido
We report a feature described and imaged by KC Pau during an onbserving session carried out on December 30, 2003 at 12:36 UT. The suspected rille appears as a diagonal line located to the south of the crater Manilius. The images taken by Pau (figure1) and by Francisco J. Bellido (figure2) and the visual observation carried out by Lena (figure3) showed the presence of a real cross sectional feature not reported in the Atlas of the Moon by A. Rukl and on the Lunar quadrant maps. Fig.1 Pau on December 30 2003 at 12:36 UT Fig 2
Schmidt-Cassegrain 235 mm + Barlow 2X + Philips ToUcam Pro
Fig 3: Raffaello Lena. observation carried out on 26 April 2004 - 20:55 UT. Refractor 10 cm f/15 180 x . Fig 4: Piergiovanni Salimbeni: 26 April 2004: 20.20 UT/20.40 UT. Sc 203mm F/10 We are surprised the rille was not better known. The collection of new Hires images may contribute to study this structure and to stimulate the interest of other lunar observers. We detected to the West of Manilius the presence of a dome; this possible dome, observed by Pau and Lena, is unreported in ALPO dome catalogue. Using our images,we were able to measure the diameter and position of the newly reported dome.These were obtained by enlarging the images, counting the number of pixels in the object of interest, and then converting this into kilometers per pixel (table 1).

33. Manilius, Liber V
Translate this page M. MANILII ASTRONOMICON LIBER QUINTUS. Hic alius finisset iter signisque relatis quis adversa meant stellarum numina quinque quadriiugis
http://www.thelatinlibrary.com/manilius5.html
M. MANILII ASTRONOMICON LIBER QUINTUS Hic alius finisset iter signisque relatis
quis adversa meant stellarum numina quinque
quadriiugis et Phoebus equis et Delia bigis
non ultra struxisset opus, caeloque rediret
ac per descensum medios percurreret ignes
Saturni, Iovis et Martis Solisque, sub illis
post Venerem et Maia natum te, Luna, vagantem.
me properare etiam mundus iubet omnia circum
sidera vectatum toto decurrere caelo,
cum semel aetherios ausus conscendere currus
summum contigerim sua per fastigia culmen. hinc vocat Orion, magni pars maxima caeli, et ratis heroum, quae nunc quoque navigat astris, Fluminaque errantis late sinuantia flexus et biferum Cetos squamis atque ore tremendo Hesperidumque vigil custos et divitis auri et Canis in totum portans incendia mundum araque divorum, cui votum solvit Olympus; illinc per geminas Anguis qui labitur Arctos Heniochusque memor currus plaustrique Bootes atque Ariadnaeae caelestia dona coronae, victor et invisae Perseus cum falce Medusae Andromedanque necans genitor cum coniuge Cepheus, quaque volat stellatus Equus celerique Sagittae Delphinus certans et Iuppiter alite tectus

34. Manilius, Liber I
Translate this page M. MANILII ASTRONOMICON LIBER PRIMUS. Carmine divinas artes et conscia fati sidera, diversos hominum variantia casus, caelestis rationis
http://www.thelatinlibrary.com/manilius1.html
M. MANILII ASTRONOMICON LIBER PRIMUS Carmine divinas artes et conscia fati
sidera, diversos hominum variantia casus,
caelestis rationis opus, deducere mundo
aggredior primusque novis Helicona movere
cantibus et viridi nutantis vertice silvas,
hospita sacra ferens nulli memorata priorum.
hunc mihi tu, Caesar, patriae princepsque paterque,
qui regis augustis parentem legibus orbem
concessumque patri mundum deus ipse mereris,
das animum viresque facis ad tanta canenda.
iam propiusque favet mundus scrutantibus ipsum et cupit aetherios per carmina pandere census. hoe sub pace vacat tantum; iuvat ire per ipsum aera et immenso spatiantem vivere caelo signaque et adversos stellarum noscere cursus. quod solum novisse parum est. impensins ipsa scire iuvat magni penitus praecordia mundi, quaque regat generetque suis animalia signis, cernere et in numerum Phoebe modulante referre. bina mihi positis lucent altaria flammis, ad duo templa precor duplici circumdatus aestu carminis et rerum; certa cum lege canentem mundus et immenso vatem circumstrepit orbe vixque soluta suis immittit verba figuris.

35. Manilius, Sphere, 1675
15. manilius, Marcus. The sphere of Marcus manilius by Edward Sherburne. London, 1675. We have already noted that ancient Greek
http://www.lindahall.org/events_exhib/exhibit/exhibits/stars/she.htm
15. Manilius, Marcus. The sphere of Marcus Manilius...by Edward Sherburne . London, 1675.
We have already noted that ancient Greek and Latin astronomical poems played a major role in celestial cartography by contributing the constellation figures, so that in many ways Bayer's atlas was a union of of the visual Aratus with the tabular Tycho Brahe. But even after this marriage, the Latin poets continued on in their own tradition, and occasionally new editions appeared that made additional contributions to astronomy. Edward Sherburne's translation of The Sphere of Manilius was a lavish production, and on the slightest pretext he would digress to provide the reader with up-to-date astronomical information. We have modern moon-maps and cosmological diagrams, and it is no surprise then that we can also find a pair of splendid celestial planispheres folded into the book. These maps seem to have been inspired by one of the large Blaeu celestial globes, which were notable for dressing some of the northern constellations in winter garb. So Bootes, with his fur hat and coat is well prepared to encounter the bear at the celestial north pole. A detail of this same region also shows a new constellation, Cor Caroli Regis Martyris, that was invented by Sir Charles Scarborough only two years earlier to honor Charles I. The constellation, containing only a single star, would later be incorporated into Canes Venatici, but Cor Caroli has stayed on as a name for the star.

36. MANILIUS: ASTRONOMICA (complete Text)
Translate this page manilius ASTRONIMICA. LIBER PRIMUS. Carmine divinas artes et conscia fati sidera, diversos hominum variantia casus, caelestis rationis
http://www.filosofico.net/manilioastronomica.htm
MANILIUS
ASTRONIMICA
LIBER PRIMUS Carmine divinas artes et conscia fati
sidera, diversos hominum variantia casus,
caelestis rationis opus, deducere mundo
aggredior primusque novis Helicona movere
cantibus et viridi nutantis vertice silvas,
hospita sacra ferens nulli memorata priorum.
hunc mihi tu, Caesar, patriae princepsque paterque,
qui regis augustis parentem legibus orbem
concessumque patri mundum deus ipse mereris,
das animum viresque facis ad tanta canenda. iam propiusque favet mundus scrutantibus ipsum et cupit aetherios per carmina pandere census. hoe sub pace vacat tantum; iuvat ire per ipsum aera et immenso spatiantem vivere caelo signaque et adversos stellarum noscere cursus. quod solum novisse parum est. impensins ipsa scire iuvat magni penitus praecordia mundi, quaque regat generetque suis animalia signis, cernere et in numerum Phoebe modulante referre. bina mihi positis lucent altaria flammis, ad duo templa precor duplici circumdatus aestu [22] carminis et rerum; certa cum lege canentem mundus et immenso vatem circumstrepit orbe vixque soluta suis immittit verba figuris.

37. Famous Quotations Of Manilius From EntRainbow.com
manilius, New York Alphabetic Map ListingUNH DIMOND LIBRARY Documents Department Data Center. Historic USGS Maps of manilius, New York. Alphabetic Map Listing. Tully 15 Minute 1900. 1955.
http://entrainbow.netfirms.com/cgi-bin/view_quot.pl?auth=Manilius

38. L'astronomie Et La Poesie : Manilius
Nox Oculis. Marcus manilius (I er siècle av. JC). Poète romain, connu pour son poème, en cinq livres, Astronomica. L auteur n est
http://pages.infinit.net/noxoculi/manilius.html
Nox Oculis
Marcus Manilius (I er Astronomica (extraits)
    Now Constellations, Muse, and signs rehearse,
    In order, let them sparkle in thy verse.
    Those which obliquely round the burning Zone,
    And bear the Summer and the Winter Sun,
    Those first: then those which roll a different way
    Which Nights serene disclose, and which create
    The steady Rules, and fix the Laws of Fate.
    First Aries, glorious in his Golden Wool,
    Looks back and wonders at the mighty Bull,
    Whose back-parts first appear: He bending lies
    With Threat'ning Head, and calls the Twins to rise, They clasp for fear , and mutually embrace; And next (to) the Twins with an unsteady pace Bright Cancer rolls: then Leo shakes his mane : And following Virgo calms his rage again : Then Day and Night weigh'd in Libra's Scales, Equal awhile, at last the Night prevails, And longer grown the heavier scale inclines And draws bright Scorpio from the Winter signs : Him Centaur follows with an aiming Eye His Bow full drawn and ready to let fly : Next narrow Horns the twisted Caper shows

39. Learn More About Marcus Manilius In The Online Encyclopedia.
Visit the Online Encyclopedia and learn more and get your questions answered about Marcus manilius. see previous page. Marcus manilius.
http://www.onlineencyclopedia.org/m/ma/marcus_manilius.html
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Marcus Manilius
Marcus Manilius , a Roman poet , author of a poem in five books called Astronomica The author is neither quoted nor mentioned by any ancient writer. Even his name is uncertain, but it was probably Marcus Manilius; in the earlier books the author is anonymous, the later give Manilius, Manlius, Mallius. The poem itself implies that the writer lived under Augustus or Tiberius , and that he was a citizen of and resident in Rome . According to R. Bentley he was an Asiatic Greek; according to F. Jacob an African. His work is one of great learning; he had studied his subject in the best writers, and generally represents the most advanced views of the ancients on astronomy (or rather astrology His Astronomicon was critically edited by A.E. Housman

40. Manilius: New & Used Books: Find The Lowest Price
manilius Compare new and used books prices among 98 book stores in a click. Find the lowest price. Searched in books for manilius.
http://www.fetchbook.info/Manilius.html

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Hardcover / July 1992 / 0674995163
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Poetics of Latin Didactic: Lucretius, Vergil, Ovid, Manilius
By Katharina Volk
Hardcover / July 2002 / 0199245509
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