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  1. 3 de may. de 2011 · Historia del nombre Sempronia. Femenino de Sempronio. Proviene del nombre latino Sempronius, una ilustre familia romana. Significado del nombre Sempronia. Aunque puede ser de origen etrusco, también se cree que es una derivación del latín semper, "siempre". Origen del nombre Sempronia. Etrusco. Personajes famosos con el nombre Sempronia

  2. the many Catilinarian conspirators Sallust names in his Bellum Catilinae, two in particular have left scholars scratching their heads: Q. Curius, a former senator, the lover of Fulvia, and the ultimate betrayer of the conspiracy (Cat. 17.4, 23.1–3, 26.3), and Sempronia, the lone named female member of Catiline’s retinue (25, 40.5).

  3. Sempronia is a focal character in the 1600s play by Ben Jonson, Catiline His Conspiracy. [20] She is the title character of the short story "The Consul's Wife" by Steven Saylor where she and her lover are plotting to have her husband murdered. She also appears in Saylor's novel Catilina's Riddle. [21] In Saylor's works she is indeed depicted as ...

  4. Sempronia, a revolutionary – Diotíma. 174. Sempronia, a revolutionary. Rome, 1st cent. B.C. (Sallust, Conspiracy of Catiline 24.3-25. L) The historian Sallust regarded the conspiracy led by Catiline in 62 B.C. as a result of moral decline; in his account, Catiline’s supporter Sempronia egregiously lacks the qualities for which virtuous ...

  5. Introduction mong the many Catilinarian conspirators Sallust names in his Bellum Catilinae, two in particular have left scholars scratching their heads: A Q. Curius, a former senator, the lover of Fulvia, and the ultimate betrayer of the conspiracy (Cat. 17.4, 23.1–3, 26.3), and Sempronia, the lone named female member of Catiline’s retinue ...

  6. 25 de nov. de 2021 · Sallust's account of Sempronia is genuinely a wild ride. Please remember that the ancients would not have read anything in his work as a positive reflection ...

    • 12 min
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    • MoAn Inc.
  7. The portrait was intended to bite into the mind and memory of the reader. When Tacitus drew the character of Seianus in a brief sequence of strong sharp phrases, recalling Sallust’s Catilina, he paid thereby a very proper compliment to the master of Roman historical style. 2 Likewise his picture of the seductive Poppaea Sabina, modelled upon Sempronia, but not with slavish imitation.

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