On agriculture /

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Bibliographic Details
Author / Creator:Cato, Marcus Porcius, 234 B.C.-149 B.C. author.
Edition:Rev. / by Harrison Boyd Ash.
Imprint:Cambridge, MA : Harvard University Press, 2014.
Description:1 online resource
Language:English
Latin
Series:Loeb Classical Library ; 283
Loeb Classical Library ; 283.
Subject:
Format: E-Resource Book
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/10301293
Hidden Bibliographic Details
Other authors / contributors:Varro, Marcus Terentius, author.
Ash, Harrison Boyd, 1891- translator.
Hooper, William Davis, 1868-1945, translator.
ISBN:9780674993136
Notes:Text in Latin with English translation on facing pages.
Description based on print version record.
Summary:Cato's second century BCE De Agricultura is our earliest complete Latin prose text, recommends farming for its security and profitability, and advises on management of labor and resources. Varro's Res rustica (37 BCE) is not a practical treatise but instruction, in dialogue form, about agricultural life meant for prosperous country gentlemen. Cato (M. Porcius Cato) the elder (234-149 BCE) of Tusculum, statesman and soldier, was the first important writer in Latin prose. His speeches, works on jurisprudence and the art of war, his precepts to his son on various subjects, and his great historical work on Rome and Italy are lost. But we have his De Agricultura; terse, severely wise, grimly humorous, it gives rules in various aspects of a farmer's economy, including even medical and cooking recipes, and reveals interesting details of domestic life. Varro (M. Terentius), 116-27 BCE, of Reate, renowned for his vast learning, was an antiquarian, historian, philologist, student of science, agriculturist, and poet. He was a republican who was reconciled to Julius Caesar and was marked out by him to supervise an intended national library. Of Varro's more than seventy works involving hundreds of volumes we have only one on agriculture and country affairs (Rerum Rusticarum) and part of his work on the Latin language (De Lingua Latina; Loeb nos. 333, 334), though we know much about his Satires. Each of the three books on country affairs begins with an effective mise en scene and uses dialogue. The first book deals with agriculture and farm management, the second with sheep and oxen, the third with poultry and the keeping of other animals large and small, including bees and fishponds. There are lively interludes and a graphic background of political events.
Other form:Print version: Cato, Marcus Porcius, 234 B.C.-149 B.C. On agriculture. Rev. Cambridge, Mass. : Harvard University Press, 1934 9780674993136

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