Site Map

  Ovid Index for
Ovid
Website Links For
Ovid
 

Information About

Ovid

APPAREL
BABY
BEAUTY
BOOKS
CAR TOYS
CELL PHONES
DVD'S
ELECTRONICS
GOURMET FOOD
GROCERIES
HEALTH & PERSONAL
HOME & GARDEN
JEWELRY
MUSIC
MUSIC INSTRUMENTS
OFFICE PRODUCTS
SOFTWARE
SPORTING GOODS
TOOLS & HARDWARE
TOYS
VIDEO GAMES
SHOPPING HOME

MORE SHOPPING...



's 1632 London edition of ''Ovids Metamorphosis Englished.'']]

Publius Ovidius Naso (ical poets of Latin Literature , Ovid was generally considered the greatest master of the Elegiac Couplet . His poetry, much imitated during Late Antiquity and the Middle Ages , had a decisive influence on European Art and Literature for centuries.

R. J. Tarrant offers the following assessment for the importance of Ovid:
: ''From his own time until the end of Antiquity Ovid was among the most widely read and imitated of survives for any of his works, but it seems likely that the elegance of his style and his command of rhetorical technique would have commended him as a school author, perhaps at the elementary level.''

Ovid wrote in '', whose two fragments are in Iambic Trimeter and Anapest s, respectively, and his great ''Metamorphoses'', which he wrote in Dactylic Hexameter , the meter of Virgil 's '' Aeneid '' and Homer 's epics. Ovid offers an epic unlike those of his predecessors, a chronological account of the Cosmos from creation to his own day, incorporating many myths and legends about supernatural transformations from the Greek and Roman traditions.

Augustus banished Ovid in AD 8 to Tomis on the Black Sea for reasons that remain mysterious. Ovid himself wrote that it was because of ''carmen et error'' – "a poem and a mistake" (''Tr.'' 2.207). The ''error'' itself is uncertain. Ovid may have had an affair with a female relative of Augustus, or withheld knowledge of such an affair. The ''carmen'', however, is probably his '' Ars Amatoria '', a Didactic poem offering amatory advice to Roman men and women, which had been in circulation for several years.

It was during this period of exile -- more properly known as a relegation -- that Ovid wrote two more collections of poems, called '' Tristia '' and ''Epistulae ex Ponto,'' which illustrate his sadness and desolation. Being far away from Rome, Ovid had no chance to research in libraries and thus was forced to abandon his work Fasti . Even though he was friendly with the natives of Tomis and even wrote poems in their language, he still pined for Rome and his beloved third wife. Many of the poems are addressed to her, but also to Augustus , whom he calls Caesar and sometimes God, to himself, and even sometimes to the poems themselves, which expresses his heart-felt solitude. The famous first two lines of the ''Tristia'' demonstrate the poet's misery from the start:

Parve -- nec invideo -- sine me, liber, ibis in urbem:

::''ei mihi, quod domino non licet ire tuo!''

Little book -- and I won't hinder you -- go on to the city without me:

::''Alas for me, because your master is not allowed to go!''

Ovid died at Tomis after nearly ten years of banishment.


Works


Existing and generally considered authentic, with approximate dates of publication

  • ( 10 BC ) '' Amores '' ('The Loves'), 5 books, about "Corinna", anti-marriage (revised into 3 books ca. AD 1 )

  • ( 5 BC ) '' Heroides '' ('The Heroines') or '' Epistulae Heroidum'' ('Letters of Heroines'), 21 letters (letters 16–21 were composed around AD 4 - 8 )

  • (5 BC) '' Remedia Amoris '' ('The Cure for Love'), 1 book

  • (5 BC) '' Medicamina Faciei Feminae '' ('Women's Facial Cosmetics' or 'The Art of Beauty'), 100 lines surviving

  • ( 2 BC ) '' Ars Amatoria '' ('The Art of Love'), 3 books (the third written somewhat later)

  • (finished by 8AD) '' Fasti '' ('Festivals'), 6 books surviving which cover the first 6 months of the year and provide unique information on the Roman Calendar

  • (AD 8 ) '' Metamorphoses '' ('Transformations'), 15 books

  • ( 9 ) '' Ibis '', a single poem

  • ( 10 ) '' Tristia '' ('Sorrows'), 5 books

  • (10) '' Epistulae Ex Ponto '' ('Letters from the Black Sea'), 4 books

  • ( 12 ) '' Fasti '' ('Festivals'), 6 books surviving which cover the first 6 months of the year and provide unique information on the Roman Calendar



Lost or generally considered spurious

  • ''Medea'', a lost tragedy about Medea

  • a poem in Getic , the language of Dacia where Ovid was exiled, not extant (and possibly fictional)

  • ''Nux'' ('The Walnut Tree')

  • ''Consolatio ad Liviam'' ('Consolation to Livia')

  • ''Halieutica'' ('On Fishing') - generally considered spurious, a poem that some have identified with the otherwise lost poem of the same name written by Ovid.



Works and artists inspired by Ovid

See the website "Ovid illustrated: the Renaissance reception of Ovid in image and Text" for many more Renaissance examples.

Dante mentions him twice:


Retellings, adaptations and translations of his actual works



Trivia

Ovid's '' Ars Amatoria '' contains the first reference to the board game Ludus Duodecim Scriptorum .'''''


See also



References

#Note|1}} R. J. Tarrant, "Ovid" in ''Texts and Transmission: A Survey of the Latin Classics'' (Oxford, 1983), p. 257.


External links


  • University of Virginia, "Ovid Illustrated: The Renaissance Reception of Ovid in Image and Text"


  • Latin and English translation

  • --- Perseus/Tufts: P. Ovidius Naso ''Amores'', ''Ars Amatoria'', ''Heroides'' (on this site called ''Epistulae''), ''Metamorphoses'', ''Remedia Amoris''. Enhanced brower. Not downloadable.

  • --- Sacred Texts Archive: Ovid ''Amores'', ''Ars Amatoria'', ''Medicamina Faciei Femineae'', ''Metamorphoses'', ''Remedia Amoris''.

  • --- The Metamorphoses of Publius Ovidius Naso ; elucidated by an analysis and explanation of the fables, together with English notes, historical, mythological and critical, and illustrated by pictorial embellishments: with a dictionary, giving the meaning of all the words with critical exactness. By Nathan Covington Brooks. Publisher: New York, A. S. Barnes & co.; Cincinnati, H. W. Derby & co., 1857 ''(a searchable facsimile at the University of Georgia Libraries; DjVu & layered PDF format)''

  • Original Latin only

  • --- Latin Library: Ovid ''Amores'', ''Ars Amatoria'', ''Epistulae ex Ponto'', ''Fasti'', ''Heroides'', ''Ibis'', ''Metamorphoses'', ''Remedia Amoris'', ''Tristia''.

  • --- Gutenberg Project: Fasti With introduction and extensive notes in English by Thomas Keightley. Plain text version.

  • English translation only

  • --- New translations by A. S. Kline ''Amores'', ''Ars Amatoria'', ''Epistulae ex Ponto'', ''Fasti'', ''Heroides'', ''Ibis'', ''Medicamina Faciei Femineae'', ''Metamorphoses'', ''Remedia Amoris'', ''Tristia'' with enhanced browsing facility, downloadable in HTML, PDF, or MS Word DOC formats. Site also includes wide selection of works by other authors.

  • Commentary

  • --- Perseus/Tufts: Commentary on the ''Heroides'' of Ovid