
Gianmarco Bianchini
Ph.D. in Classics, University of Toronto (September 2017--April 2024)
M.A. in Classics, Sapienza Università di Roma (January 2014--July 2016)
B.A. in Classics, Sapienza Università di Roma (September 2010--January 2014)
Supervisors: Jarrett Welsh (University of Toronto, Ph.D. Supervisor), Alison Keith (University of Toronto, Ph.D. Advisor), Cillian O'Hogan (University of Toronto, Ph.D. Advisor), Gian Luca Gregori (Sapienza Università di Roma, M.A. Supervisor), Michela Rosellini (Sapienza Università di Roma, M.A. Advisor), and Massimo Di Marco (Sapienza Università di Roma, B.A. Supervisor)
Phone: +1 437 433 4940
M.A. in Classics, Sapienza Università di Roma (January 2014--July 2016)
B.A. in Classics, Sapienza Università di Roma (September 2010--January 2014)
Supervisors: Jarrett Welsh (University of Toronto, Ph.D. Supervisor), Alison Keith (University of Toronto, Ph.D. Advisor), Cillian O'Hogan (University of Toronto, Ph.D. Advisor), Gian Luca Gregori (Sapienza Università di Roma, M.A. Supervisor), Michela Rosellini (Sapienza Università di Roma, M.A. Advisor), and Massimo Di Marco (Sapienza Università di Roma, B.A. Supervisor)
Phone: +1 437 433 4940
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Papers by Gianmarco Bianchini
How reliable are the quotations in the Latin inscriptions ? Do they help to reassess the Ovidian text ?
The main purpose of this study is to answer such questions, with respect to these particular cases.
sic habeas [facil]es s[emp]er ubiq[ue deos],
from a verse by Ovid (her. 16, 282): sic habaes faciles in tua vota deos.
Conference Presentastions by Gianmarco Bianchini
How reliable are the quotations in the Latin inscriptions ? Do they help to reassess the Ovidian text ?
The main purpose of this study is to answer such questions, with respect to these particular cases.
sic habeas [facil]es s[emp]er ubiq[ue deos],
from a verse by Ovid (her. 16, 282): sic habaes faciles in tua vota deos.
The fortune of Lucretius is also reflected on stone.
From the complete analysis of the corpus of carmina latina epigraphica and considering some successive catalogs, I have collected fourteen likely quotations from De rerum natura, ranging from the first to the fourth century CE.
Funerary inscriptions concerning the issue of future life are apparently the most fertile ground for Lucretius’ influence.