Tras las huellas de Horacio: Carm.,1,2 y 4, 15

Horace, in Carm., 1, 2, and 4, 15 alludes several times to gods important to Octavian's adoptive family and to the ruler himself, whose presence has been traditionally analized and ínterpreted from an internal point of view: it can be explained because of the relatíonship between gods and the g...

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Veröffentlicht in:Auster : revista del Centro de Estudios Latinos 2004-01 (8-9)
1. Verfasser: Joan Gómez Pallarés
Format: Artikel
Sprache:spa
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Zusammenfassung:Horace, in Carm., 1, 2, and 4, 15 alludes several times to gods important to Octavian's adoptive family and to the ruler himself, whose presence has been traditionally analized and ínterpreted from an internal point of view: it can be explained because of the relatíonship between gods and the gens Iulia. 1'11 try to offer in this paper a complementary point of view: using an external analysis to understand references to gods, 1 think that its presence can be explained beca use of the temples they "lived in" in Rome, because of the places where these temples were built and, finally, because of the iconic representations used for its cult. At the same time, the new relationship established between 1, 2 and 4, 15 offers evidences for a new understanding of Horace's second edition of lyric poetry, that presenting Odes's Fourth Book
ISSN:1514-0121
2346-8890