| Dimensions | 12 × 17 × 2 cm |
|---|---|
| Language |
Turquoise cloth binding with black title on the spine and front board.
Note: This book carries a £5.00 discount to those that subscribe to the F.B.A. mailing list
127 pages. No dust jacket. Blue cloth with decorations. Part 1. Latin and English text. Binding remains firm. Boards have moderate shelf-wear with bumping to corners and rubbing to surfaces. Moderate tanning to spine and edges with crushing to spine ends.
Gaius Plinius Secundus (AD 23/24–79), known in English as Pliny the Elder was a Roman author, naturalist, natural philosopher, and naval and army commander of the early Roman Empire, and a friend of the emperor Vespasian. He wrote the encyclopedic Naturalis Historia (Natural History), a comprehensive thirty-seven-volume work covering a vast array of topics on human knowledge and the natural world, which became an editorial model for encyclopedias. He spent most of his spare time studying, writing, and investigating natural and geographic phenomena in the field.
Among Pliny’s greatest works was the twenty-volume Bella Germaniae (“The History of the German Wars”), which is no longer extant. Bella Germaniae, which began where Aufidius Bassus’ Libri Belli Germanici (“The War with the Germans”) left off, was used as a source by other prominent Roman historians, including Plutarch, Tacitus, and Suetonius. Tacitus may have used Bella Germaniae as the primary source for his work, De origine et situ Germanorum (“On the Origin and Situation of the Germans”).
Pliny the Elder died in AD 79 in Stabiae while attempting the rescue of a friend and her family from the eruption of Mount Vesuvius.

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