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- Carmen_Priami abstract "The Carmen Priami ("Priam's Song") is a lost Latin poem known from the quotation of a single line by Varro. The unknown poet, "a remarkable reactionary," rejects the Hellenizing trend in Latin poetry led by Ennius (ca. 239–169 BC) and adopts a deliberately archaic style, invoking the Camenae:The invocation of the Muse is a convention of Greco-Roman poetry, and Ennius announced his intention to leave behind the rusticity of native poetic traditions and embrace the sophistication of the Greeks with service to the Muses. His immediate predecessors Livius and Naevius had asserted their place among traditional Roman poets, or vates, by continuing to invoke instead the Camenae, a group of goddesses, varying in number, who were associated with fresh-water springs, or fontes, and thus metaphorically "sources" of inspiration. These were attributes also of the Muses, and while the Camenae never lost their Roman character, they became increasingly identified with their Greek counterparts.The poet of the Carmen Priami uses artificially archaic language: ueteres Casmenas cascam rem uolo profarei. The line was composed in the Saturnian meter, which had ceased to be used and which the poet misunderstands, misplacing the caesura. "The motive for such a use," notes literary historian Gian Biagio Conte, "could only be to lend substance to some intuition of primitive preliterary epic composition."The poem is among the "countertendencies" in Latin literature that reveal Roman ambivalence toward the adoption of Greek culture.".
- Carmen_Priami thumbnail Felice_Giani_001.jpg?width=300.
- Carmen_Priami wikiPageID "26251464".
- Carmen_Priami wikiPageLength "3712".
- Carmen_Priami wikiPageOutDegree "19".
- Carmen_Priami wikiPageRevisionID "590335877".
- Carmen_Priami wikiPageWikiLink Ancient_Greek_literature.
- Carmen_Priami wikiPageWikiLink Archaism.
- Carmen_Priami wikiPageWikiLink Caesura.
- Carmen_Priami wikiPageWikiLink Camenae.
- Carmen_Priami wikiPageWikiLink Category:Latin_poems.
- Carmen_Priami wikiPageWikiLink Category:Old_Latin_literature.
- Carmen_Priami wikiPageWikiLink Ennius.
- Carmen_Priami wikiPageWikiLink Epic_poetry.
- Carmen_Priami wikiPageWikiLink Gnaeus_Naevius.
- Carmen_Priami wikiPageWikiLink History_of_literature.
- Carmen_Priami wikiPageWikiLink Interpretatio_graeca.
- Carmen_Priami wikiPageWikiLink Latin.
- Carmen_Priami wikiPageWikiLink Literary_history.
- Carmen_Priami wikiPageWikiLink Livius_Andronicus.
- Carmen_Priami wikiPageWikiLink Marcus_Terentius_Varro.
- Carmen_Priami wikiPageWikiLink Muse.
- Carmen_Priami wikiPageWikiLink Priam.
- Carmen_Priami wikiPageWikiLink Saturnian_(poetry).
- Carmen_Priami wikiPageWikiLink Varro.
- Carmen_Priami wikiPageWikiLink Vates.
- Carmen_Priami wikiPageWikiLink File:Felice_Giani_001.jpg.
- Carmen_Priami hasPhotoCollection Carmen_Priami.
- Carmen_Priami wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Cquote.
- Carmen_Priami wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Italictitle.
- Carmen_Priami wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Carmen_Priami subject Category:Latin_poems.
- Carmen_Priami subject Category:Old_Latin_literature.
- Carmen_Priami hypernym Poem.
- Carmen_Priami type Book.
- Carmen_Priami type Poem.
- Carmen_Priami type Book.
- Carmen_Priami comment "The Carmen Priami ("Priam's Song") is a lost Latin poem known from the quotation of a single line by Varro. The unknown poet, "a remarkable reactionary," rejects the Hellenizing trend in Latin poetry led by Ennius (ca.".
- Carmen_Priami label "Carmen Priami".
- Carmen_Priami sameAs Carmen_Priami.
- Carmen_Priami sameAs Carmen_Priami.
- Carmen_Priami sameAs m.0b75cby.
- Carmen_Priami sameAs Q2939627.
- Carmen_Priami sameAs Q2939627.
- Carmen_Priami wasDerivedFrom Carmen_Priami?oldid=590335877.
- Carmen_Priami depiction Felice_Giani_001.jpg.
- Carmen_Priami isPrimaryTopicOf Carmen_Priami.