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The Pliny Project


Article # : 17207 

Section : THE ARTS
Issue Date : 2 / 1990  2,706 Words
Author : Henry Lansford
Henry Lansford is a free-lance writer and communication consultant based in Boulder, Colorado. He has been writing about the natural resources of the Rocky Mountain West for the past twenty-four years. He is also scientific writer-editor for the Atmospheric Sciences Research Center of the State University of New York at Albany.

       "Miraris cur me Laurentinum uel (si ita mauis), Laurens menum tanto opere delectet; desines mirari, cum cognoueris gratiam uillae, opportunitatem loci, litoris spatiu. [You wonder why my Laurentinum (or if you prefer, my Laurens) delights me so. You will cease to wonder when you have become acquainted with the charm of the villa itself, the convenience of the location and the spaciousness of the shore.]"
       
        In these opening lines of a letter written to his friend Gallus around the end of the first century A.D., Gaius Plinius Caecilius Secundus - Pliny the Younger - proudly and lovingly praised the virtues of this seaside villa at Laurentum, on the Tyrrhenian coast southwest of Rome. Although its precise location has never been pinpointed, a recent study of Pliny's Laurentine villa by a team of architecture and classics scholars provides some interesting insights into life in a Roman villa, the villa tradition in ancient Roman society, and some implications for contemporary architecture.
       
        Pliny the Younger was so called to distinguish him from his famous uncle, Pliny the Elder, an indefatigable scholar and writer who produced the celebrated thirty-seven-volume Natural History (characterized by one scholar as "a storehouse of ancient errors"). The younger Pliny, a successful lawyer and imperial administrator, is best known to classical scholars as the author of the nine-volume Epistularium, a collection of elegantly written letters that convey a wealth of information about social, literary, political, and domestic life in first-century Rome.
       
        Like most wealthy Romans, Pliny owned a lot of real estate, including a country place in Tuscany as ... (1996 of 16792 Characters)
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