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LIVIUS ANDRONICUS (c. 284–204 B.C. )

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Originally appearing in Volume V16, Page 816 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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LIVIUS ANDRONICUS (c. 284–204 B.C. )  , the founder of

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Roman epic
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poetry and drama . His name, in which the Greek 'An pbeteos is combined with the gentile name of one of the
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great Roman houses, while indicative of his own position as a manumitted slave, is also significant of the influences by which Roman literature was fostered, viz, the culture of men who were either Greeks or "semi-Graeci" by birth and
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education, and the
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protection and favour bestowed upon them by the more enlightened members of the Roman aristocracy . He is supposed to have been a native of Tarentum, and to have been brought, while still a boy, after the capture of that
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town in 272, as a slave to Rome . He lived in the household of a member of the gens Livia, probably M . Livius Salinator . He determined the course which Roman literature followed for more than a century after his time . The imitation of Greek
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comedy, tragedy and epic poetry, which produced great results in the hands of Naevius, Plautus, Ennius and their successors, received its first impulse from him . To judge, however, from the insignificant remains of his writings, and from the opinions of
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Cicero and Horace, he can have had no pretension either to
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original genius or to
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artistic accomplishment . His real claim to distinction was that he was the first great schoolmaster of the Roman
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people . We learn from Suetonius that, like Ennius after him, he obtained his living by teaching Greek and Latin; and it was probably as a school-
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book, rather than as a
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work of
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literary pretension, that his
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translation of the Odyssey into Latin Saturnian verse was executed . This work was still used in
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schools in the time of Horace (Epp. ii. i., 69), and, although faultily executed,satisfied a real want by introducing the Romans to a knowledge of Greek . Such knowledge became essential to men in a high position as a means of intercourse with Greeks, while Greek literature stimulated the minds of leading Romans .

Moreover,

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southern Italy and Sicily afforded many opportunities for witnessing representations of Greek comedies and tragedies . The Romans and Italians had an indigenous drama of their own, known by the name of Satura, which prepared them for the reception of the more
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regular Greek drama . The distinction between this Sallow and the plays of Euripides or Menander was that it had no regular plot . This the Latin drama first received from Livius Andronicus; but it did so at the cost of its originality . In 24.0, the
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year after the end of the first Punic War, he produced at the ludi Romani a translation of a Greek
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play (it is uncertain whether a comedy or tragedy or both), and this representation marks the beginning of Roman literature (Livy vii . 2) . Livius himself took
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part in his plays, and in order to spare his voice he introduced the custom of having the solos (cantica) sung by a boy, while he himself represented the
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action of the
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song by dumb show . In his translation he discarded the native Saturnian metre, and adopted the
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iambic, trochaic and cretic metres, to which Latin more easily adapted itself than either to the
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hexameter or to the lyrical
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measures of a later time . He continued to produce plays for more than
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thirty years after this time . The titles of his tragedies—Achilles,
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Aegisthus, Equus Trojanus, Hermione, Tereus—are all suggestive of subjects which were treated by the later tragic poets of Rome . In the year 207, when he must have been of a great age, he was appointed to compose a hymn of thanksgiving, sung by maidens, for the victory of the Metaurus and an intercessory hymn to the Aventine
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Juno . As a further tribute of
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national recognition the " college " or " gild " of poets and actors was granted a place of meeting in the temple of
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Minerva on the Aventine .

See fragments in L .

Muller, Livi Andronici et Cn . Naevi Fabularum Reliquiae (1885); also J . Wordsworth, Fragments and Specimens of Early Latin (1874) ; Mommsen, Hist. of Rome, bk. iii. ch . 14 .

End of Article: LIVIUS ANDRONICUS (c. 284–204 B.C. )
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