1. Colloquia familiaria. Introduction to the Colloquia familiaria; Salutandi formulae Bibliographies. Erasmus Bibliography; Google is proud to partner with libraries to digitize public domain materials and make them widely accessible. Public domain books belong to the public and we . Title, Colloquia familiaria. Author, Desiderius Erasmus. Published, Original from, the Bavarian State Library. Digitized, May 4, Export Citation.
![]()
| Author: | Shakasida Kajikasa |
| Country: | Guadeloupe |
| Language: | English (Spanish) |
| Genre: | Art |
| Published (Last): | 11 September 2015 |
| Pages: | 363 |
| PDF File Size: | 13.43 Mb |
| ePub File Size: | 16.77 Mb |
| ISBN: | 433-9-54743-843-5 |
| Downloads: | 10202 |
| Price: | Free* [*Free Regsitration Required] |
| Uploader: | Gura |
Flat Style by Ian Bradley.
Textkit Greek and Latin Forums
Board index Textkit Community Open Board. Colloquia Textkit is a learning community- introduce yourself here.

Use the Open Board to introduce yourself, chat about off-topic issues and get to know each other. Probably, you already know they by means of Stoa. If anyone wanted a copy of it to use offline or something let me know. Gonzalo, what other renaissance texts have you found useful?
I like the natural approach to Latin that Erasmus takes. I don’t like sometimes the bad use of Latin made onwards from these centuries.
And, well, if you say “renaissance texts” I can also answer you by means of Iohannes Boccaccio, Petrarca and Dante. I must confess that I feel, specially Francesco Petrarca, more in favor to the Italian language fiorentino in his Latin writings than in favor of a mere and pure Latin.
Besides, you can read some compositions by Giacomo Leopardi, which are always entertaining: We had sometime ago a discussion related to spoken Latin, its pros and cons as I thinkand other questions.
Colloquia familiaria: a selection
Last edited by Gonzalo on Wed Jan 30, 7: They have a few works by Famkliaria here. Of course, their selection of Latin works is small, but the file sizes are much smaller than scanned PDFs, too.
Unfortunately, most erasmu them are in plain. You can always convert them, or download them from manybooks. They have almost all of PG’s catalog, and you can download them in a variety of formats. I’ve also taken an interest in the Colloquia, and I’ve copied and pasted all of the Stoa’s text into one document file.
