Michael

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The astonishing “gap” in Latin literature between the middle of the second and the end of the third century CE demonstrates that the effort to Romanize the culture, which had characterized the classical period between Cicero and Horace, had not met with the intended success. The attempt to create a Roman literary canon on a par with that of the Greeks had not really displaced Greek as the prime language of literature and philosophy even in the western parts of the empire.
Latin: Story of a World Language
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