Elegiae
Rome
c. 47 BCE–c. 15 BCE · Rome
Sextus Propertius (c. 50/45-c. 15 BCE) was a Roman elegiac poet of the Augustan age, celebrated for four books of Elegies that center largely on his passionate and turbulent love for a woman he called Cynthia. His dense, learned, and emotionally charged verse made him one of the major Latin love poets alongside Tibullus and Ovid.
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We know they were here, but the specifics of what they did at this stop aren’t recorded yet in our corpus.
# Rome In the late eleventh and twelfth centuries, Rome lay within the Papal States, the territorial domain of the Catholic Church, though its temporal glory as an empire had long faded. The city sprawled across its famous hills along the Tiber River, a landscape of crumbling ancient monuments, medieval fortifications, and Romanesque churches that dominated the skyline. The Jewish community of Rome was among Europe's most ancient, tracing roots to the second century BCE, and it flourished in a precarious but resilient position under papal authority; while confined to restricted quarters and subject to discriminatory laws, Roman Jews maintained a sophisticated intellectual and commercial life, with Hebrew scholarship and biblical commentary flourishing despite—or perhaps because of—the community's isolation. The Jewish quarter itself, densely packed and vibrant, became a center of learning where skilled scribes copied manuscripts and rabbinical discussions drew on centuries of local tradition. What made Rome extraordinary for Torah study was not merely its learned scholars but the tangible presence of antiquity itself: the community lived amid the ruins of pagan temples and Roman law, giving their interpretations of Jewish law a unique resonance, as if they were rebuilding Jewish civilization in the very streets where Roman power had once reigned supreme.
Nepos, Cornelius, Cicero, Quintus Tullius Cicero, Julius Caesar, Sallust, Parthenius of Nicaea
In the same place & time
Sages whose lives overlapped with Propertius, Sextus’s in the same cities, drawn from their recorded journeys.
Nepos, Cornelius, Cicero, Quintus Tullius Cicero, Julius Caesar, Sallust, Parthenius of Nicaea, Vitruvius, Virgil, Didymus Alexandrinus, Horace, Strabo, Augustus, Dionysius of Halicarnassus, Tibullus, Seneca the Elder, Ovid, Celsus, Valerius Maximus
The world in their lifetime
Thinkers and teachers of other traditions whose lives overlapped with Propertius, Sextus’s — a glimpse of the wider world they lived in. Drawn purely from recorded birth and death years.
Rome