![]() His faculty ripened with experience and with the knowledge of that social life which was both his theme and his inspiration many of his best epigrams are among those written in his last years. He published some juvenile poems of which he thought very little in his later years, and he chuckles at a foolish bookseller who would not allow them to die a natural death (I. Not much is known of the details of his life for the first twenty years or so after he came to Rome. Seneca the Younger and Lucan may have served as his first patrons, but this is not known for sure. ![]() ![]() ![]() The success of his countrymen may have been what motivated Martial to move to Rome, from Hispania, once he had completed his education. The epigram bears to this day the form impressed upon it by his unrivalled skill in wordsmithing. Martial professes to be of the school of Catullus, Pedo, and Marsus. He was educated in Hispania, a part of the Roman Empire which in the 1st century produced several notable Latin writers, including Seneca the Elder and Seneca the Younger, Lucan and Quintilian, and Martial's contemporaries Licinianus of Bilbilis, Decianus of Emerita and Canius of Gades. The memories of this old home, and of other spots, the rough names and local associations which he delights to introduce into his verse, attest to the simple pleasures of his early life and were among the influences which kept his spirit alive in the stultifying routines of upper-crust social life in Rome. His home was evidently one of rude comfort and plenty, sufficiently in the country to afford him the amusements of hunting and fishing, which he often recalls with keen pleasure, and sufficiently near the town to afford him the companionship of many comrades, the few survivors of whom he looks forward to meeting again after his thirty-four years' absence (x. His name seems to imply that he was born a Roman citizen, but he speaks of himself as "sprung from the Celts and Iberians, and a countryman of the Tagus" and, in contrasting his own masculine appearance with that of an effeminate Greek, he draws particular attention to "his stiff Hispanian hair" (x. His parents, Fronto and Flaccilla, appear to have died in his youth. His place of birth was Augusta Bilbilis (now Calatayud) in Hispania Tarraconensis. In Book X of his Epigrams, composed between 95 and 98, he mentions celebrating his fifty-seventh birthday hence he was born during March 38, 39, 40 or 41 AD (x. Knowledge of his origins and early life are derived almost entirely from his works, which can be more or less dated according to the well-known events to which they refer. Martial has been called the greatest Latin epigrammatist, and is considered the creator of the modern epigram. ![]() He wrote a total of 1,561 epigrams, of which 1,235 are in elegiac couplets. In these short, witty poems he cheerfully satirises city life and the scandalous activities of his acquaintances, and romanticises his provincial upbringing. Marcus Valerius Martialis (known in English as Martial / ˈ m ɑːr ʃ əl/ March, between 38 and 41 AD – between 102 and 104 AD) was a Roman poet born in Hispania (modern Spain) best known for his twelve books of Epigrams, published in Rome between AD 86 and 103, during the reigns of the emperors Domitian, Nerva and Trajan. Augusta Bilbilis, Hispania Tarraconensis, Roman Empire ![]()
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