Aelius donatus biography of martin
Aelius Donatus - Wikipedia
- Aelius Donatus (English: / d oʊ ˈ n eɪ t ə s /; fl.
Aelius Donatus - Encyclopedia
AELIUS DONATUS, Roman grammarian and teacher of rhetoric, flourished in the middle of the 4th century A.D. The only fact known regarding his life is that he was the tutor of St Jerome. He was the author of a number of professional works, of which there are still extant: - Ars grammatica; the larger portion of his commentary on Terence (a compilation from other commentaries), but probably not in its original form; and a few fragments of his notes on Virgil, preserved and severely criticized by Servius, together with the preface and introduction, and life of Virgil. The first of these works, and especially the section on the eight parts of speech, though possessing little claim to originality, and in fact evidently based on the same authorities which were used by the grammarians Charisius and Diomedes, attained such popularity as a school-book that in the middle ages the writer's name, like the French Calepin, became a common metonymy (in the form
Donatus, Aelius
Possibly the First Printed Edition Donatus's "Ars minor", the ...
Martin Morin - Wikipedia
- Aelius Donatus (English: / d oʊ ˈ n eɪ t ə s /; fl.
Aelius Donatus | Latin Grammar, 4th Century, Teacher | Britannica
Élio Donato – Wikipédia, a enciclopédia livre
- Aelius Donatus (fl.
Donatus - Classics - Oxford Bibliographies
| Aelius Donatus (fl. | |
| Aelius Donatus (flourished 4th century ad) was a famous grammarian and teacher of rhetoric at Rome, one of whose pupils was Eusebius Hieronymus (later St. Jerome). | |
| 18 Lindsay describes Martin of Laon as 'an Irishman, every inch of him' and goes on to laugh at his etymological follies.'9 Goold describes the compiler of S. |
Donatus the Grammarian (and others) - Georgetown University
- Donatus was a proponent of an early system of punctuation, consisting of dots placed in three successively higher positions to indicate successively longer pauses, roughly equivalent to the modern comma, colon, and full stop.