Marcus Annaeus Lucan

Lucan, Marcus Annaeus

 

Born A.D. 39 in Cordoba, Spain; died A.D. 65, in Rome. Roman poet. Nephew of the philosopher Seneca.

Lucan took part in a plot against Nero, for which he committed suicide on Nero’s orders. Lucan’s only surviving work is an unfinished historical narrative poem in ten chapters, Pharsalia, or The Civil War, which describes the war between Caesar and Pompey (49-47 B.C.); the poem’s climactic moment is the battle at Pharsala. The work is imbued with the attitudes of the senatorial opposition, which felt that Caesar’s victory signified the end of Roman liberty. The philosophical basis of the poem is stoicism. Tragic pathos, rhetoric, and the piling-on of horrors define the expressiveness and tension of the style.

WORKS

De hello civili. Edited by P. Wuilleumier and H. Le Bonniec. Paris, 1962.
In Russian translation:
Farsaliia, Hi Poema o grazhdanskoi voine. Moscow-Leningrad, 1951.

REFERENCE

Morford, M. P. O. The Poet Lucan: Studies in Rhetorical Epic. Oxford, 1967.