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The Romane History, &c. by T. Livius of Padua. Also The Breviaries of L. Florus, &c. by Dr. PHILEMON HOLLAND, fol. London

TACITUS.

1600

The End of Nero and Beginning of Galba. Fower Bookes of the Histories of Cornelius Tacitus. The Life of Agricola, by Sir HENRY SAVILLE, 4to. Lond. 1591 Annales of Tacitus, by RICHARD GRENAWAY, fol.

SALLUST*.

1598

The Famous Cronycle of the Warre, which the Romyns had against Jugurth, &c. compyled in Latin by the renowned Romayn Sallust, &c. translated into Englyshe, by Sir ALEX. BARCLAY PREEST, &c. Printed by Pynson, fol.

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London, printed by Joh. Waley, 4to.

1557

The Conspiracie of Lucius Cataline, translated into Eng. by THO. PAYNELL, 4to. Lond. 1541 and 1557 The two most worthy and notable Histories, &c. Both written by C. C. Sallustius, and translated by THO. HEYWOOD, Lond. sm. fol.

1608

* A translation of Sallust was entered at Stationers-Hall in 1588. Again, in 1607, "The historie of Sallust in Englishe,"

SUETONIUS.

SUETONIUS.

Suetonius, translated by Dr. PHIL. HOLLAND, fol.

London

CESART.

1606*

Cæsar's Commentaries, as touching British Affairs. Without name, printer, place, or date; but by the type it appears to be Rastell's.

Ames, p. 148. The eight Bookes of Caius Julius Cæsar, translated by ARTHUR GOLDING, Gent. 4to. London

1565 and 1590 Casar's Commentaries (de Bello Gallico) five Bookes, by CLEMENT EDMUNDES, with Observations, &c. Fol.

De Bello Civili, by ditto, three Bookes, fol.

Ditto, by CHAPMAN

1600

1609

1604

JUSTIN.

The History of Justine, &c. by A. G. [ARTHUR GOLD

ING] London. 4to.

Ditto, by Dr. PHIL. HOLLAND

1564 and 1578

1606

*This translation was entered at Stationers-Hall, 1604. In the entries made in the books of the StationersCompany is the following:

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John Charlewood.] Sept. 1581, Abstracte of the historię of Cesar and Pompeius."

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Ditto, by G. W. with an Epitomie of the Lives, &c. of the Romaine Emperors, from Aurelius Victor, fol.

1606

Q. CURTIUS.

The Historie of Quintus Curtius, &c. translated, &c. by JOHN BRENDE, 4to. London

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1553

1561, 1584, 1570, 1592

EUTROPIUS.

Eutropius englished, by NIC. HAWard, 8vo. 1564

A. MARCELLINUS.

Ammianus Marcellinus, translated by Dr. P. HOLLAND, London. fol.

1609

CICERO.

Cicero's Familiar Epistles, by J. WEBBE, SM.

8vo.

no date

1576

Certain select Epistles into English, by ABRA. FLEM-
MING, 4to. London
Those Fyve Questions which Marke Tullye Cicero disputed
in his Manor of Tusculanum, &c. &c. Englyshed by
JOHN DOLMAN, sm. 8vo. London

1561

In the Stationers' books, this or some other translation of the same author was entered by Richard Tottell, Feb. 1582, and again by Tho. Creede, &c. 1599.

Marcus

* Marcus Tullius Cicero, three Bookes of Duties, tourned out of Latin into English by NIC. GRIMALDE 1555, 1556, 1558, 1574

Ames says 1553; perhaps by mistake. The thre Bokes of Tullius Offyce, &c. translated, &c. by R. WHYTTINGTON, Poet Laureat, 12mo. Lond. 1533, 1534, 1540, and 1553†

The Boke of Tulle of Old Age, translated by W. WYR. CESTRE, alias BOTANER. Caxton, 4to.

1481 De Senectute, by WHYTTINGTON, 8vo. no date An Epistle or Letter of Exhortation, written in Latine by Marcus Tullius Cicero, to his Brother Quintus, the Proconsul, or Deputy of Asia, wherein the Office of a Magistrate is cunningly and wisely described, translated into Englyshe by G. G. set forth and authorised according to the Queene's Majesties In unctions. Prynted at London, by Rouland Hall, dwelling in GoldingLane, at the sygne of the three arrowes, 12mo.

1561

Maittaire says (Ann. Typog. B. 5. 290.) " In florulentâ tituli margunculâ (vulgo vignette) superiore, inscribitur 1534. This was a wooden block used by the Printer Tottel, for many Books in small 8vo. and by no means determines their Date. There may, however, have been some earlier translation than any here enumerated, as in Sir Tho. Elyot's Boke named the Governour, 1537, is mentioned "the worke of Cicero, called in Latine De Officiis, whereunto yet is no propre English word, &c."

+ In the books belonging to Stationers-Hall, "Tullie's Offices in Latin and English," is entered Feb. 1582, for R. Tottell. Again, by Tho. Orwin, 1591

Ooiij

The

** The worthie Booke of Old Age, otherwise intitled The Elder Cato, &c. 12mo. London

1569

1569

**Tullius Cicero on Old Age, by THO. NEWTON, 8vo. London Tullie's Friendship, Olde Age, Paradoxe, and Scipio's Dream, by THо. NEWTON, 4to. 1577 Tullius de Amicitia, translated into our maternal Englishe Tongue, by the E. of WORCESTER. Printed by Caxton, with the Translation of De Senectute, fol. The Paradoxe of M. T. Cicero, &c. by Roв. WHYTTINGTON, Poet-Laureat. Printed in Southwarke,

12mo.

1540

Webbe translated all the sixteen Books of Cicero's Epistles; but probably they were not printed together in Shakspere's lifetime. I suppose this from a passage in his Dedication, in which he seems to mean Bacon, by a great Lord Chancellor.

BOETHIUS.

Boethius, by CHAUCER. Printed by Caxton, fol. Boethius in English Verse, by THO. RYCHARD. Imprinted in the exempt Monastery of Tavistock, 4to.

1525

English and Latin, by GEO. COLVILLE, 4to. 1556 *

**These are perhaps the same.

In the Stationers' books, Jan. 13th, 1608, Matthew Lownes entered "Anitius Manlius Torquatus Severinus Boethius, a Christian Consul of Rome, newly translated out of Latin, together with original notes explaining the obscurest places."

APULEIUS.

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