Update 2: Here you can listen to the Coriolan Overture.
Update 1: Bingley wrote about Coriolanus on About.com:
- Coriolanus Biography
Bingley's Biography of Coriolanus Who Was Originally Known as Cnaeus Marcius
- Coriolanus
Plutarch's Biography of Coriolanus and Shakespeare's Coriolanus Play
Last Sunday we went to the opening concert of the 2008/2009 season of the Stamford Symphony Orchestra. After the National Anthem, the first order of business was the Coriolan Overture by Beethoven (followed by Symphony No. 9 in C major (D.944) – The Great for big as opposed to little and better known to me as Symphony No. 7 – by Schubert; and the Emperor Concerto No. 5 for Piano & Orchestra in
E flat major by Beethoven, soloist Vladimir Feltsman). The program note for Coriolan says,
No doubt the protagonist’s temperament—iron-willed, passionate,
uncompromising and moved to reckless bravery—resonated deeply in
Beethoven’s psyche; he saw in Coriolanus a mirror of himself.
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Our current read, Eagle in the Snow by Wallace Breem, centers around the barbarian invasion of 406 CE across the Rhein river, which our fictitious hero Paulinus Gaius Maximus is tasked to stave off by Stilicho, magister militum of the Western Roman Empire. (Note also Claudian at LacusCurtius re Stilicho.)
The Cambridge Medieval History by By J.B. Bury, Macmillan, 1911, page 266, gives a concise description. (The book may also be read at the Internet Archive.)
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I have begun reading our next chat subject, the novel Eagle in the Snow by Wallace Breem, luckily having found it in a neighboring town's library. The story begins in Britannia and on Hadrian's Wall – of which we will be hearing soon from Heloise. But it really centers on the Roman provinces west of the Rhein river where our hero Paulinus Gaius Maximus is given the task to try and hold off invasion from the beyond the river, with one puny legion, beginning around 400 CE according to the timeline from the novel.
When Maximus and his soldiers arrive in Augusta Treverorum (Trier) they are briefly quartered within its massive gates. One of those gates, now known as Porta Nigra, still exists.

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Either I've become older and wiser or older and denser: this time around I have to spend much more time on our current read, The Beginnings of Rome: Italy From the Bronze Age to the Punic Wars (Circa 1,000 to 264 B.C.) by T.J. Cornell than in the past.
Tonight's assignment is Chapters 8, 9, and 10, before we adjourn this discussion and the rest of the book to 2009. I have the sinking feeling that we won't get to Chapter 10 …
Continue reading "the denseness (in the positive sense) of t.j. cornell's writings and more" »
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