This article relies largely or entirely on a single source. (July 2019) |
Roman republic/Roman empire
editPoets (by date of birth)
edit- Lucretius (94 - 49 BCE)
- Catullus (84 -54 BCE)
- Virgil (Oct. 15, 70 - Sept. 21, 19 BCE)
- Gallus (69 - 26 BC), Egypt
- Horace (Dec. 8, 65 - Nov. 27, 8 BC)
- Tibullus (54 - 19 BCE)
- Propertius (50 - 15/2 BCE), Bevagna
- Ovid (Mar 20, 43 BCE - 17 CE)
Unknown Date:
- Sulpicia[1] - the only woman poet of Ancient Rome whose works survive
- Meleager of Gadara
Works
edit- Meleager of Gadara gathers an anthology of short poems and epigrams that would become the basis for the Greek Anthology
South Asia
editWorks
edit- The Pali Canon is first written down (estimated)
- The Tolkappiyam, a Tamil grammar written in verse
China
editPoets (by year of birth)
edit- Yang Xiong (53 BCE - 18 CE)
Korea
editPoets (by year of birth)
edit- Yuri of Goguryeo, (reigned c. 17 BCE to 18 CE)
References
edit- ^ Plant, Ian Michael (2004). Women Writers of Ancient Greece and Rome: An Anthology. University of Oklahoma Press. p. 106. ISBN 9780806136219.