Columnas Herculis
Latin
Pronunciation
- (Classical Latin) IPA(key): [kɔˈɫʊm.naːs ˈhɛr.kʊ.lɪs]
- (modern Italianate Ecclesiastical) IPA(key): [koˈlum.nas ˈɛr.ku.lis]
Proper noun
Columnās Herculis f pl
- accusative of Columnae Herculis (“the Pillars of Hercules”)
- c. 1 CE – 100 CE, Quintus Curtius Rufus, Historiae Alexandri Magni 10.1.17:
- ipse animō īnfīnīta complexus statuerat omnī ad orientem maritimā regiōne perdomitā ex Syriā petere Āfricam, Carthāginī īnfēnsus, inde Numidiae sōlitūdinibus peragrātīs cursum dīrigere—ibi namque Columnās Herculis esse fāma vulgāverat—, Hispāniās deinde, quās Hibēriam Graecī ā flūmine Hibērō vocābant, adīre et praetervehī Alpēs Ītaliaeque ōram, unde in Ēpīrum brevis cursus est.
- He himself, having envisioned boundless ambissions in his mind, had resolved, with every maritime region in the East subdued, to head from Syria towards Africa, bearing hatred towards Carthage; from there, having traversed through the Numidian wilderness, he directed his course to Gades, for tradition stated that the Pillars of Hercules were there; then to enter Spain, which the Greeks called Hiberia after the river Hiberus, and to pass by the Alps and Italian coast, from whence the passage to Epirus is short.
- ipse animō īnfīnīta complexus statuerat omnī ad orientem maritimā regiōne perdomitā ex Syriā petere Āfricam, Carthāginī īnfēnsus, inde Numidiae sōlitūdinibus peragrātīs cursum dīrigere—ibi namque Columnās Herculis esse fāma vulgāverat—, Hispāniās deinde, quās Hibēriam Graecī ā flūmine Hibērō vocābant, adīre et praetervehī Alpēs Ītaliaeque ōram, unde in Ēpīrum brevis cursus est.
- c. 77 CE – 79 CE, Pliny the Elder, Naturalis Historia 13.138.4, (three other accusative occurrences in Pliny):
- c. 98 CE, Tacitus, Germania 34.2.1:
- ipsum quīn etiam Ōceanum illā temptāvimus; et superesse adhūc Herculis Columnās fāma vulgāvit, sīve adiit Herculēs, seu quicquid ubīque magnificum est, in clāritātem ejus referre cōnsēnsimus.
- Indeed, we even attempted the Ocean itself with that, and the rumour spread that the Pillars of Hercules still exist, whether Hercules reached them or we agreed to attribute whatever is magnificent anywhere in the world to his glory.
- ipsum quīn etiam Ōceanum illā temptāvimus; et superesse adhūc Herculis Columnās fāma vulgāvit, sīve adiit Herculēs, seu quicquid ubīque magnificum est, in clāritātem ejus referre cōnsēnsimus.
- c. 74 CE – 130 CE, Florus, Epitome of Roman History 1.22.147:
- Scīpiō, cui jam grande dē Āfricā nōmen Fāta dēcrēverant, bellātrīcem illam, virīs armīsque nōbilem Hispāniam, illam sēminārium hostīlis exercitūs, illam Hannibalis ērudītrīcem—incrēdibile dictū—tōtam ā Pȳrēnaeīs montibus in Herculis Columnās et Ōceanum recuperāvit, nesciās citius an fēlīcius.
- Scipio, to whom the Fates had already decreed a great name from Africa, recovered the whole of that warlike Spain, renowned for men and arms, that nursery of an enemy army, that teacher of Hannibal, from the Pyrenees Mountains to the Pillars of Hercules and the ocean — unbelievable to say, you wouldn't know whether he did it more quickly or successfully.
- Scīpiō, cui jam grande dē Āfricā nōmen Fāta dēcrēverant, bellātrīcem illam, virīs armīsque nōbilem Hispāniam, illam sēminārium hostīlis exercitūs, illam Hannibalis ērudītrīcem—incrēdibile dictū—tōtam ā Pȳrēnaeīs montibus in Herculis Columnās et Ōceanum recuperāvit, nesciās citius an fēlīcius.