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  1. 16 de ene. de 2013 · Más Info http://www.trailersyestrenos.esVersión moderna de la obra 'Coriolano' de William Shakespeare, donde en la Antigua Roma, Cayo Marcio Coriolano intent...

  2. Coriolanus is a tragedy by William Shakespeare that was first performed around 1609.Like Julius Caesar and Antony and Cleopatra, it is a Roman play.But unlike those plays, it is not set in the Imperial Rome of the first century CE, but more than two centuries earlier, when Rome was just one Italian city among many, fighting for survival.

  3. Coriolan ( anglais : Coriolanus) est une tragédie de William Shakespeare, créée en 1607 et publiée pour la première fois en 1623. Elle s'inspire de la vie de Coriolan, figure légendaire des débuts de la république romaine. Elle fait partie d'une série d’œuvres du dramaturge anglais dont le sujet est tiré de l'histoire romaine comme ...

  4. Coriolanus follows the eponymous character as he tries (and fails) to gain political power through allegiances to the common people whom he once hated, and his longstanding rivalry with his enemy Aufidius--a rivalry that will prove deadly by the play’s end. With this Shakescleare modern English translation of the play, you can follow the ...

  5. Shakespeare consulted numerous sources for information about Coriolanus. The main work he seemed to have used was the “Life of Caius Martius Coriolanus,” from Lives, written by the famous ancient Greek historian Plutarch.Scholars believe that Shakespeare relied on the popular contemporary translation of Lives by Sir Thomas North, which was reprinted in 1595.

  6. Coriolanus Full Book Summary. In ancient Rome, in the aftermath of a famine, the common people, or plebeians, demand the right to set their own price for the city's grain supply. In response to their protests, the ruling aristocracy, or patricians, grant the plebeians five representatives, or tribunes--a decision that provokes the ire of the ...

  7. A Modern Perspective: Coriolanus. By Heather James. Shakespeare’s Coriolanus labors to establish his reputation as Rome’s most valiant son, but his relentless verbal attacks on his fellow Romans and strenuous defenses of himself cause him to lose respect almost as quickly as he earns it. Though no one doubts his valor, many question the ...

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