A. 求英文故事the Dog of Pompeii的中文概括
這是一個1999年的美國電影,講的是一個住在義大利龐貝古城的盲眼的孤兒和他的狗的故事,我也只能搜這部電影的介紹,沒有片源.
the Dog of Pompeii的中文翻譯_網路翻譯
the Dog of Pompeii
全部釋義和例句>>龐貝古城的狗
B. 龐貝末日簡介英文版
The site of Pompeii is located in western Italy in a region called Campania, near the Bay of Naples. With the coast to the west and the Apennine Mountains to the east, Campania is a fertile plain, traversed by two major rivers and blessed with soil rich in phosphorus and potash. In ancient times, the region's crop yield was six times higher than the average of the rest of the peninsula. Campania was so fertile that some areas had up to three grain crops per year. The region also hosted some of Italy's chief olive groves, and the mountains nourished thousands of sheep.
Though little is known about Campania's first settlers, the first people to settle in this region were probably prehistoric hunters, gatherers and fishers. By at least the eighth century B.C., a group of Italic people known as the Oscans occupied the region; they most likely established Pompeii, though the exact date of its origin is unknown. Ionians also settled in Campania ring the eighth century B.C.
Their Greek settlements began as a series of small trading posts, but soon grew into successful merchant cities that eventually dominated the area. For a few centuries the inhabitants of Campania remained under Hellenic control, with Pompeii and the nearby city Herculaneum the center of Greek occupation. During the fifth century B.C. a group of warriors from Samnium, a region north of Campania, invaded the latter region and seized control of Pompeii. Rome, vying with the Samnites over control of the Italic peninsula, drove the Samnites out in the fourth century B.C. and took Pompeii as its own ally about 290 B.C.
Rome's control over Pompeii was distant - the city was allowed to retain its own language and culture, but was required to admit itself subject to Rome without benefiting from the status of Roman citizenship. Pompeii reluctantly accepted this situation for centuries; finally, when the Social War began in 90 B.C., they saw a chance at freedom and joined forces with other Roman "allies" ag
C. 請問關於龐貝古城的電影《 最後的一天》 怎麼下載啊
《龐貝古城 - 最後的一天》(Pompeii - The Last Day)BBC[DVDRip]
中文名稱:龐貝古城 - 最後的一天
英文名稱:Pompeii - The Last Day
資源類型:DVDRip
版本:BBC
發行時間:2003年
地區:香港
語言:普通話,英語
簡介:
【原 片 名】Pompeii - The Last Day
【中 文 名】龐貝古城 - 最後的一天
【出品年代】2003
【出品公司】BBC
【國 家】英國
【類 別】劇情
【IMDB鏈接】
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0369838/
【IMDB評分】7.4/10 (29 votes)
【導 演】Peter Nicholson
【主 演】Rachel Atkins .... Plinia
Jim Carter .... Polybius
Rebecca Clarke .... Fortunata
Chrissie Cotterill .... Epidia
Jonathan Firth .... Stephanus
Martin Hodgson .... Gaius
Leigh Jones .... Sabinus
Neji Nejah .... Restitutus
Tim Pigott-Smith .... Pliny the Elder
Chad Shepherd .... Africanus
Alisdair Simpson .... Narrator
Katherine Whitburn .... Julia
Robert Whitelock .... Celas
Inika Leigh Wright .... Hedone
George Yiasoumi .... Felix
【影片長度】50 Mins
【對白語言】英語/中文普通話
【字幕語言】中文
【內容簡介】
重現古代最慘烈的自然災難—大約2000年前,於公元79年的維蘇威火山大爆發。
本片透過目擊者的眼光,呈現龐貝城的最後二十四小時。有人試圖逃離災禍,有人慘遭奪命,其中有一人僥倖存活。小普利尼對這場驚人災禍的說明,留存至今。透過他的解析、屍體所揭露出的線索,和從遺跡中起出的工藝品,龐貝城的最後一天得以再現。
這場人類悲劇的源頭就是維蘇威火山。它休眠了數百年,山坡也充滿生機,卻又突然爆發。在短短的二十四小時之內,它噴發出四十億噸的浮石、岩塊與火山灰,將龐貝和赫庫蘭尼姆這對雙子城,覆蓋於二十五公尺的火山碎屑之下。
「龐貝古城」這部影片探討維蘇威火山的再度爆發,以及這對龐貝居民的影響。龐貝居民力抗迎面而來的災禍,被迫做出終將決定自身存亡的選擇。
電驢下載地址:
http://lib.verycd.com/2005/03/01/0000040748.html
D. 龐貝末日的介紹
使用網路網盤免費分享給你,《龐貝末日》是由導演保羅·安德森執導的劇情片,基特·哈靈頓、凱瑞·安·莫斯、艾米莉·布朗寧、阿德沃爾·阿吉紐依·艾格拜吉、傑西卡·盧卡斯、庫里·格拉漢姆、薩沙·羅伊茨、傑瑞德·哈里斯、基弗·薩瑟蘭領銜主演。影片採用3D實拍技術。《龐貝末日》於2014年02月21日正式北美上映,2014年8月15日在中國內地上映。影片講述古羅馬時代,維蘇威火山爆發在即,龐貝城的貴族小姐愛上了奴隸角鬥士的故事。
E. 求一份 龐貝(pompeii)的英文版簡介
The site of Pompeii is located in western Italy in a region called Campania, near the Bay of Naples. With the coast to the west and the Apennine Mountains to the east, Campania is a fertile plain, traversed by two major rivers and blessed with soil rich in phosphorus and potash. In ancient times, the region's crop yield was six times higher than the average of the rest of the peninsula. Campania was so fertile that some areas had up to three grain crops per year. The region also hosted some of Italy's chief olive groves, and the mountains nourished thousands of sheep.
Though little is known about Campania's first settlers, the first people to settle in this region were probably prehistoric hunters, gatherers and fishers. By at least the eighth century B.C., a group of Italic people known as the Oscans occupied the region; they most likely established Pompeii, though the exact date of its origin is unknown. Ionians also settled in Campania ring the eighth century B.C.
Their Greek settlements began as a series of small trading posts, but soon grew into successful merchant cities that eventually dominated the area. For a few centuries the inhabitants of Campania remained under Hellenic control, with Pompeii and the nearby city Herculaneum the center of Greek occupation. During the fifth century B.C. a group of warriors from Samnium, a region north of Campania, invaded the latter region and seized control of Pompeii. Rome, vying with the Samnites over control of the Italic peninsula, drove the Samnites out in the fourth century B.C. and took Pompeii as its own ally about 290 B.C.
Rome's control over Pompeii was distant - the city was allowed to retain its own language and culture, but was required to admit itself subject to Rome without benefiting from the status of Roman citizenship. Pompeii reluctantly accepted this situation for centuries; finally, when the Social War began in 90 B.C., they saw a chance at freedom and joined forces with other Roman "allies" against the city that oppressed them. The rebels and Rome fought for two years but one of Rome's most brilliant generals, Sulla, eventually defeated the Campanians. He took Pompeii and Herculaneum in 89 B.C.
Though the allies were defeated, they were awarded the status of Roman citizenship. In order to quell any further uprisings, however, their former liberties were taken away, and Rome established colonies of army veterans to help keep the order. Eventually, Sulla established the Cornelia Veneria colony in Campania, which began the "romanization" of the region.
Campania adapted to the Romans as easily as it had to the Greeks. Because of the area's natural resources, trade flourished and the standard of living was raised. Pompeii developed its luxury services, trade with foreign countries and agricultural proce. As Rome itself became more prosperous, its wealthy citizens looked to Pompeii and the Gulf of Naples as a relaxing vacation area. The shoreline of the Gulf became host to the splendid country houses of the most powerful people in the world, including emperors, court personages, and Roman aristocracy. It appeared that Pompeii and the surrounding villas had finally found the peace they had longed for.
Though Mt. Vesuvius had once been a very active volcano, it had remained dormant for as long as humans could remember. Since no legacy of destruction had been passed down from their ancestors, the people living near the mountain didn't realize there was any potential for danger. The first warning sign came on February 5th, A.D. 62. About midday, a "long, muffled roar" shook the town; nobody could tell what it was, or where it had come from. Soon the earth began to tremble, and buildings collapsed all around. People rushed out of the town and away from the falling buildings, only to fall prey to deep chasms that ripped open the countryside without warning. The town's nearby reservoir also broke, adding floods to the chaotic scene. Though it was destructive, the first earthquake lasted for only a moment; an hour later, however, the area was seized by another tremor. The quakes continued to occur at unpredictable intervals, inflicting alternate moods of hysteria and hope, until nightfall.
For the next seventeen years Pompeii concentrated on repairing the damages the earthquake had caused, determined to make their town even more splendid than before. Campania was peaceful and prosperous once more, and their maritime trading instry continued to be successful. Signs of the upcoming eruption began at the beginning of August in A.D. 79. Small tremors shook the ground, but the quakes were so insignificant and caused so little damage that few paid any attention to them. Springs and wells also dried up, which in ancient times was often interpreted as a sign of the gods' displeasure.
On August 20th, the earth began to rumble and crack, and the usually calm sea gave way to giant waves. Horses, cattle and birds became uneasy and restless, as if they could foresee the disaster that awaited the town. Finally, on the morning of August 24th, 79 A. D. the volcano burst open with an earsplitting crack. Smoke, mud, flames and burning stones spewed from the summit of the mountain, sending a rain of ash and rock through the surrounding countryside. The mud seeped down the sides of Vesuvius, swallowing nearby farms, orchards and villas. Adding to the destruction were the mephitic vapors that accompanied the falling debris; the fumes first caused deliriousness in their victims, then suffocated them.
Some people of Pompeii grabbed their beasts of burden and attempted to flee the area; others perhaps chose to wait until the streets were clear of the panicked masses; still others sealed themselves up in rooms, supposing that the ashes and poisonous gasses would not harm them there. The unfortunate people who could not escape in time to avoid disaster were killed by falling buildings, overcome by the mephitic gas, or simply buried by the rapidly falling ash. Their bodies were quickly covered by the volcano's mineral deposits, which covered Pompeii in a layer more than 30 feet thick.
Over the years, the memory of Pompeii and the surrounding cities faded into a vague legend about the lost treasure of la Citta ("the City"). Interest in recovery of the ancient sites did not return until the fourteenth century, when the Renaissance brought a renewed fascination with all things antique. Ancient writers such as Pliny the Younger, Perotto, Sannazzaro, and Dion Cassius mentioned Pompeii and the disaster that had befallen it; tantalizing hints as to what lay beneath the Campanian soil were also unearthed.
Based on artifacts discovered by people who lived on the land, scholar humanists hypothesized that the ancient objects they found came from the famous la Citta . Excavations did not occur, however, until the eighteenth century, when Herculaneum was rediscovered by a peasant digging a well. Pompeii itself was found ring an excavation that began on March 23, 1748. From that date on, excavations at Pompeii have continued sporadically. Portions of the site remain uncovered, and excavation and research teams are still attempting to reveal this mysterious city's secrets.
F. 中英文講述電影《龐貝末日》
在古羅馬時代,一個叫做邁洛(Milo)的船王奴隸愛上了船王的女兒,夢想著有一天能夠贖回自由身迎娶心上人。然而邁洛沒有料到,就在他被賣給那不勒斯另一名奴隸主的同時,他的心上人也被許配給一個腐敗的羅馬議員。這時維蘇威火山爆發了,邁洛不顧生命危險回到龐貝想救出心上人和被困在競技場的角鬥士好友
G. 求龐貝古城影片資料
咳,說清楚嘛,以為你要下載這個記錄片
中文名稱:龐貝古城 - 最後的一天
英文名稱:Pompeii - The Last Day
資源類型:DVDRip
版本:BBC
發行時間:2003年
地區:香港
語言:普通話,英語
【IMDB評分】7.4/10 (29 votes)
【導 演】Peter Nicholson
【主 演】Rachel Atkins .... Plinia
Jim Carter .... Polybius
Rebecca Clarke .... Fortunata
Chrissie Cotterill .... Epidia
Jonathan Firth .... Stephanus
Martin Hodgson .... Gaius
Leigh Jones .... Sabinus
Neji Nejah .... Restitutus
Tim Pigott-Smith .... Pliny the Elder
Chad Shepherd .... Africanus
Alisdair Simpson .... Narrator
Katherine Whitburn .... Julia
Robert Whitelock .... Celas
Inika Leigh Wright .... Hedone
George Yiasoumi .... Felix
【影片長度】50 Mins
【對白語言】英語/中文普通話
【字幕語言】中文
【內容簡介】
重現古代最慘烈的自然災難—大約2000年前,於公元79年的維蘇威火山大爆發。
本片透過目擊者的眼光,呈現龐貝城的最後二十四小時。有人試圖逃離災禍,有人慘遭奪命,其中有一人僥倖存活。小普利尼對這場驚人災禍的說明,留存至今。透過他的解析、屍體所揭露出的線索,和從遺跡中起出的工藝品,龐貝城的最後一天得以再現。
這場人類悲劇的源頭就是維蘇威火山。它休眠了數百年,山坡也充滿生機,卻又突然爆發。在短短的二十四小時之內,它噴發出四十億噸的浮石、岩塊與火山灰,將龐貝和赫庫蘭尼姆這對雙子城,覆蓋於二十五公尺的火山碎屑之下。
「龐貝古城」這部影片探討維蘇威火山的再度爆發,以及這對龐貝居民的影響。龐貝居民力抗迎面而來的災禍,被迫做出終將決定自身存亡的選擇。
H. 求一部關於龐貝古城的電影
龐貝城的末日Ultimi giorni di Pompei, Gli (1959)
參考:http://www.mtime.com/movie/65311/details.html#menu