Livius Andronicus (died between 207 and 200 BC) was a Greek author who is seen as the first Ancient Roman poet. He was probably an actor, and grew up in the Greek city Tarentum. Scholars think he was captured as a prisoner of war and taken to Rome as a slave. He was later freed, so they called him a freedman.[1] His first language was Greek and scholars think he learned Latin after coming to Rome.[2] His most famous work is the Odusia, a translation of the Odyssey into Latin.
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