The History of Rome
Livy
translated by Rev. Canon Roberts, 1912
The house holds 1763 episodes of this work — 833,116 words of testimony.
Apparatus shelf + pinned Wikisource — Livy, The History of Rome (Rev. Canon Roberts translation, Everyman's Library) · Rev. Canon Roberts, Everyman's Library (J. M. Dent & Sons / E. P. Dutton), first issue 1912; six volumes
license: public-domain (the Roberts translation's Everyman first issue is 1912, pre-1930; Wikisource dates the translation 1905 — either way decades inside the US public domain; digital-door text carries no additional rights)
provenance: TWO DOORS, one translation, stated honestly: (1) shelf djvu scans vols I-V — 'Livy - The History of Rome [Vol I..V].djvu', sha256 2e02ebff590ebaf6…/3c4df8aaeeffb255…/3eb73eb49c30dba2…/2e5b7572db51e439…/b21ec32a66a5fb99… (full hashes in ops/sources/books.inventory.json), text layers re-ordered from their own geometry by profile livy-roberts-v1 (ops/pipeline/profile_livy_roberts.py); (2) pinned en.wikisource.org digital transcriptions of the same translation — Book XXXIX (revid 3795019, sha256 f1a3ada49b10c956…) and Books XL-XLV (revids 3795016/3795012/3784681/3795009/3784683/8966066, sha256 012d7b73fa2f78c9…), acquisition pins in ops/sources/MANIFEST.md; plus 55 whole-chapter cures for 3 missing print leaves and the OCR holes in the scans (per-chapter list frozen in livy.works.json and livy.leaf-cures.json; witness revids in livy.witness.json). Books 11-20 are lost in the manuscript tradition (only the Periochae survive). Chapter boundaries were verified against a committed boundary witness built from the same pinned door; canon chapter counts double-sourced (critical editions + the witness, 35/35 books agree)