Just out of curiosity, are there any latin texts that haven't been translated yet?
There is also an Italian translation from 1724, although the few bits I read have left me with the impression that it isn't terribly accurate.Indeed. They were entirely translated in the 1970s into French by Jean-Pierre Callu though.
Most of the Latin texts ever written have never been translated, and, unless machine learning dramatically improves, are unlikely to be translated for the forseeable future. Indeed, this is the strongest argument there is for learning Latin to a high degree of reading fluency. There are currently over 59,000 texts in the Neo-Latin bibliography, and as more texts are discovered, this number increases (yes, we don't even know how many texts there are; many have not been read by anyone for hundreds of years - let alone translated! There are a few Neo-Latin projects in various countries currently building bibliographies - and this bibliography does not even take into account the huge volume of Latin material that remains in manuscript.) http://www.philological.bham.ac.uk/bibliography/index.htmJust out of curiosity, are there any latin texts that haven't been translated yet?