Liverpool Classical Monthly: LCM., Bände 17-18J. Pinsent, 1992 |
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Seite 76
... sources but as targets.11 There is no reason to think that he is really following them in details . At True History 1. 29 Lucian and his companions pass close to Cloudcuckooland . I thought of the poet Aristophanes , a wise man and a ...
... sources but as targets.11 There is no reason to think that he is really following them in details . At True History 1. 29 Lucian and his companions pass close to Cloudcuckooland . I thought of the poet Aristophanes , a wise man and a ...
Seite 122
... sources and from his own genius much more mythological lore . His primary purpose was not to steal but to transmit knowledge . The First Vatican Mythographer was the anonymous writer of a treatise on mythology contained in a single ...
... sources and from his own genius much more mythological lore . His primary purpose was not to steal but to transmit knowledge . The First Vatican Mythographer was the anonymous writer of a treatise on mythology contained in a single ...
Seite 123
... sources , of George Thomson on Aeschylus , Eum . 269-72 , in The Oresteia of Aeschylus ( Cambridge 1938 ) . The two sources for Pericles ' expression ( Thucydides and [ Lysias ] ) have resonances with the words , but not the sense , of ...
... sources , of George Thomson on Aeschylus , Eum . 269-72 , in The Oresteia of Aeschylus ( Cambridge 1938 ) . The two sources for Pericles ' expression ( Thucydides and [ Lysias ] ) have resonances with the words , but not the sense , of ...
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accept Aeneid Aeschylus amber ancient Ansegisus antiquity appears argues argument Arion Aristophanes Athenian Athens Atticus Augustus Aulularia Bernal Black Athena Bronze Age Caeculus Callimachus Cambridge Catullus century B. C. Chaerea Cicero cited claim classical comedy commentary context Copyright culture discussion edition Editor Egypt Egyptian epic evidence example explain fact fragments Greece Greek Groningen Herakles Herodotus Hesiod Homer Horace Horsfall Hyksos Iliad inscription interpretation later Latin literary Liverpool London manuscripts means Muses myth Nepos original Ovid Oxford papyrus parallel passage perhaps phantasia Phocion Pinsent Planudes Plato Plautus Plutarch poem poet poetry possible Professor Propertius quod readers reference Roman Rome scholars seems sense Servius sexual Socrates sources status Stoic story suggests theatre Thucydides Tibullus tradition translation Tritle University Vatican Mythographer Virgil women word writing Zeus δὲ ἐν καὶ τὸ τῶν