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  •  
    721

    German classical philologist Ribbeck's second edition of Virgil's works was published in Leipzig, 1894-1895. Solely a critical edition, it lacks textual commentary. It comprises four parts in two volumes: Volume 1 contains the Eclogues and Georgics, and Aeneid, Books 1-6.

  •  
    607

    German classical philologist Ribbeck's second edition of Virgil's works was published in Leipzig, 1894-1895. Solely a critical edition, it lacks textual commentary. It comprises four parts in two volumes: Volume 2 contains the Aeneid, Books 7-12 and Appendix Vergiliana, giving texts of other poems assigned to the Virgilian canon.

  •  
    777

    Samuel Butler's four-volume edition of the Tragedies of Aeschylus draws upon the monumental 1663 Latin commentary edition by Thomas Stanley. Based upon Stanley's own notes and translations, Butler's Greek and Latin edition distils the early English scholarship on Aeschylus. This third volume (1812) contains the Choephori and Eumenides.

  •  
    907

    Samuel Butler's four-volume edition of the Tragedies of Aeschylus draws upon the monumental 1663 Latin commentary edition by Thomas Stanley. Based upon Stanley's own notes and translations, Butler's Greek and Latin edition distils the early English scholarship on Aeschylus. This first volume (1809) contains Prometheus Bound and The Suppliants.

  •  
    991

    Samuel Butler's four-volume edition of Aeschylus' Tragedies draws upon the monumental 1663 Latin commentary of Thomas Stanley. Based upon Stanley's notes and translations, Butler's Greek and Latin edition distils the early English scholarship on Aeschylus. This second part of the fourth volume contains attributed fragments and an index.

  • - Aus dem Geiste der Musik
    av Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche
    371

    Die Geburt der Tragoedie (1872) is one of the most important philosophical texts of the modern period. Nietzsche traces the origins of Greek tragedy in the encounter between the Dionysian and the Apollonian, and suggests that the music of Richard Wagner has a power to overcome this dichotomy.

  •  
    731

    First published between 1839 and 1851, this is still widely considered to be the definitive collection of ancient Greek proverbs and ranks among the outstanding works of nineteenth-century classical scholarship. Volume 1 contains texts by Zenobius, Diogenianus, Plutarchus, and Gregorius Cyprius, with critical apparatus and Latin commentary.

  • - Griechisch und Deutsch, mit Erlauternden Abhandlungen
     
    417

    Muller's translation of and commentary on Aeschylus' play The Eumenides was published in 1833. The play is a reenactment of the Greek legend of the trial of Agamemnon's son Orestes. The role of the chorus and the significance of the costumes are explored, and the composition of the play explored.

  •  
    807

    Karl Muller (1813-1894) published this monumental and still unrivalled collection of the surviving fragments of Greek historical works in Paris between 1841 and 1872. Volume 1 contains histories by Hecataeus, Charon of Lampascus, and Apollodorus of Athens.

  •  
    777

    Karl Muller (1813-1894) published this monumental and still unrivalled collection of the surviving fragments of Greek historical works in Paris between 1841 and 1872. Volume 2, published in 1843, includes the histories of Diodorus Siculus, Polybius, and Dionysius of Halicarnassus.

  •  
    807

    Karl Muller (1813-1894) published this monumental and still unrivalled collection of the surviving fragments of Greek historical works in Paris between 1841 and 1872. Volume 3, published in 1849, includes works of the period from 247 BCE until the Roman conquest in 146 BCE.

  •  
    907

    Karl Muller (1813-1894) published this monumental and still unrivalled collection of the surviving fragments of Greek historical works in Paris between 1841 and 1872. Volume 4, published in 1851, runs from 306 CE until 610 CE, and includes the first modern edition of John of Antioch's writings.

  •  
    807

    Karl Muller (1813-1894) published this monumental and still unrivalled collection of the surviving fragments of Greek historical works in Paris between 1841 and 1872. The final volume of his Fragmenta contains fragments of Greek and Byzantine historians, and some Greek and Syrian works preserved in Armenian writings.

  • - Containing an Account of its Composition and of the Jurists Used or Referred to Therein, Together with a Full Commentary on One Title (De Usufructu)
    av Henry John Roby
    721

    Henry John Roby (1830-1915) was a Cambridge-educated classicist specialising in Roman Law. First published in 1884, this volume discusses the historical and legal context of Justinian's Digesta and provides the Latin text of De Usufructu (one of the titles from the Digesta) with detailed close textual analysis.

  • - Horace and the Elegiac Poets
    av William Young Sellar
    577

    William Young Sellar (1825-1890) was a classical scholar specialising in the analysis of Roman poetry. This volume, first published posthumously in 1891, discusses the forms and development of Roman poetry in the reign of Augustus, and was considered the standard reference for the development of Augustan Roman poetry.

  •  
    907

    Emil Baehrens published this text and commentary of the first-century BCE Latin poet Catullus between 1876 and 1885. It was considered groundbreaking for its analysis of the medieval manuscripts of the poems, and although many editions have since been published, Baehrens' work is still of interest to scholars.

  •  
    921

    Diels' Doxographi Graeci (1879) inaugurated the critical discipline of doxography - the editing, cataloguing, and analysing of extracts of classical texts that contain references to the ideas and arguments of lost authors and schools. Diels analyses passages from a range of Greek authors to uncover the ideas of the Presocratic philosophers.

  • av Edwyn Robert Bevan
    487

    Edwyn Bevan, a scholar of early Christianity as well as of the Hellenistic period, collates written and archaeological sources to describe the creation of an eastern empire by Seleucus, one of the successors of Alexander the Great. This two-volume 1902 work covers the rise and fall of the Seleucid dynasty.

  • - From the End of the Sixth Century B.C. to the End of the Middle Ages
    av John Edwin Sandys
    821

    The Cambridge classicist Sir John Sandys published this three-volume history between 1903 and 1908. It remains the only large-scale work spanning the entire history of classical studies from the sixth century BCE to 1900. Volume 1 covers the Classical period, Byzantine scholarship and the medieval West to 1350.

  • - From the Revival of Learning to the End of the Eighteenth Century in Italy, France, England and the Netherlands
    av John Edwin Sandys
    737

    The Cambridge classicist Sir John Sandys published this three-volume history between 1903 and 1908. It remains the only large-scale work spanning the entire history of classical studies from the sixth century BCE to 1900. Volume 2 covers the period from the Renaissance to the eighteenth century.

  • - The Eighteenth Century in Germany and the Nineteenth Century in Europe and the United States of America
    av John Edwin Sandys
    731

    The Cambridge classicist Sir John Sandys published this three-volume history between 1903 and 1908. It remains the only large-scale work spanning the entire history of classical studies from the sixth century BCE to 1900. Volume 3 covers the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.

  • av Ernst Curtius
    637 - 731

    Adolphus William Ward's translation of 1868-1873 made Curtius' seminal work (first published in German between 1857 and 1867) available to the Victorian reading public. Volume 1 covers the period before the so-called Dorian migrations, and the development of Attica and the Peloponnese up until the Persian wars.

  • av Friedrich Gottlieb Welcker
    607 - 807

    In this three-volume work on tragedy, published between 1839 and 1841, Friedrich Gottlieb Welcker (1784-1868) attempts to reconstruct all the lost trilogies and tetralogies of Greek tragic theatre, insisting on their artistic unity, and demonstrating their fundamental debt to the Epic Cycle.

  •  
    991

    Galen (129-c. 199 CE) is the most famous physician of the Greco-Roman world whose writings have survived. This monumental 22-volume edition of his complete works by Karl Gottlob Kuhn (1754-1840), originally published in Leipzig between 1821 and 1833 and reissued here, has never yet been rivalled.

  •  
    991

    Galen (129-c. 199 CE) is the most famous physician of the Greco-Roman world whose writings have survived. This monumental 22-volume edition of his complete works by Karl Gottlob Kuhn (1754-1840), originally published in Leipzig between 1821 and 1833 and reissued here, has never yet been rivalled.

  •  
    991

    Galen (129-c. 199 CE) is the most famous physician of the Greco-Roman world whose writings have survived. This monumental 22-volume edition of his complete works by Karl Gottlob Kuhn (1754-1840), originally published in Leipzig between 1821 and 1833 and reissued here, has never yet been rivalled.

  •  
    907

    Galen (129-c. 199 CE) is the most famous physician of the Greco-Roman world whose writings have survived. This monumental 22-volume edition of his complete works by Karl Gottlob Kuhn (1754-1840), originally published in Leipzig between 1821 and 1833 and reissued here, has never yet been rivalled.

  • - From Arcadius to Irene (395 A.D. to 800 A.D)
    av J. B. Bury
    647 - 717

    This two-volume 1889 work examines Byzantine history from 395 to 800. The account begins in the year in which, on the death of Theodosius I, the empire was divided into eastern and western parts. Volume 1 covers the period to the deaths of Belisarius and Justinian in 565.

  • av August Rossbach
    907

    Rudolf Westphal (1826-92) and August Rossbach (1823-98) were German classical scholars whose collaboration resulted in this multi-volume analysis of ancient Greek metre and music. Reissued here is the revised third edition published in four parts between 1885 and 1889.

  •  
    401

    This 1879 Latin dissertation was the first substantial work on Archimedes by the Danish philologist Johan Ludvig Heiberg (1854-1928). The book features chapters on the Greek scientist's life, works and mathematics. A survey of the extant codices and the Greek text of Psammites (The Sand Reckoner) are also included.

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