The Year's Work in Classical Studies, Issue 22J.W. Arrowsmith, 1928 - Classical antiquities |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 26
Page 4
3 E. R. Dodds ' Euripides the Irrationalist 4 is fresh and stimulating ; Professor Dodds finds that for Euripides the evil in human nature is rooted in heredity , and takes the place of the Aeschylean curse . The intellect does not help ...
3 E. R. Dodds ' Euripides the Irrationalist 4 is fresh and stimulating ; Professor Dodds finds that for Euripides the evil in human nature is rooted in heredity , and takes the place of the Aeschylean curse . The intellect does not help ...
Page 55
3 He finds two temples there , clearly to be traced among the ruins which were first noticed , rather casually , by Woodhouse in 1893 ( Aetolia , p . 203 ) . He would date them not later than the end of the sixth century B.C .; they are ...
3 He finds two temples there , clearly to be traced among the ruins which were first noticed , rather casually , by Woodhouse in 1893 ( Aetolia , p . 203 ) . He would date them not later than the end of the sixth century B.C .; they are ...
Page 99
The worst difficulty is that it is not always easy to find what is wanted . To take an example at random . The reader wishes to find out something about the Latin sapo ; he will not find it in its alphabetical order in the text because ...
The worst difficulty is that it is not always easy to find what is wanted . To take an example at random . The reader wishes to find out something about the Latin sapo ; he will not find it in its alphabetical order in the text because ...
What people are saying - Write a review
We haven't found any reviews in the usual places.
Contents
GREEK HISTORY By M Cary D Litt | 21 |
ROMAN HISTORY By Hugh Last M A | 33 |
GREEK AND ROMAN RELIGION By H | 51 |
4 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Aeschylus ancient appeared Arch belong Berlin bibliography bronze Bull Cambridge carried century century B.C. Classical cleared collection Comparative complete contains continued contribution criticism dealing detail discovery discussion earlier early east edition evidence excavations finds followed fragments further German given gives Greek Hermes illustrated important inscription interesting Italy Journal known languages late later Latin Leipzig light lines linguistic literature London material mentioned Munich notes origin Oxford Paris passage perhaps period Phil Plato Plautus points Press produced Professor publication published question recent reference relating religion remains Roman Rome Scavi scholar seen shows side suggestion temple theory tombs translation University valuable volume wall writing written