Journal title
ISSN: 0017-3916    frecuency : 4   format : Electrónica

Issues

      see all issue


Skip Navigation Links.

Volume 50 Number 2 Year 2010

8 articles in this issue 

Jonathan L. Ready

The description of Odysseus stringing his bow at Od. 21.405-409, which is compared to a singer repairing a lyre, is formulated to be emblematic of the restoration of his xenia relationships and his position as basileus in Ithaca.

Pags. 133 - 157  

Bronwen L. Wickkiser

The monologue on enlightenment PCG VIII 1001, describing the theater and the temple of Asclepius, is set in Athens and evokes the connections, spatial and ritual, that existed between the temple of Dionysus and that of Asclepius nearby.

Pags. 159 - 173  

Philip R. Bosman

In the anecdote in Berol. P. 13044, Alexander questioning ten Indian gymnosophists, they are seen as passive recipients of his gift of clothing rather then self-sufficient sages, and there is no indication of a Cynic origin.

Pags. 175 - 192  

Alexander Dale

The few epigrams in non-elegiac meters that have been attributed to Meleager's Garland reached the Anth.Pal. from other sources instead, and their absence from the Garland probably reflects the expectation of his time that proper epigrams are elegiac.

Pags. 193 - 213  

J. C. Iglesias-Zoido

Three complementary aspects of Alexander's speeches before Issus and Gaugamela--typology, style, and argumentation--are studied to clarify the distinct ways in which Alexander's words were presented by ancient historians.

Pags. 215 - 241  

Mark Shiffman

Plutarch's skeptical Platonism is embodied in his understanding of Socrates and Socrates' use of eros, and serves to harmonize his use of the skeptical heritage with his understanding of central Platonic teachings: questioning is the crucial tool in the s... see more

Pags. 243 - 271  

Philip F. Venticinque

The charters and the prosopography of guilds in Egypt show that, rather than compensating for economic or social weakness, membership strengthened and multiplied existing family and other networks in ways that furthered success and prosperity.

Pags. 273 - 294  

Kevin W. Wilkinson

With Palladas redated to the time of Constantine, several of his borrowings from Latin or from Christian terminology can now be recognized as novel colloquialisms in the scoptic tradition.

Pags. 295 - 308