8 articles in this issue
David Sansone
The speeches attributed to these figures by Plato, when analyzed by the procedures charted by D. Tomkins, are consistent with their stylistic characteristics exhibited in Thucydides.
Maxim M. Kholod
The first grant probably consisted of Ilium, Cebren, and Scepsis and vicinity, while the second was either in the same part of the Troad or in the coastal region between Adramyttium and the Caicus.
Brian D. McPhee
The elevated position of Poseidon in the divine hierarchy reflects his importance in myth and cult, and Orion’s “regaining his own land” is part of Corinna’s ennobling depiction of this hero of Tanagra.
Edmund James Stewart
A reconstruction of the play shows that it does not violate the conventions of fifth-century tragedy about time and space but rather is consistent in theme and in staging with attested features of classical drama.
Kristin Mann
The idyllic description of the Golden Age in the prologue is false and unrealistic, whereas his dark and violent fables show the truth, a contradiction designed to instruct readers to figure out for themselves the moral of each fable.
Andrea Favuzzi
Three short passages quoted in the Suda can be shown to relate historical events of the fifth century B.C. and can be attributed with some confidence to Aelian.
Michael Zellmann-Rohrer
Edition of a new parallel for the recently-published ring-inscription (SEG LXIII 1740); re-edition of another ring inscription once in the De Clerq collection (cf. SEG VII 77), with information on its new location.
Tommaso Braccini
The story of the apple repeatedly given from person to person is found in variants ranging as far as India, which shows the flexible usefulness of this edifying tale and complicates tracing it to a particular origin.