22 324 résultats
E. J. Brill, Leyden. 1946. In-8 Carré. Broché. Bon état. Couv. convenable. Dos satisfaisant. Quelques rousseurs. 210 pages. Het Schrift en de Klankleer. Declinatio. Nomina. Adverbia. Thematische Coniugatie...
028220363X.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
1333908636.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
Light browning to wraps. Former owner's name to ffep in black marker. ; Contents: The Problem; The Polymetric Short Poems (1-60) ; The Long Poems and the Epigrams (61-116) ; Chronological Consequences; Lesbia--When? Lesbia--Who? Index of Catullan passages. ; 70 pages
Light discoloration to spine. Scholar's name to inner cover (J. B. Clinard). ; 212 pages; Consists of twelve separate but inter-connected essays on poetry and personalities in late-republican Rome. Contents: The two worlds of Titus Lucretius; Cinna the Poet; Structural Patterns in Catullus; Catullus, 'poem 68'; Lesbia and her Children; Who was Gellius? The Good Goddess; The Go-Between; Two friends of Clodius in Cicero's Letters; Clodius at the Theatre; Pyxis Caeliana; The Last of the Metelli.
Light discoloration to spine. Scholar's initials to ffep (P. G. Walsh). Includes tipped-in typed letter from Wiseman to Walsh. ; 212 pages; Consists of twelve separate but inter-connected essays on poetry and personalities in late-republican Rome. Contents: The two worlds of Titus Lucretius; Cinna the Poet; Structural Patterns in Catullus; Catullus, 'poem 68'; Lesbia and her Children; Who was Gellius? The Good Goddess; The Go-Between; Two friends of Clodius in Cicero's Letters; Clodius at the Theatre; Pyxis Caeliana; The Last of the Metelli.
Small stain to foreedge of last few pages. Else very light shelfwear. ; 212 pages; Consists of twelve separate but inter-connected essays on poetry and personalities in late-republican Rome. Contents: The two worlds of Titus Lucretius; Cinna the Poet; Structural Patterns in Catullus; Catullus, 'poem 68'; Lesbia and her Children; Who was Gellius? The Good Goddess; The Go-Between; Two friends of Clodius in Cicero's Letters; Clodius at the Theatre; Pyxis Caeliana; The Last of the Metelli.
Very light rubbing else Fine. ; Heidelberger Althistorische Beitrage Und Epigraphische Studien Band 47; Vol. 47; 283 pages; English summary: Human perception includes the division of space into left and right. In general, left holds a negative connotation: A clumsy man appears linkisch in German, links meaning left, and the term translates as awkward. If you conned him, he has been gelinkt. For a long time this negative coloring was also closely associated with the image of left-handers: Left-handers were often regarded as disabled, appeared awkward and antisocial, and were exposed to discrimination. To understand the people of ancient Greece and Rome, one must understand the role right and left played in their perception and evaluation of the world. Henning Wirth studies the following questions from an ancient historical perspective: How did the Greeks and Romans perceive left? What role was provided to the left hand in a dominantly right-handed world, where the right hand attested Godly effectiveness? And how does one explain the phenomenon of left-handedness and assessment of left-handed people? German text. German description: Zur menschlichen Wahrnehmung gehort die Einteilung des Raumes in links und rechts. Dabei ist links in der Regel negativ konnotiert: Ein ungeschickter Mensch erscheint alinkisch. Hat man ihn betrogen, so hat man ihn agelinkt. Lange Zeit war diese Negativfarbung auch eng mit dem Bild uber Linkshander verknupft: Linkshander galten oftmals als behindert, erschienen asozial und ungeschickt und waren Diskriminierungen ausgesetzt. Will man den Menschen der griechischen und romischen Antike verstehen, muss man nachvollziehen, welche Rolle rechts und links in seiner Wahrnehmung und Bewertung der Welt spielten. Aus althistorischer Perspektive untersucht Henning Wirth hier folgende Fragen: Welche Vorstellungen besassen Griechen und Romer von links' Welche Rolle war in einer mehrheitlich aus Rechtshandern bestehenden Welt, in der der rechten Hand gottliche Wirkkraft attestiert wurde, fur die linke Hand vorgesehen' Und wie erklarte man sich das Phanomen der Linkshandigkeit und bewertete linkshandige Menschen'
pp. [8], 587, [101]. Text in Greek and Latin on opposite pages. No extra engraved title as in some copies. Numerous typographic borders. Some pages set as typographic designs. Small 8vo. 158 mm. Early full leather binding; lacking 2" of leather at the tail of the spine. Text generally browned and loose, but not brittle, nor with any substantial loss. Numerous early manuscript notations and ownerships, including: Ambrose Lewis, 1657; Thomas Answorth, 1708; Jacob Dickinson, 1763; and Enoch Walker. An interesting copy of a very interesting book. **PRICE JUST REDUCED! SMALL BOX 5
Harlequin romance - Syllogi series # 2927 Book
Spine browned. Scholar's bookplate to inner cover (G. P. Goold). Bump to lower corner with minor creasing through pages. ; Main headings: The older Manuscripts of Quintilian; Orthography; Noctes Quintilianeae. ; Institute of Classical Studies Bulletin Supplement 25; 236 pages
5717Lpz./Bln., Tbn., 1922.
Light shelfwear. DJ is price-clipped. DJ Spine very lightly discolored. ; 316 Illustrations. A Historical and comprehensive study of Greek fortifications and military architecture, principles and defensive planning from Early Archaic Greece to the Roman arrival in Greece. ; Phoenix Journal of the Classical Association of Canada Supplementary; Oblong Small 4to 9" - 11; 370 pages
Rebound in black cloth, near Fine. Original wraps bound in. ; 5/6 Heft: Pp 119a-192, mostly plates. Heft XIII: Pp 385-424. ; 4to - over 9¾" - 12" tall
Wraps are edgeworn with chipping and a few small closed tears. ; Signed by one author on front wrap: "With compliments. A. D. Winspear". ; University of Wisconsin Studies in the Social Sciences and History, No. 24; 317 pages; An attempt to see Augustus in the context of the political and administrative problems which he inherited, and to estimate his services as the founder of the empire and organiser of the Roman Republic. ; Signed by Author
Spine a little creased. 1 corner lightly creased. Light pencil marginalia to a few pages. Scholars' bookplate to inner cover. ; 0.94 x 8.82 x 5.91 Inches; 358 pages; In this interpretation of the seven extant tragedies of Sophocles, Professor Winnington-Ingram provides not so much a straightforward account of Sophocles as an exploration of his tragic vision of the world. The Sophoclean hero lies at the centre of this vision. Taking the plays individually but without losing sight of the single consistent mind behind them, the author faces the questions of how the hero is to be regarded, what we are to make of the fates he suffered and the divine powers who controlled those fates. He proceeds by a detailed study of what Sophocles wrote, by close attention to form and recurrent themes, and especially by close analysis of a number of choral odes. Students of Greek drama will find that this detailed study provides invaluable insights into the meaning of the tragedies. Greek in the text is translated or paraphrased, so that the book will also be of interest to students of the literature and drama of other cultures.
Spine a little creased. Light shelfwear. Tiny chip to top edge of front wrap. Scholar's blindstamp to half-title. ; 0.94 x 8.82 x 5.91 Inches; 358 pages; In this interpretation of the seven extant tragedies of Sophocles, Professor Winnington-Ingram provides not so much a straightforward account of Sophocles as an exploration of his tragic vision of the world. The Sophoclean hero lies at the centre of this vision. Taking the plays individually but without losing sight of the single consistent mind behind them, the author faces the questions of how the hero is to be regarded, what we are to make of the fates he suffered and the divine powers who controlled those fates. He proceeds by a detailed study of what Sophocles wrote, by close attention to form and recurrent themes, and especially by close analysis of a number of choral odes. Students of Greek drama will find that this detailed study provides invaluable insights into the meaning of the tragedies. Greek in the text is translated or paraphrased, so that the book will also be of interest to students of the literature and drama of other cultures.
Very light wear to corners. ; Professor Winnington-Ingram's reputation as an authority on Greek drama is based on a lifetime's careful scholarship. In 1980 the Press published Professor Winnington-Ingram's book on Sophocles and in 1983 he followed it up with some studies on Aeschylus. This book explores the problems in Aeschylus' earlier plays: Persae, Septem contra Thebas and the Daniad trilogy. There is also an emphasis on different aspects of the Oresteia and finally, an examination of the peculiar problems in Prometheus Bound. A view of Aeschylean tragedy emerges - and of the poet's contribution to the development of Greek religious thought. Students of Greek drama will welcome this collection. Greek in the body of the text is translated, so that the book will be accessible to those studying Greek literature in translation and the literature and drama of other cultures. ; Cambridge Paperback Library; 240 pages
Scholar's bookplate to inner cover (G. P. Goold). Light Foxing/dustsoiling to top of textblock. Light shelfwear to DJ. ; Professor Winnington-Ingram's reputation as an authority on Greek drama is based on a lifetime's careful scholarship. In 1980 the Press published Professor Winnington-Ingram's book on Sophocles and in 1983 he followed it up with some studies on Aeschylus. This book explores the problems in Aeschylus' earlier plays: Persae, Septem contra Thebas and the Daniad trilogy. There is also an emphasis on different aspects of the Oresteia and finally, an examination of the peculiar problems in Prometheus Bound. A view of Aeschylean tragedy emerges - and of the poet's contribution to the development of Greek religious thought. Students of Greek drama will welcome this collection. Greek in the body of the text is translated, so that the book will be accessible to those studying Greek literature in translation and the literature and drama of other cultures. ; 240 pages
Scholar's stamp to front inner cover (Michael Comber). Tear to ffep. Boards have clear plastic DJ (as issued? ). ; Contents: Homer and the Bard by Penelope Murray; The Iliad: the style of Books 5 and 6: G. S. Kirk; Homeric Epic and the Tragic Moment: by John Gould; Virgil's Iliad by K. W. Gransden; The Epic Theme of Love by John Bayley; Homer in Byzantine Dress: Tom Winnifrith; Children of Homer: the Epic Strain in Modern Greek Literature: Paul Merchant; Postscript by Tom Winnifrith. ; 132 pages
Light rippling to edges of about 10 pages [moisture? ]. Foxing/dustsoiling to top of textblock. Edgewear with minor chipping along top edge of DJ. ; Theme, structure and narrative in Chariton B. P. Reardon; The importance of sophists By E. L. Bowie; Lucian: a sophist's sophist By Graham Anderson; The mendacity of Kalasiris and the narrative strategy of Heliodoros' Aithiopika By John J. Winkler; The Emperor Julian on his predecessors By G. W. Bowersock; Greek translations of Latin literature in the fourth century A. D. By Elizabeth Fisher; The empress and the poet: paganism and politics at the court of Theodosius II By Alan Cameron; Pastiche, pleasantry, prudish eroticism: the letters of ‘Aristaenetus’ By W. Geoffrey Arnott; The date and purpose of the Philopatris By Barry Baldwin; Yale Classical Studies Volume XXVII; 344 pages; During the 1980s papyrology celebrates its centenary as a branch of classical studies. Today's state of the art is reflected in the volume's contents which include editions and reeditions of texts, and papers in the many areas of classical antiquity in which our knowledge has been so immeasurably enriched by the discovery and decipherment of Greek and Latin papyri, viz. Language, government, social and economic history, law, private life. Some of the papers also have interdisciplinary ramifications, and the international cooperation that has characterised papyrology from its inception is here readily apparent in the names, languages and affiliations of the contributors.
114594Baarn, Ambo, 1992.