3 607 résultats
200739471Cambridge University Press. 2007. Hardcover. Near Fine in Near Fine dust jacket. Gift inscription from editors to Carolyn Dewald on ffep.; 6.25 X 1.25 X 9.25 inches; 360 pages; Signed by Editors . 0521876303 . Cambridge University Press hardcover
199239654Georg Olms Verlag. 1992. Hardcover. Fine in No Dust Jacket dust jacket. Unchanged Reprint of 1866 ed.; 496 pages . 3487096366 . Georg Olms Verlag hardcover
200539055Oxford University Press. 2005. Softcover. Near Fine. Very faint shelfwear.; 21.6 X 14 X 2.85 centimeters; 500 pages . 0199281319 . Oxford University Press paperback
200737597University of London Institute of Classical Studies. 2007. Softcover. Very Good. Faint shelfwear to wraps. Scholar's name to ffep D. Gerber.; Bulletin of the Institute of Classical Studies Supplement 95; 156 pages; Pindar’s fifteen victory odes for Sicilian victors include some of Pindar’s most impressive and widely admired poems such as the first two Olympians and first three Pythians. The majority of the Sicilian odes date from between about 476 to 466 BC and were composed to celebrate the victories of the great tyrants of Sicily Hieron of Syracuse and Theron of Akragas or their families or courtiers at the crown games. The Sicilian tyrants made spectacular use of their wealth and power in competing in equestrian events at the games and in commissioning Pindar and Bacchylides to celebrate their victories in song. This book examines the Sicilian odes of Pindar as a group investigating the ways in which they interact and exploit their overlapping and intersecting audiences. It studies the different performances of Pindar’s odes including reperformances subsequent to the first performance and the audiences of these performances and argues that these have important consequences for our view of the role victory odes played in the self-display of the Sicilian tyrannies to one another and the wider Greek world the intertexts between the odes the ‘conventional’ material in Pindar and the ways in which Pindar fulfils his promise of lasting fame for his patrons. . 1905670095 . University of London Institute of Classical Studies paperback
198139064Scholars Press. 1981. Softcover. Very Good. Minor shelfwear. Creasing to ffep. Minor pencilling.; American Philological Association. Special Publications 4; 8.9 X 5.8 X 0.6 inches; 207 pages . 0891305513 . Scholars Press paperback
19678706Casa Editrice G. D'Anna. 1967. Softcover. Very Good. Light edgewear especially to corners of wraps. Spine slightly discolored. Light bump to top corner of book. Light yellowing to back wrap.; 379 pages . Casa Editrice G. D'Anna paperback
199036723Oxford University Press. 1990. Softcover. Very Good. Signed by author to ffep: "For Doug Gerber with great respect and all best wishes from Bill"; Society For Classical Studies American Classical Studies; 8.9 X 5.9 X 0.6 inches; 232 pages; Signed by Author . 155540491X . Oxford University Press paperback
19688494Fondation Hardt. 1968. Hardcover. Very Good in Good dust jacket. DJ is chipped along top edge and has moisture stains to DJ spine. DJ is browned. Bottom corners bumped. Small ding along top edge of front board. Scholars' bookplate to inner cover.; Raubitschek: Das Denkmal-Epigram; Gentili: Epigramma ed elegia; Giangrande: Sympotic Literature and Epigram; Robert: les épigrammes satiriques de Lucillius sur les athlètes: parodie et réalités; Ludwig: Die Kunst der Variation in hellenistiche n Liebesepigramm; Labarbe: Aspects gnomiques de l'épigramme grecque; Luck: Witz und sentiment im griechischen Epigramm.; Entretiens Sur L'Antiquité Classique Tome XIV; 447 pages . Fondation Hardt hardcover
197627645Edizioni Gonnelli. 1976. Softcover. Very Good. Scholar's bookplate to inner cover G. P. Goold. Pages tanned. Minor shelfwear.; Italian text.; Documenti Inediti Di Cultura Toscana Vol. 1; 167 pages . Edizioni Gonnelli paperback
200227625University of Michigan Press. 2002. Hardcover. Very Good in Very Good dust jacket. Minor shelfwear. Dustjacket is protected in mylar.; The Homeric poems were not intended for readers but for a listening audience. Traditional in their basic elements the stories were learned by oral poets from earlier poets and recreated at every performance. Individual nuances tailored to the audience could creep into the stories of the Greek heroes on each and every occasion when a bard recited the epics. For a particular audience at a particular moment "tradition" is what it believes it has inherited from the past--and it may not be particularly old. The boundaries between the traditional and the innovative may become blurry and indistinct. By rethinking tradition we can see Homer's methods and concerns in a new light. The Homeric poet is not naive. He must convince his audience that the story is true. He must therefore seem disinterested unconcerned with promoting anyone's interests. The poet speaks as if everything he says is merely the repetition of old tales. Yet he carefully ensures that even someone who knows only a minimal amount about the ancient heroes can follow and enjoy the performance while someone who knows many stories will not remember inappropriate ones. Pretending that every detail is already familiar the poet heightens suspense and implies that ordinary people are the real judges of great heroes. Listening to Homer transcends present controversies about Homeric tradition and invention by rethinking how tradition functions. Focusing on reception rather than on composition Ruth Scodel argues that an audience would only rarely succeed in identifying narrative innovation. Homeric narrative relies on a traditionalizing inclusive rhetoric that denies the innovation of the oral performance while providing enough information to make the epics intelligible to audiences for whom much of the material is new. Listening to Homer will be of interest to general classicists as well as to those specializing in Greek epic and narrative performance. Its wide breadth and scope will also appeal to those non-classicists interested in the nature of oral performance.; 1.25 x 9.75 x 6.75 Inches; 248 pages . 0472112651 . University of Michigan Press hardcover
196220327Athens: G. Phexe. 1962. First Edition. Softcover. Good in Good dust jacket. Front inner hinge strained some smudges on endpapers small tears at bottom of backstrip and lower edges of wraps. Edgewear with tears and chipping to DJ.; 452 pages . G. Phexe paperback
201741453Cambridge University Press. 2017. Softcover. Near Fine. Cambridge Classical Texts And Commentaries Series Number 54; 5.5 X 1.59 X 8.5 inches; 705 pages . 1107435269 . Cambridge University Press paperback
201742724Cambridge University Press. 2017. Softcover. Very Good. Underlining in pencil to a few pages.; Cambridge Classical Texts And Commentaries Series Number 54; 8vo 8" - 9" tall; 705 pages . 1107435269 . Cambridge University Press paperback
196813493Rudolf Habelt. 1968. Hardcover. Very Good in No Dust Jacket dust jacket. Spine and part of front board lightly discolored. Faint bumping to spine ends. Minor shelfwear.; Volume 1 only. 188 167 pp.; Antiquitas. Reihe 1 Abhandlungen Zur Alten Geschichte 9; 1; 355 pages; 2 Maps fold in pocket. Text in Greek; critical matter in Latin. Additional title: quos ab editore prelo datos iteratis curis perpoliverunt Ernst Kirsten et Friedrich Lapp. Praefatiunculam / scripsit Hildebrecht Hommel. Tabulas / addiderunt E. Kirsten et W. Aly. . Rudolf Habelt hardcover
198237439Société D'Édition `les Belles Lettres'. 1982. First Edition. Hardcover. Very Good in No Dust Jacket dust jacket. Very minor shelfwear. Scholar's name to ffep D. Gerber.; Parallel text in French and Greek.; Collection Des Universités De France. Association Guillaume Budé; 126 X 12 X 193 millimeters; 209 pages . 2251003622 . Société D'Édition `les Belles Lettres' hardcover
196711422Bouma's Boekhuis. 1967. Hardcover. Very Good in No Dust Jacket dust jacket. Very light shelfwear.; Unchanged Reprint of 1928 edition.; 253 pages . Bouma's Boekhuis hardcover
198229612Cambridge University Press. 1982. Hardcover. Very Good- in Very Good dust jacket. 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. . 0521239478 . Cambridge University Press hardcover
189910433B. G. Teubner. 1899. Hardcover. Very Good in No Dust Jacket dust jacket. 1 corner bumped. Minor shelfwear. Very light foxing. Light tanning to pages.; Text in Ancient Greek. Latin apparatus. Vii 305pp; Bibliotheca Scriptorum Graecorum Et Romanorum Teubneriana TEUBNER; 12mo 7" - 7½" tall; 305 pages . B. G. Teubner hardcover
1994028946MANILA: MARY JO EDUCATIONAL SUPPLY PUB. VG. Hardcover. First Edition. 1994. MARY JO EDUCATIONAL SUPPLY PUB. hardcover
16646Hamburg gedr. bei Hartwig u. Müller. . Nr. 49 8 Bll. fehlt. - Schröder 23374. - Friedrich Ferdinand Ludewieg 1785-1831 Apotheker in Hamburg gab von 1821 bis Juli 1824 zusammen mit Haeselinger "Die Biene" heraus zu deren Mitarbeitern auch Georg Nikolaus Bärmann gehörte vgl. Schröder 145 59. Einbd. etw. berieb. stellenw. etw. braun-fleck. NaV. - Gedichte Erzählungen Anekdoten Rätsel Theaterkritiken u.a. meist anonym oder unter Pseudonym veröffentlicht. Dieser Band enthält 4 Gedichte von Ludewieg. Hamburg, gedr. bei Hartwig u. Müller. unknown
1903219789Verlag von Wyß Eberle & Co. Verlag von Eberle & Richenbach Einsiedeln. Verlag von Carl Aug. Seyfried & Comp. München 1903. Hardcover mit Leinenrücken und -ecken ohne Schutzumschlag Die Jahresangabe ist ungefähr. Zustand: mit Kennungen einer Privatbibliothek. Rücken Ecken Kanten sehr gut. Verlag von Wyß, Eberle & Co., Verlag von Eberle & Richenbach, Einsiedeln. Verlag von Carl Aug. Seyfried & Comp., München, hardcover
1996017259Bamako Mali: Editions Donniya 1996 Traces of use / spine faded / creases in cover . 470 pagina's. Photographs. 2de / 2nd. soft cover. used / gebruikt. A5 formaat. paperback. Editions Donniya paperback
1962016449Amsterdam: G.A. van Oorschot 1962 4 delen complete met stofomslag in goede staat de stofomslagen hebben kleine gebruiksspoortjes dundruk uitgave leeslinten. Deel 1 1962 550 pagina's; deel 2 1964 1ste druk 543 pagina's; deel 3 1ste druk 1965 495 pagina's; deel 4 1ste druk 1967 731 pagina's. Tekstverzorging en annotaties H. van Galen Last. 2de / 2nd. cloth / linnen hardcover. good / goed. A5 formaat. G.A. van Oorschot hardcover
157965Leipzig Apud G.J. Goeschen 1805. 334 p. Contemporary boards. 17.5 cm Cover scuffed and worn at the extremities. Occasional small pencil stripes and marks in the margins hardcover