3 035 résultats
Set has minor shelfwear to boards. Scholars' bookplates to inner covers (G. P. Goold). Dustjackets haves tears and chipping. DJ spines a bit browned. DJ of Vol. 2 has tape applied to spine and front lower corner (now browned). ; 2 Volume Set COMPLETE; Vol. 1/2/2022; 719 pages
DJ is price-clipped. DJ is chipped at top corners. A couple of small closed tears along bottom edge of DJ. Dustjacket has shelfwear and rubbing. Book has very minor shelfwear. ; Volume 2 ONLY: Commentary and Indexes. ; Volume 2 Only; 1008 pages
Small blindstamp to titlepage (ex-institution). No other ex-library markings. Else fine. ; Caesarea Maritima, a port town on the Mediterranean coast about 40km north of modern Tel Aviv, was founded by King Herod theGreat sometime shortly after 22 BC and flourished as a major urban centre during the first six centuries C. E. The 411 inscriptions included in this volume represent the finds of a quarter of a century of investigation at the site and bear crucial testimony to the civil and military organization, urban construction, religion and funerary practices of an important Roman and Byzantine provincial centre. In addition, the language of the Greek and Latin inscriptions provides important insights into the evolution of those languages as well as information on the demographic, ethnic and social make-up of the population of Caesarea Maritima in the Roman and Late Antique Periods.; American Schools of Oriental Research; 11.4 X 8.7 X 1.5 inches; 301 pages
Vol. 1: Front hinge a bit strained. Else very light shelfwear. VG; Vol. 2: Near Fine. ; Vol. 1 (1980) ISBN: 3110073447, 737 pp; Vol. 2 (1996) ISBN: 3110143631, 839 pp. Heavy set ; 2 Volume Set; Vol. 1/2/2022; 9.6 X 7.1 X 2.0 inches; 1576 pages
Spine sunned. Minor shelfwear. Light pencil to a couple of pages. ; Illuminates the diplomatic narrative of the period covered (403-336 B. C. ). Each of the translations have a commentary in order to supply needed background information and narrative continuity. ; Greek Historical Documents; 129 pages
Dustjacket is protected in mylar. Dustjacket and book have very minor shelfwear. ; Illuminates the diplomatic narrative of the period covered (403-336 B. C. ). Each of the translations have a commentary in order to supply needed background information and narrative continuity. ; Greek Historical Documents; 129 pages
Minor shelfwear. Former owner's name on ffep. Book does not lie flat. ; Illuminates the diplomatic narrative of the period covered (403-336 B. C. ). Each of the translations have a commentary in order to supply needed background information and narrative continuity. ; Greek Historical Documents; 129 pages
Former owner's name on inner cover. Mild browning to ffeps. Very light shelfwear to book. DJ is tattered with open tears & missing a few pieces but mostly complete. ; The Four Gospels of Karahissar is a thirteenth-century codex of the four Gospels in Greek, written in distinguished miniscule script, illustrated with 65 terse miniatures, and introduced by 7 elegant decorative arcades. Iconographically and stylistically its large cycle of text illustrations ranks in importance easily among the first half-dozen sequences miniatured in tetraevangelia. It stands at the very center of an extended, prominent, and singularly interesting family of medieval Greek manuscripts, very intimately related to each other and historically associated with the vicissitudes and policies of the imperial family of Byzantium. ; Volume 2 Only; Vol. 2
Bound in brown cloth with gilt lettering to spine. Lower corners a bit bumped. ; Special Publications of the Linguistic Society of America; 159 pages
Corners of wraps are a little worn. Some rubbing. Scholar's label to inner cover (H. J. Mason). ; Looks at extant fifth-century documents with particular focus on Athens. Omits major authors to concentrate on lesser lights like Diodorus of Sicily and Pseudo-Xenophon. ; 124 pages
Corners of wraps are a little worn. Some rubbing. Chipping to base of spine. Spine a little discolored. ; Looks at extant fifth-century documents with particular focus on Athens. Omits major authors to concentrate on lesser lights like Diodorus of Sicily and Pseudo-Xenophon. ; 124 pages
Wraps have light creasing. Light bump to top of spine. Minor shelfwear. ; Looks at extant fifth-century documents with particular focus on Athens. Omits major authors to concentrate on lesser lights like Diodorus of Sicily and Pseudo-Xenophon. ; 124 pages
Wraps have moderate rubbing. Spine a bit. Minor shelfwear. Former owner's name to half-title (R. LaFleur). ; Looks at extant fifth-century documents with particular focus on Athens. Omits major authors to concentrate on lesser lights like Diodorus of Sicily and Pseudo-Xenophon. ; 124 pages
Top corner of wraps creased. Minor shelfwear. Former classics scholar's name on ffep (W. M. McLeod) ; Looks at extant fifth-century documents with particular focus on Athens. Omits major authors to concentrate on lesser lights like Diodorus of Sicily and Pseudo-Xenophon. ; 124 pages
Rubbing and shelfwear to wraps. ; Looks at extant fifth-century documents with particular focus on Athens. Omits major authors to concentrate on lesser lights like Diodorus of Sicily and Pseudo-Xenophon. ; 124 pages
Minor shelfwear. Former owner's name on ffep. ; Looks at extant fifth-century documents with particular focus on Athens. Omits major authors to concentrate on lesser lights like Diodorus of Sicily and Pseudo-Xenophon. ; 124 pages
Slight spine slant. Very minor shelfwear. ; Bulletin of the Institute of Classical Studies Supplement 73; 212 pages; With contributions from Edward Bispham, Guy Bradley, Alison E. Cooley, Fay Glinister, Valerie Hope, Mark Pobjoy and Benet Salway. The Epigraphic Landscape presents a series of case-studies in which a new generation of scholars examines the significance of interpreting inscriptions in terms of their topographical context and physical appearance. Some chapters focus on a genre of inscription – honorific building and funerary – whilst others discuss a single text such as the Rapino Bronze and the album of Canusium. This approach reveals the contribution of inscribed monuments to the transformation of towns and countryside and the impact of Rome on the landscape of the rest of Italy. The integration of epigraphic literary archaeological and topographical sources suggests new ways of looking at Roman colonization in Umbria. The transformation of the epigraphic landscape of its surrounding region challenges current views on the date of Lavinium’s decline. Similar inscriptions from Puteoli provide a starting-point for exploring the activities of the super-élite of Campania. By trying to reconstruct the motivations behind inscriptions several contributors reveal the subjectivity of these texts – such as the factors governing the appearance of gladiators’ tombstones – and warn against adopting too literal an interpretation of these sources even if inscribed in stone.
Faint creasing to wraps. Light staining to ffep and front inner cover. Scholars' bookplate to inner cover (Slater & Dunbabin). ; 9.4 X 6.3 X 0.5 inches; 204 pages
21181650-nnew. unknown
21181650like new. unknown
Book has been rebound in maroon boards with white lettering to spine. Call numbers to spine. Ex-library copy. Former owner has removed front institution plate and covered markings with white plain stickers. ; A study of the Athenian ephebia through a study of the ephebic inscriptions. An attempt to reconstruct a picture of the ephebia, its origins, its purpose, its functioning, its development and it s place in Greek history. ; Mnemosyne, Bibliotheca Classica Batava; 185 pages
xxv + 251pp., 24cm., in the series "Studia Hellenistica" volume 39, softcover, fine (new) condition, G74651
Self-published. Bump along upper edge of rear board. Tiny chip to cloth at upper corner. ; Thesis/dissertation; 4to 11" - 13" tall; 318 pages
Dustjacket has minor shelfwear. Light discoloration to DJ spine and top of front panel. ; 233 pages; This ia a systematic paleographical analysis, tracing the typological development of the Phoenician and Punic scripts from the eighth to the first century BC, presenting an exhaustive study of this important segment of alphabetic epigraphy. Seventeen plates accompany the author's descriptive material.
Ex-library copies with institution stamps to inner covers. Scholar's bookplate to inner covers (G. P. Goold). A few small tears to cloth. Fraying to spine ends. Spines have removed call numbers. Circulation pockets removed. Some darkening to boards. ; Vol. 1: (1904) 226 pp ; Vol. 2: (1904) 201 pp; Vol.3: (1904) 249 pp; Books on Egypt and Chaldaea Vol. XVII, XVIII, XIX; Vol. 1/3/2022; 676 pages