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Klappentext Published between 1868 and 1920, this 35-volume set illuminates the development of specialised academic journals as well as classical philology. Zusammenfassung Founded in 1868 by Cambridge scholars John Eyton Bickersteth Mayor (1825–1910), William George Clark (1821–78), and William Aldis Wright (1831–1914), this biannual journal survived until 1920, spanning the period in which modern academic journals developed. These 35 volumes illuminate the growth and scope of classical philology. Inhaltsverzeichnis Archaeological interpretations; On certain engineering difficulties in Thucydides' account of the escape from Plataea; On the first seven verses of the Antigone; On some fragments of the New Comedy, and some passages of Aeschylus, Theognis, Alcaeus and Ibycus; The Homeric trial-scene; Note on Xenophon, De vect. IV, 14; Note on Plato, Apol. Socr., p. 26; Notes on gender, especially in Indo-European languages; Atakta; Notes on some passages in the Politics; Observations on the Oedipus Coloneus of Sophocles; Old German glosses from a Bodleian manuscript; Traces of different dialects in the language of Homer; On some difficulties in the Platonic psychology; On Plato's Republic Vi, 509 D; Aesch. Ag. 115-120; Thilo's Servius; Pyrrhus in Italy; Biology and social science; Horatiana; On a passage in the Rhetorica ad Herennium; Dissignare; The chronology of the Book of Kings; On the text and interpretation of certain passages in the Agamemnon of Aeschylus; On the fragments of Euripides; Plato's later theory of ideas; The simile of the treacherous hound in the Agamemnon; Aristotle, Politics, IV (VII), 13.