All Stories

  1. Playing Hesiod: The “Myth of the Races” in Classical Antiquity, written by Van Noorden, H.
  2. ODYSSEY 13 AND 14 - A.M. Bowie (ed.) Homer: Odyssey Books XIII and XIV. Pp. xii + 258. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2013. Paper, £19.99, US$34.99 (Cased, £55, US$90). ISBN: 978-0-521-15938-8 (978-0-521-76354-7 hbk).
  3. Oral Tradition: Ancient Greece
  4. Writing
  5. Rhadamanthys
  6. Pharos
  7. Orientalizing Period
  8. Thebes, Egyptian
  9. Writing, in Homer
  10. Pithekoussai
  11. Nestor's Cup
  12. Chalcis (1)
  13. Crete
  14. Egypt and Homer
  15. Eretria
  16. Alphabet
  17. Inscriptions
  18. Euboea
  19. Near East and Homer
  20. Homer and Writing
  21. Singing the Dead: A Model for Epic Evolution
  22. (T.) Bryce The Trojans and their Neighbours. Pp. xiv + 225, ills, maps. London and New York: Routledge, 2006. Paper, £16.99, US$30.95 (Cased, £65, US$120). ISBN: 978-0-415-34955-0 (978-0-415-34959-8 hbk).
  23. After Schliemann
  24. THE GODS IN MYTH
  25. STATIC ELECTRIC FIELD INTERACTION WITH TISSUES
  26. J. P. Small, Wax Tablets of the Mind, Cognitive Studies of Memory and Literacy in Classical Antiquity. London and New York: Routledge, 1997. Pp. viii + 377. ISBN 0-415-14938-5. £50.00.
  27. J. P. Small, Wax Tablets of the Mind, Cognitive Studies of Memory and Literacy in Classical Antiquity. London and New York: Routledge, 1997. Pp. viii + 377. ISBN 0-415-14938-5. £50.00.
  28. How Writing Came About
  29. Classical Myth
  30. BARRY B. POWELL, Homer and the origin of the Greek alphabet. Cambridge, University Press, 1991. XXVI, 280 p. Pr. £ 55,00.
  31. Literacy and Paideia in Ancient Greece.
  32. Ancient Greek Studies and Folkloristics
  33. Review of Powell (1991): Homer and the Origin of the Greek Alphabet
  34. Homer and the Origin of the Greek Alphabet Barry B. Powell
  35. Homer and the Origin of the Greek Alphabet.
  36. Homer and the Origin of the Greek Alphabet
  37. The Orazio Lirico of Giorgio Pasquali: Its Place in His Career and in the History of Horatian Scholarship
  38. Cadmean Letters: The Transmission of the Alphabet to the Aegean and Further West before 1400 B. C.
  39. Homer and the Origin of the Greek Alphabet
  40. Chronological charts
  41. Maps
  42. Definitions
  43. Bibliography
  44. A note on terms and phonetic transcriptions
  45. Foreword: Why was the Greek alphabet invented?
  46. Review of criticism: What we know about the origin Greek alphabet
  47. Argument from the history of writing: How writing worked before the Greek alphabet
  48. Argument from the material remains: Greek inscriptions from the beginning to c. 650 b.c.
  49. Argument from coincidence: Dating Greece's earliest poet
  50. Conclusions from probability: how the Iliad and Odyssey were written down
  51. Gelb's theory of the syllabic nature of West Semitic writing
  52. Why Was the Greek Alphabet Invented? The Epigraphical Evidence
  53. The Origin of the Puzzling Supplementals f x y
  54. The Syllabic Inscriptions of Rantidi-Paphos
  55. Egyptian Stelae, Reliefs and Paintings from the Petrie Collection, Part Three: The Late Period, with a Supplement of Miscellaneous Inscribed Material
  56. THE SIGNIFICANCE OF THE SO-CALLED ‘HORNS OF CONSECRATION’
  57. The Ordering of Tibullus Book 1
  58. Polyamine complexes with seven-membered chelate rings: complex formation of 3-azaheptane-1,7-diamine, 4-azaoctane-1,8-diamine (spermidine), and 4,9-diazadodecane-1,12-diamine (spermine) with copper(II) and hydrogen ions in aqueous solution
  59. Narrative Pattern in the Homeric Tale of Menelaus