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  1. Homer and Thucydides: Corcyra and Sicily.C. J. Mackie - 1996 - Classical Quarterly 46 (1):103-113.
    This article is concerned with reminiscences of Homer in Thucydides' History. The principal aim is to raise questions as to what extent Thucydides' account of the Sicilian venture is a conscious response to some Homeric journey narratives. Such questions are worth asking because Thucydides refers to the Cyclopes and Laestrygonians at the beginning of his story. It will be argued that this reference is intended not solely for the sake of mythical history, but to broaden the context in which Athenian (...)
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  • Homer and Thucydides: Corcyra and Sicily.C. J. Mackie - 1996 - Classical Quarterly 46 (01):103-.
    This article is concerned with reminiscences of Homer in Thucydides' History. The principal aim is to raise questions as to what extent Thucydides' account of the Sicilian venture is a conscious response to some Homeric journey narratives. Such questions are worth asking because Thucydides refers to the Cyclopes and Laestrygonians at the beginning of his story . It will be argued that this reference is intended not solely for the sake of mythical history, but to broaden the context in which (...)
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  • Moral Values in the Age of Thucydides.J. L. Creed - 1973 - Classical Quarterly 23 (02):213-.
    Thucydides describes Antipho as ‘inferior to no one of his time in and more capable than any of initiating ideas and giving expression to them’. What does he mean here by? Does it refer to ability? or does it refer to courage and consistency of principle? and in either case how are we to relate this description of Antipho to Thucydides description of Nicias as less worthy than any other Greek of the historian's day to meet with the misfortunes that (...)
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  • Moral Values in the Age of Thucydides.J. L. Creed - 1973 - Classical Quarterly 23 (2):213-231.
    Thucydides describes Antipho as ‘inferior to no one of his time in and more capable than any of initiating ideas and giving expression to them’. What does he mean here by? Does it refer to ability? or does it refer to courage and consistency of principle? and in either case how are we to relate this description of Antipho to Thucydides description of Nicias as less worthy than any other Greek of the historian's day to meet with the misfortunes that (...)
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  • Thucydides on the Causes of the War.A. Andrewes - 1959 - Classical Quarterly 9 (3-4):223-.
    It is no doubt often salutary, even a necessary condition of progress, that we should shelve the great problems of a preceding generation without precisely solving them; but a controversy may be shelved too soon, and I fear this may have been the case with the great ‘Thucydidean question’ as it stood in the days of Wilamowitz and Schwartz. The analysts said some wild things, and their disagreements about early and late passages, or about the range of an editor's activities, (...)
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  • Thucydides on the Causes of the War1.A. Andrewes - 1959 - Classical Quarterly 9 (3-4):223-239.
    It is no doubt often salutary, even a necessary condition of progress, that we should shelve the great problems of a preceding generation without precisely solving them; but a controversy may be shelved too soon, and I fear this may have been the case with the great ‘Thucydidean question’ as it stood in the days of Wilamowitz and Schwartz. The analysts said some wild things, and their disagreements about early and late passages, or about the range of an editor's activities, (...)
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