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Sophocles and Nicias as Colleagues

Hermes 84 (1):110-116 (1956)

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  1. Strategia and Hegemonia in Fifth-Century Athens.N. G. L. Hammond - 1969 - Classical Quarterly 19 (1):111-144.
    Those who have studied the Athenian system of command in the fifth century have confined themselves almost entirely to the period after 440 B.C. They have raked over the evidence to discover signs of double representation of one tribe on the board of strategi, or of a supreme among the or of a chairman at least of the board of strategi. On the other hand little attention is paid to the progressive diminution of the military functions of the archon polemarchus (...)
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  • Three Non-Roman Blood Sports.M. Gwyn Morgan - 1975 - Classical Quarterly 25 (1):117-122.
    There is more than enough evidence to show that cock-fighting, quail-fighting, and even partridge-fighting were favourite sports among the Greeks, no matter what part of the mediterranean world they inhabited. Whether Romans ever shared these passions is another question altogether. When Saglio contributed his article on cock-fighting to the Dictionnaire des antiquitis grecques et romaines, he limited himself to the transports it caused the Greeks. For this he was reprimanded, obliquely, by Schneider, asserting—but neglecting to support the assertion in detail—that (...)
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  • Three Non-Roman Blood Sports.M. Gwyn Morgan - 1975 - Classical Quarterly 25 (01):117-.
    There is more than enough evidence to show that cock-fighting, quail-fighting, and even partridge-fighting were favourite sports among the Greeks , no matter what part of the mediterranean world they inhabited. Whether Romans ever shared these passions is another question altogether. When Saglio contributed his article on cock-fighting to the Dictionnaire des antiquitis grecques et romaines, he limited himself to the transports it caused the Greeks. For this he was reprimanded, obliquely, by Schneider, asserting—but neglecting to support the assertion in (...)
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  • Strategia and Hegemonia in Fifth-Century Athens.N. G. L. Hammond - 1969 - Classical Quarterly 19 (01):111-.
    Those who have studied the Athenian system of command in the fifth century have confined themselves almost entirely to the period after 440 B.C. They have raked over the evidence to discover signs of double representation of one tribe on the board of strategi, or of a supreme among the or of a chairman at least of the board of strategi. On the other hand little attention is paid to the progressive diminution of the military functions of the archon polemarchus (...)
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