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  1. Nikias, Epimenides and the Question of Omissions in Thucydides.Gabriel Herman - 1989 - Classical Quarterly 39 (01):83-.
    Our starting point is a somewhat obscure incident which has lately attracted some attention. The year is 429 B.C., and the place is Athens in the third year of the Peloponnesian war. The plague, which had broken out only a year before, was still claiming its victims. Yet military operations were in full swing, and the general Phormio operating in the Corinthian gulf against a Peloponnesian fleet was able to score an impressive victory. The Lacedaemonians were deeply dissatisfied. This was (...)
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  • Quatre cultes de Thasos.Henri Seyrig - 1927 - Bulletin de Correspondance Hellénique 51 (1):178-233.
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  • (5 other versions)Documents d'Asie Mineure.Louis Robert - 1981 - Bulletin de Correspondance Hellénique 105 (1):331-360.
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  • (1 other version)Sparta and Samos: a Special Relationship?L. H. Jeffery & Paul Cartledge - 1982 - Classical Quarterly 32 (2):243-265.
    The relationship between the United Kingdom and the United States seems to embody most fully the type of the ‘special relationship’ today. It is a relationship founded ultimately (and now of course remotely) on biological kinship, structured by mutual economic and strategic interests and cemented by a sense of political and ‘spiritual’ affinity. At least the broad contours of such contemporary ‘special relationships’ are sufficiently clear. This is far from being the case with those of the Archaic and Classical Greek (...)
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  • (1 other version)Sparta and Samos: a Special Relationship?L. H. Jeffery & Paul Cartledge - 1982 - Classical Quarterly 32 (02):243-.
    The relationship between the United Kingdom and the United States seems to embody most fully the type of the ‘special relationship’ today. It is a relationship founded ultimately on biological kinship, structured by mutual economic and strategic interests and cemented by a sense of political and ‘spiritual’ affinity. At least the broad contours of such contemporary ‘special relationships’ are sufficiently clear. This is far from being the case with those of the Archaic and Classical Greek world, for two main reasons. (...)
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  • The Nothoi of Kynosarges.Sarah C. Humphreys - 1974 - Journal of Hellenic Studies 94:88-95.
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