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  1. Ajax's Entry in the Hesiodic Catalogue of Women.Margalit Finkelberg - 1988 - Classical Quarterly 38 (01):31-.
    The list of Helen's suitors in the Catalogue of Women, a late epic poem attributed to Hesiod, is directly related to the Catalogue of Ships in Iliad 2, in that it is in fact a list of future participants in the Trojan war. That the two catalogues treat the same traditional material is demonstrated above all by their agreement on minor personages: not only the protagonists of the Trojan saga, but also such obscure figures as Podarces of Phylace, Elephenor of (...)
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  • Dieuchidas of Megara.J. A. Davison - 1959 - Classical Quarterly 9 (3-4):216-.
    It is immediately evident that the second sentence in this passage is incomplete; as it stands is fails to tell us what it was that Dieuchidas said execept in so far as it implies some connexion between either Solon of Peisistratus and the lines which we now reat at Iliad 2.558 ff. Many scholars have striven to fill the lacuna in accordance with their own views of what Dieuchidas ought to have written, and some have sought to use the resulting (...)
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  • The past is a foreign country.David Lowenthal - 1985 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    In this remarkably wide-ranging book Professor Lowenthal analyses the ever-changing role of the past in shaping our lives. A heritage at once nurturing and burdensome, the past allows us to make sense of the present whilst imposing powerful constraints upon the way that present develops. Some aspects of the past are celebrated, others expunged, as each generation reshapes its legacy in line with current needs. Drawing on all the arts, the humanities and the social sciences, the author uses sources as (...)
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  • Dieuchidas of Megara.J. A. Davison - 1959 - Classical Quarterly 9 (3-4):216-222.
    It is immediately evident that the second sentence in this passage is incomplete; as it stands is fails to tell us what it was that Dieuchidas said execept in so far as it implies some connexion between either Solon of Peisistratus and the lines which we now reat at Iliad 2.558 ff. Many scholars have striven to fill the lacuna in accordance with their own views of what Dieuchidas ought to have written, and some have sought to use the resulting (...)
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  • Oral Tradition and Written Record in Classical Athens.Rosalind Thomas - 1992 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 25 (3):298-303.
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  • Orientation of the Dead in Greece and Italy.H. J. Rose - 1920 - The Classical Review 34 (7-8):141-146.
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  • A Note on the Megarian Historian Dieuchidas.Donald W. Prakken - 1941 - American Journal of Philology 62 (3):348.
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  • Word Patterns in the Catalogue of Ships :: A Structural Analysis of Homeric Language.Barry Powell - 1978 - Hermes 106 (2):255-264.
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  • The Ptolemaic Papyri of Homer.Mark Naoumides & Stephanie West - 1970 - American Journal of Philology 91 (3):375.
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  • Megarische Studien.E. L. Highbarger & Krister Hanell - 1937 - American Journal of Philology 58 (1):118.
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  • Thucydides and the Athenian Purification of Delos.Roger Brock - 1996 - Mnemosyne 49 (3):321-327.
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  • Greeks and Their Past in the Second Sophistic.E. L. Bowie - 1970
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  • The Latest Expansions of the Iliad.George Melville Bolling - 1916 - American Journal of Philology 37 (1):1.
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