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Full Description
Founded in 1868 by the Cambridge scholars John Eyton Bickersteth Mayor (1825-1910), William George Clark (1821-78), and William Aldis Wright (1831-1914), this biannual journal was a successor to The Journal of Classical and Sacred Philology (also reissued in the Cambridge Library Collection). Unlike its short-lived precursor, it survived for more than half a century, until 1920, spanning the period in which specialised academic journals developed from more general literary reviews. Predominantly classical in subject matter, with contributions from such scholars as J. P. Postgate, Robinson Ellis and A. E. Housman, the journal also contains articles on historical and literary themes across the 35 volumes, illuminating the growth and scope of philology as a discipline during this period. Volume 11, comprising issues 21 and 22, was published in 1882.
Contents
Introductory remarks on the 'Philebus'; On some epigrams of the Greek Anthology; M. Guyau on the Epicurean doctrine of free-will and atomic declination; Further notes on Homeric subjects; Notes; On the history of the words 'tetralogia' and 'trilogia'; Notes on Placidus; Lexicographical notes; Notes on the glosses quoted in Hagen's Gradus ad criticen; Conjectural emendations in the text of Aristotle and Theophrastus; Catullus 64, 276; Notes on the second book of the Iliad; On Aeschylus' Agamemnon 1227-1230; Catullus 63, 18; Inscriptions of Cilicia, Cappadocia, and Pontus; On the Mostellaria of Plautus; Propertianum; The earliest Italian literature; A neglected MS of Plato; On some alleged linguistic affinities of the Elohist; On Petronius; Two emendations in Cicero; Euripides; Euripidea; Horace Carm. I. 12, 41-44; Plato's later theory of ideas; The use and meaning of 'liceo' and 'liceor'; Horace Carm. I. 13, 1-3.