00958nam a2200277 i 450099100211440970753620020507160303.0000719s1983 it ||| | ita 8813154615b11610797-39ule_instLE02730736ExLDip.to Studi Giuridiciita346.450433PR-VI/AConfortini, Massimo228794La multiproprietà /Massimo ConfortiniPadova :CEDAM,1983-v. ;24 cm.Pubblicazioni dell'Istituto di diritto privato dell'Universita di Roma La Sapienza ;27Multiproprietà.b1161079701-03-1702-07-02991002114409707536LE027 PR-VI/A 481LE027I-1694le027-E0.00-l- 00000.i1182533902-07-02Multiproprietà61994UNISALENTOle02701-01-00ma -itait 3103955oam 22006014 450 99620133550331620150123152300.00-674-99463-9(CKB)3820000000011929(SSID)ssj0001417954(PQKBManifestationID)11873683(PQKBTitleCode)TC0001417954(PQKBWorkID)11365092(PQKB)10548047(OCoLC)899735945(MaCbHUP)hup0000521(EXLCZ)99382000000001192920141025d1973 my pengurcn#|||||txtccrAetiaIambi ; Hecale and other fragments /Callimachus ; edited and translated by C. A. Trypanis. Hero and Leander / Musaeus ; edited by Thomas Gelzer ; translated by Cedric WhitmanCambridge, MA :Harvard University Press,2014.1 online resourceLoeb Classical Library ; 421Includes indexes.Fragments by Callimachus (third century BCE) include those from the Aetia, Greek aetiological stories; a book of Iambi; and the epic poem Hecale. Hero and Leander by Musaeus (fifth or sixth century CE) is a short epic poem.Callimachus of Cyrene, born ca. 310 BCE, after studying philosophy at Athens, became a teacher of grammar and poetry at Alexandria. Ptolemy II Philadelphus of Egypt (reigned 285-247) made him when still young a librarian in the new library at Alexandria; he prepared a great catalogue of its books. Callimachus was author of much poetry and many works in prose, but not much survives. His hymns and epigrams are given with works by Aratus and Lycophron in another volume (no. 129) of the Loeb Classical Library. In the present volume are included fragments of the Aetia (Causes), aetiological legends concerning Greek history and customs; fragments of a book of Iambi; 147 fragments of the epic poem Hecale, which described Theseus's victory over the bull which infested Marathon; and other fragments. We have no explicit information about the poet Musaeus, author of the short epic poem on Hero and Leander, except that he is given in some manuscripts the title Grammatikos, a teacher learned in the rhetoric, poetry and philosophy of his time. He was obviously a follower of the Egyptian poet Nonnus of Panopolis, of the fifth century AD, and his poem seems also to presuppose the Paraphrase of the Psalms of Pseudo-Apollinarius which can be dated to the period 460-470. Musaeus takes up a subject whose first detailed treatment is preserved in Ovid's Heroides (Epistles 18 and 19), but he presents it in a quite different manner. Among the literary antecedents to which this learned grammatikos expressly alludes, the most prominent are Books 5 and 6 of the Odyssey and Plato's Phaedrus. He draws too on the Hymns of Proclus and the Metaphrasis of the Gospel of St. John by Nonnus. He was most probably a Christian Neoplatonist writing a Christian allegory.Greek poetryTranslations into EnglishGreek poetryGreek poetry(OCoLC)947503fastGreek poetry, Hellenistic(OCoLC)947510fastHero (Greek mythology)(OCoLC)955551fastLeander (Greek mythology)(OCoLC)994788fastGreek poetryTranslations into English.Greek poetry.Greek poetryGreek poetry, HellenisticHero (Greek mythology)Leander (Greek mythology)881/.01Callimachus161836MusaeusGrammaticus,Trypanis Constantine A.(Constantine Athanasius),1909-1993,Gelzer ThomasWhitman Cedric HubbellMaCbHUPTLCBOOK996201335503316Aitia14478UNISA