This 1897 two-volume edition of Roger Bacon's ground-breaking thirteenth-century encyclopedia of science was the first complete printed edition. Bacon's text appears here... Læs mere
Charles Wordsworth's Graecae Grammaticae Rudimenta in Usum Scholarum was the foundational Greek grammar of nineteenth-century England. Wordsworth, a... Læs mere
Samuel Butler's four-volume edition of the Tragedies of Aeschylus draws upon the monumental 1663 Latin commentary edition by Thomas Stanley. Based upon Stanley's own... Læs mere
This two-volume critical edition of Seneca's tragedies by Friedrich Leo (1851–1914) was published in Berlin in 1878–1879. A classical scholar of some distinction, Leo was... Læs mere
This two-volume critical edition of Seneca's tragedies by Friedrich Leo (1851–1914) was published in Berlin in 1878–1879. A classical scholar of some distinction, Leo was best known for his work on Roman poetry. Volume 1 contains his critical observations and textual analysis.
Samuel Butler's four-volume edition of the Tragedies of Aeschylus draws upon the monumental 1663 Latin commentary edition by Thomas Stanley. Based upon Stanley's own... Læs mere
Samuel Butler's four-volume edition of the Tragedies of Aeschylus draws upon the monumental 1663 Latin commentary edition by Thomas Stanley. Based upon Stanley's own... Læs mere
German classical philologist Ribbeck's second edition of Virgil's works was published in Leipzig, 1894–1895. Solely a critical edition, it lacks textual commentary. It... Læs mere
German classical philologist Ribbeck's second edition of Virgil's works was published in Leipzig, 1894–1895. Solely a critical edition, it lacks textual commentary. It comprises four parts in two volumes: Volume 1 contains the Eclogues and Georgics, and Aeneid, Books 1–6.
The title of this 1878 work literally means The Book of Catullus of Verona and is a careful perusal by Robinson Ellis of the oeuvre of the Roman poet, giving a history of the variant manuscripts of the poems, and supplying a text with suggested readings and emendations.
Published in Oxford in 1912, Pitman's edition of the four middle books of Tacitus' Annals, covers the final years and death of the Emperor Tiberius and part of the reign of Claudius. The text is derived from Furneaux's edition of 1894, with additional commentary by the editor.
Henry Furneaux (1829–1900) was a leading classical scholar from Oxford specialising in... Læs mere