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  1. The Fall of Troyby 4th century Smyrnaeus Quintus by Smyrnaeus Quintus, 2008-09-01
  2. The Fall of Troy by 4th century Smyrnaeus Quintus, 2006-11-03
  3. 4th-Century Poets; Gregory of Nazianzus, Ausonius, Lactantius, Claudian, Quintus Smyrnaeus, Juvencus, Zuo Si, Tao Qian, Prudentius

61. Links To Possibly Better Reference Sites On Troy And The Trojan Wars.
The Fall of Troy By Quintus Smyrnaeus. Originally written in Greek somethimeabout the middle of the 4th century CE Translation by AS Way, 1913.
http://www.angelfire.com/hi2/bvchstroy/links.html
Links To Possibly Better Reference Sites on Troy and the Trojan Wars.
Another Trojan War - brief discussion of the controversy surrounding Heinrich Schliemann's excavation of the Ancient city of Troy http://www.cyberpath.net/bjc/library/trojan.html The Fall of Troy - By Quintus Smyrnaeus. Originally written in Greek somethime about the middle of the 4th Century C.E. Translation by A.S. Way, 1913. http://sunsite.berkeley.edu/OMACL/Troy How The Trojan War Began - Discussing the mythological story behind the siege of Troy. http://www.angelfire.com/mi/myth/beforetroy.html The Trojan Horse- Looking at that big ol' horse from the Trojan War. http://darter.ocps.k12.fl.us/classroom/who/darter/trhorse.htm The Trojan Women - A play by Euripides, written 415 B.C.E. http://classics.mit.edu/Euripides/troj_women.html And guess what guys? 'Coz I'm such a smart li'l chicky, I've already created another site. home

62. Ccb4-5.html
midway.uchicago.edu 4th Groningen Workshop the beginning of the19th century. Hellenistic Epigram, Quintus Smyrnaeus, Nonnus, Hellenistic
http://collection.nlc-bnc.ca/100/201/300/cdn_classical/html/1998/ccb4-5.html
I am pleased to announce that the Leiden University Classics Web Page (http://wwwlet.leidenuniv.nl/www.let.data/gltc/index.html) now gives access to updated and expanded versions of [..., inter alia:] A Bibliography of Hellenistic Poetry, including bibliographies of Aratus, Callimachus, Theocritus, Apollonius Rhodius (full bibliography, ca. 1360 items), Nicander, Hellenistic Epigram, Quintus Smyrnaeus, Nonnus, Hellenistic Society and Hellenistic Poetry 1992-1997. You can also access the full archive (ca. 3200 titles) on which these bibliographies are based. Maintained by dr. M.P. Cuypers. Last updated: 22 December 1997. From: James O'Donnell

63. CLASSICS
In the 4th century Demosthenes was expounded and imitated by in Florence half a centurybefore the by Filelfo (1427), while Quintus Smyrnaeus was discovered in
http://18.1911encyclopedia.org/C/CL/CLASSICS.htm
document.write("");
CLASSICS
Besides the works already mentioned, he published the Portraiture of Quakerisin (1806), ,JVlemoirs of William Penn (1813), Researches, Antediluvian, Patriarchal and Historical (1836), intended as a history of the interference of Providence for man’s spiritual good, and Strictures on several of the remarks concerning himself bade in the Life of Witberforce, in which his claim as originator of the antislavery movement is denied. See the lives by Thomas Elmes (1876) and Thomas Taylor (1839). CLASSICS. The term “ classic” is derived from the Latin epithet classicus, found in a passage of Aulus Gellius (xix. 8. is), where a “ scriptor ‘ classicus ‘ “ is contrasted with a “ scriptor proletarius.” The metaphor is taken from the division of the Roman people into classes by Servius Tullius, those in the first class being called classici, all the rest infra classeni, and those in the last proletarii.1 The epithet “ classic “ is accordingly applied (1) generally to an author of the first rank, and (2) more 1 The above derivation is in accordance with English usage. In the New English Dictionary the earliest example of the word “classical” is the phrase “classical and canonical,” found in the Euro~pae Speculum of Sir Edwin Sandys (1599), and, as applied to a writer, it is explained as meaning “ of the first rank or authority.” This exactly corresponds with the meaning of classicus in the above passage of Gellius. On the other hand, the French word classique (in Littré’s view) primarily means “ used in class.”

64. Women In Ancient Greek Drama, A Discussion By Frederick John Kluth Of Kent, Ohio
Other authors include Quintus Smyrnaeus, Theocritus, Bion, and Moschus. HER THEMES,ISSUES, CHARACTERISATION AND SO ON OVER THE ACTOR ON A 4th century BC GREEK
http://apk.net/~fjk/gdrama.html
Click Here for Menu Directory
Women in Ancient Greek Drama
A Discussion by Frederick John Kluth of Kent, Ohio
Advertisement:
Buy a column, video, chess set, tunic, pedestal, painting, dress, urn, vase, tie, book, statue click here . Other Greek related items are available. Also buy almost anything else.
If you click above and follow the links to a purchase then this site receives a commission for its support. The information presented here represents my impressions as a result of reading in the subject over many years. I present this information with the purpose of providing ideas and stimulus for further research. Feel free to quote me, but undertand that some of my statements will require additional substantiation from ancient sources. There is a bibliography included which should document my main sources.
Women in Ancient Greek Drama
Index
Women in Ancient Greek Drama
UP TO INDEX
Introduction:
Drama came to us from religious worship. Specifically it came from the worship of Dionysus, not Athene, not Zeus, and not Poseidon. The transition from religious worship occurred some time in the sixth century BCE. The conviction of the religion of Dionysus, that the worshipper can not only worship, but can become, can be, his god, is essentially dramatic.

65. Worlorn Brittanica Troad 970420
m Latin prose, probably in the 4th century, under the and in the time of Aelian (2ndcentury ad) this form of narration recalls the poem of Quintus Smyrnaeus.
http://www.gadzikowski.com/worlorn/brittanica.html
troad
from the encyclopedia brittanica
The Britannica Troy
TROY and TROAD . THE Troad, or the land of Troy, the northwestern promontory of Asia Minor. Natural Divisions. -The length of the Troad from north to s outh, taking a straight line from the northwest point, Cape Sigeum (Yeni Shehr), to the southwest point, Cape Lectum (Baba Kale) is roughly 40 m. The breadth, from the middle point of the west coast to the main range of Ida, is not much greater. The whole central portion of this area is drained by the Menderes (anc. Scamandcr), which rises in basin of the Menderes is divided by hills into two distinct parts, a southern and a northern plain. The southern-anciently called the Samonian plain-is the great central plain of the Troad, and takes its modern name from Bairamich, the chief Turkish town, which is situated in the eastern part of it near Ida. From the north end of the plain the Menderes winds in large curves through deep gorges in metamorphic rocks, and issues into the northern plain, stretching to the Hellespont. This is the plain of Troy, which is 7 or 8 m. Iong, and 2 or 3 m. broad on the average. The hills on the south are quite low, and towards the east are acclivities are in places so gentle as to leave the limits of the plain indefinite. Next to the basin of the Menderes, with its two plains, the best marked feature in the river-system of the Troad is the valley of the Tuzla (anc. Satniois ). The Tuzla rises in the western part of Mt Ida, south of the plain of Bairamich, from which its valley is divided by hills; and, after flowing for many miles almost parallel with the south coast of the Troad, from which, at Assus, it is less than a mile

66. XV. Scholars, Antiquaries And Bibliographers: Bibliography. Vol. 12. The Romanti
Homeric poems (Journal of Philol., VI, 114 f.), 1876; Quintus Smyrnaeus and the 1859;4th–5th edn., 1866 1911; on the Minor Prophets in The century Bible, 1905
http://www.bartleby.com/222/1500.html
Select Search All Bartleby.com All Reference Columbia Encyclopedia World History Encyclopedia World Factbook Columbia Gazetteer American Heritage Coll. Dictionary Roget's Thesauri Roget's II: Thesaurus Roget's Int'l Thesaurus Quotations Bartlett's Quotations Columbia Quotations Simpson's Quotations English Usage Modern Usage American English Fowler's King's English Strunk's Style Mencken's Language Cambridge History The King James Bible Oxford Shakespeare Gray's Anatomy Farmer's Cookbook Post's Etiquette Bulfinch's Mythology Frazer's Golden Bough All Verse Anthologies Dickinson, E. Eliot, T.S. Frost, R. Hopkins, G.M. Keats, J. Lawrence, D.H. Masters, E.L. Sandburg, C. Sassoon, S. Whitman, W. Wordsworth, W. Yeats, W.B. All Nonfiction Harvard Classics American Essays Einstein's Relativity Grant, U.S. Roosevelt, T. Wells's History Presidential Inaugurals All Fiction Shelf of Fiction Ghost Stories Short Stories Shaw, G.B. Stein, G. Stevenson, R.L. Wells, H.G. Reference Cambridge History The Romantic Revival Scholars, Antiquaries and Bibliographers ... BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
The Cambridge History of English and American Literature in 18 Volumes
Vol. 12. The Romantic Revival.

67. Www.2000english.com/information/Contents.txt
Conquest) Smollett, Tobias George (17211771) The Expedition of Humphry ClinkerTravels through France and Italy Smyrnaeus, Quintus (4th century) The Fall of
http://www.2000english.com/information/Contents.txt

68. QUINTUS SMYRNAEUS
Quintus Smyrnaeus, Greek epic poet, probably flourished in the latter part of the4th century AD He is sometimes called Quintus Calaber, because the only MS.
http://19.1911encyclopedia.org/Q/QU/QUINTUS_SMYRNAEUS.htm
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QUINTUS SMYRNAEUS
See an excellent monograph by E. Pifleyro, Manuel Jo.sê Quintana, ensayo critico y b’iogrdfico (Paris, 1892). QUINTESSENCE, in. ancient and scholastic philosophy, the name given to the fifth immaterial element, over and above the four material elements, air, water, earth and fire, which Aristotle assumed to be permeating the whole world, and called oluxta: in medieval philosophy this was called quinta essentia, the fifth essence, and by many was considered material and therefore capable of extraction. The ancient Indian philosophers also contain the same idea of a fifth element; thus there were five Sanskrit elements ( bhutas) , earth, wind, fire, water and aether. in the history of chemistry the name was applied, by analogy, to the most concentrated extract of a substance. Such is the scanty record that remains of Quintilian’s uneventful life. But it is possible to determine with some accuracy his relation to the literature and culture of his time, which he powerfully influenced. His career brings home to us the vast change which in a few generations had passed over Roman taste, feeling and society. In the days of Cicero rhetorical teaching had been entirely in the hands of the Greeks. The Greek language, too, was in the main the vehicle of instruction in rhetoric. The first attempt to open a Latin rhetorical school, in 94 B.c., was crushed by authority, and not until the time of Augustus was there any professor of the art who had been born to the full privileges of a Roman citizen. The appointment of Quintilian as professor by the chief of the state marks the last

69. Listings Of The World Arts Classical Studies Greek Quintus Of
Works by and about Quintus Smyrnaeus, a Greek writer in the 4th centuryAD. Search, Complete Directory. The Fall
http://listingsworld.com/Arts/Classical_Studies/Greek/Quintus_of_Smyrna/

70. Classical Theses In Progress (UK And Eire)
in Greek Drama (late 5th and 4th c. BC Atticus and the Greek Renaissance of the 2ndCentury AD. MD Ravenscroft, St Andrews, A Commentary on Quintus Smyrnaeus XIII,
http://www.tlg.uci.edu/~gabby/directory/ukthesis.html
Directory of PhD and DPhil Theses in Progress
In Classics and related subjects in the UK and Ireland
Currently very much under construction. Your input is required. This page is currently at http://www.tlg.uci.edu/~gabby/directory/ukthesis.html This page is designed with a bare minimum of information and simple layout for ease of download and maximum compatibility. All information in this directory is either available elsewhere on the World-wide web or was submitted by the graduate students themselves. Theses may continue to be listed for some time after they have been completed. If you would like to add or correct your entry, please contact Where email address are not supplied, they will often be available from the University email directory. Try the address http://www. university-or-town .ac.uk/ as a first guess. See also the full UK Thesis listing from BRITS (requires subscription for full directory, entries for 1994 visible by way of demo); and the somewhat out-of-date Index to Classical Dissertations and Theses in Progress or Recently Completed in North America and Great Britain , online at UCLA. The appearance of a link on this page does not necessarily represent endorsement of that site by the University of California or its affiliates.

71. Books On-line: Authors Starting With "W"
to the End of the Sixth century AD, with Walker, John, ed. The Autodesk File (4thEdition) (HTML at The Fall of Troy , by Quintus Smyrnaeus (Gutenberg text);
http://onlinebooks.library.upenn.edu/webbin/book/authorstart?W

72. Burgersdijk En Niermans
stamp on vº last leaf, stained in places). EUR 250 EUR 200 ¶ Aphthonius of Antioch(4th c. AD), teacher of rhetoric. 1538, Quintus CALABER. (=Smyrnaeus).
http://www.b-n.nl/php/search.php3?AuctionNumber=316&GroupNumber=58

73. Appendices & Bibliography
As when Giraldus Cambrensis wrote, in the twelfth century, “There are no blackcrows in this country, or they are very rare; they are all Quintus Smyrnaeus.
http://modigliani.brandx.net/user/aeron/diss/AppBib.html
Appendix A: Birds
Crows
The word badb is glossed royston-crow or scald-crow in the glossaries. These are obsolete terms for the Hooded Crow, Corvus corone cornix. This bird is not fully black, as is the American Crow, Corvus brachyrhynchos. Instead, the head, the central part of the breast, wings, tails, and legs are black, with the rest of the plumage from medium to light grey (Goodwin 1986: 115). The fully-black Carrion Crow, Corvus corone corone, The History and Topography of Ireland XVII). The Carrion and Hooded Crows are actually members of a single species, in complementary distribution. But except along the border of the two sub-species where hybrids exist, the two color patterns somehow remain separate and distinct, a mystery to ornithologists (Gibbons et al. 1993: 394-399; Goodwin 1986: 65; Bannerman 1953: 9). In 1695, the boundary separating the species was between Great Britain and Shetland. Martin Martin writes:
The crows are very numerous in Shetland, and differ in their colour from those on the mainland; for the head, wings and tail of thise in Shetland are only black, and their back, breast, and tail of a grey colour. When black crows are seen there at any time the inhabitants say it is a presage of approaching famine (1934: 380).
The Hooded Crow is found in Ireland, the west of Scotland, and the Isle of Man, with the Carrion Crow appearing the in rest of Britain (Gibbons

74. Project Gutenberg Author Index
Project Gutenberg. Author Index Q . Quida, 18391908. Quintus, Smyrnaeus, 4thcentury. To the main listings page. Main Project Gutenberg Web page (online).
http://www.ibiblio.org/gutenberg/authors/author_index_Q.html
Project Gutenberg
Author Index "Q"
Quida, 1839-1908 Quintus, Smyrnaeus, 4th century
To the main listings page
Main Project Gutenberg Web page (online)

75. Fall Of Troy
The Fall of Troy. By Quintus Smyrnaeus ( Quintus of Smyrna ) Fl. 4thCentury AD Online Medieval and Classical Library Release 18b.
http://www.artinthehills.org/college-scholarship-softball.htm

76. Buscas: Quintus Of Smyrna
The Fall of Troy by Quintus Smyrnaeus (Quintus of Smyrna) Fl. 4thCentury AD.Originally written in Greek, sometime about the
http://www.i-une.com/cgi-bin/meta/search.cgi?keywords=Quintus of Smyrna&lang=es

77. *** The House Of Ptolemy: Ptolemaic Egypt And Its Culture ***
1360 records); Nicander (27 records); Hellenistic Epigram (166 records); QuintusSmyrnaeus (22 records the ship sank around the end of the 4th century BC, at
http://www.houseofptolemy.org/housecul.htm
The House of Ptolemy:
Ptolemaic Egypt and its Culture
[ The Literate ] [ Warfare ] [ Religions ] [ Snapshops of Daily life ] ... [ Comments ]
Ptolemaic Egypt and its Culture
    The Literate:
    [ Items on The Rosetta Stone ] [ Items on Literature ]
  • - Checklist Of Editions Of Greek And Latin Papyri, Ostraca And Tablets
    Last revised 20 July 2000. By: John F. Oates, William H. Willis, Roger S. Bagnall, Klaas A. Worp, Joshua D. Sosin with
    the assistance of Sarah J. Clackson and Terry G. Wilfong
    This is the Beta version of the new, expanded Checklist. Coptic material has been added. The authors hope in the near future to add Demotic material as well, in an effort to make a more comprehensive guide to the papyrological evidence. They urge users to send us suggestions for improvement etc.
    The primary purpose of the Checklist of Editions of Greek, Latin and Coptic Papyri, Ostraca and Tablets is to provide for scholars and librarians a ready bibliography of all monographic volumes, both current and out-of-print, of Greek, Latin and Coptic texts on papyrus, parchment, ostraca or wood tablets. Texts published in periodicals as journal articles are normally excluded, since they are regularly republished in successive volumes of Sammelbuch griechischer Urkunden aus Ägypten (SB), the volumes of which are included. Many volumes containing documentary texts publish literary and subliterary texts as well, and such volumes are of course included, together with volumes of the same series that are exclusively literary. No systematic attempt to include all exclusively literary and subliterary volumes has been made. Supplementary material - Corpora, Instrumenta, Series, etc. - has been added as seemed appropriate.

78. Classic Book Author Index, Plays, Religious Manuscripts, Historic Documents, And
Oliphant, Laurence, 18291888 Oliphant, Mrs. (Margaret), 1828-1897 Oliver, CharlesA. (Charles Alexander), 1858-1932 Omar Khayyam, 11th century Oppenheim, E
http://classicscopy.com/authorindex.htm
var TlxPgNm='authorindex'; Classic Book Author Index, Plays, Religious Manuscripts, Historic Documents, and much more!
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Public Relations Speeches Marketing Advertising Resume Writing National Telemarketing Flat-Rate Long Distance Telephone! National Telemarketing Call Center Media Promotion, including Newspaper, Broadcast, and Internet Advertising Infomercials Classic Book Author Index, Plays, Religious Manuscripts, Historic Documents, and much more!
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AUTHORS in Alphabetical Order
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. Easy for students and teachers to String Search, Highlight Text, etc. Classic Book Author Index, Plays, Religious Manuscripts, Historic Documents, and much more! Advertising Auctions Autos Attorneys ... Legal Forms
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Abbott, David Phelps 1863-1934

79. Authors P-R
The Worldwide Library making e-books availableto everyone worldwide without charge now.
http://www.worldwide-library.co.uk/Authors/p-r.htm
Home Author Title Topic ... Book Club The Worldwide Library making e-books available to everyone worldwide without charge now. WWL Author Index Start A B C ... Z
P
Packard, Frank L. (Frank Lucius), 1877-1942
Page, Thomas Nelson, 1853-1922
Paine, Albert Bigelow, 1861-1937
Paine, Ralph Delahaye, 1871-1925
Paine, Thomas, 1737-1809
Palmer, Alice Freeman, 1855-1902
Paramananda, Swami, 1884-1940, Translator
Parker, Gilbert, 1862-1932
Parker, K. Langloh (Katie Langloh Mrs), 1856-1940
Parkman, Francis, 1823-1893
Parlette, Ralph, 1870-1930 Patanjali Paterson, A. B. (Andrew Barton), 1864-1941 AKA: Paterson, Banjo, 1864-1941 Paterson, Banjo, 1864-1941 AKA: Paterson, A. B. (Andrew Barton), 1864-1941 Patmore, Coventry Kersey Dighton, 1823-1896 Patten, William, 1868-1946, Editor Patterson, J. H. (John Henry), 1867-1947 Payn, James, 1830-1898 Peacock, Thomas Love, 1785-1866 Peattie, Elia W. (Elia Wilkinson), 1862-1935 Pedler, Margaret Pedley, Ethel C. Pellico, Silvio, 1789-1854 Penfeather, Amabel AKA: Cooper, Susan Fenimore, 1813-1894

80. ARIVA.DE >> Forum & Chat >> Zertifikateforum >> Thread

http://blau.ariva.de/board/152076/thread.m?backurl=board_zerti.m&tempallpostings

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