Volumes XCI–C (1993–2002)

Vol. XCI (1993)

Cybele among the philosophers: Pherecydes to Plato. By Mark Edwards, 65–74

Mons and Collis. By Åke Fridh, 1–12

The Animated Implement: A Catullan Source for Virgil's Plough. By W. W. de Grummond, 75–80

Problems in Pindar's Third Nemean. By Stephen Instone, 13–31

Juvenal, Satire 13. By F. Jones, 81–92

Notes on Theodorus Gaza's Canis Laudatio. By Jan Fredrik Kindstrand, 93–105

L'origine du σκόλιον. Par Gérard Lambin, 32–37

Vindikationen zu Senecas Controversiae und Suasoriae. Von Sven Lundström, 106–119

Morality, History, and Livy's Wronged Women. By Timothy J. Moore, 38–46

Ueberlegungen zum literarischen Wert oder Unwert hagiographischer Texte. Von Lennart Rydén, 47–60

Miscellanea

Zu Anth. Pal. 9,313 (= Anyte Epigr. 16 Gow-Page). Von Hans Bernsdorff, 120–122

Note sur le sens de contractus dans Horace, Épîtres, I, 7, 12. Par Pierre-Jacques Dehon, 123–125

Zum Lied der Vögel in Statius' Silve 2,4. Von Siegmar Döpp, 61–62

Vergils Laokoon. Von Jörg Rüpke, 126–128

Ein Kaiser bei der Küchenarbeit. Zu einer missverstandenen Stelle bei Liudprand von Cremona (Antapodosis V 25). Von Heinz Erich Stiene, 63–64

Vol. XCII (1994)

The Fall of Phaeton and the Kaalijärv Meteorite Crater: is there a Connection? By Jerker Blomqvist, 1–16

Heraklits Gott. Von Georgios Fatouros, 65–72

Zeno the rhetor and the thirteen staseis. By Malcolm Heath, 17–22

Die Dira im zwölften Buch der Aeneis: eine Klarstellung. Von Wolfgang Hübner, 23–28

Performance Studies and Greek Tragedy. By Graham Ley, 29–45

Revenge on the tyrant: the assassinations of Philip II and Caligula. By Hugh Lindsay, 73–84

Retter-Licht (φόως, φάως) bei Homer und den Tragikern. Von Manfred Lossau, 85–92

Cruindmelus. Studien zu Quellen und Parallelen. Von Bengt Löfstedt, 46–51

The Long Way Round: Tacitus, Histories 1.27. By M. Gwyn Morgan, 93–101

Lamps for St Eugenios: A Note on Byzantine Glass. By Jan Olof Rosenqvist, 52–59

Dictys und Dares über den Troischen Krieg: Homer in der Rezeptionskrise? Von Knut Usener, 102–120

Miscellanea

πῶμα = 'shell' (Lucian, Alexander 14, Addendum Cyranidibus 4.33). By David Bain, 121–123

An unnoticed fragment of the Old Comedy? By Jerker Blomqvist, 124–125

The Meaning of Sidonius, Ep. 2.1.4. By David Frye, 60–61

Krokodilstränen. Von Donna Krieger und Leena Löfstedt, 62

Zur Übersetzung einiger mittelalterlichen Theologen. Von Bengt Löfstedt, 126–128

Petronius 129.8 Reexamined. By Michele Ronnick, 63–64

Vol. XCIII (1995)

στάς, ἑστώς κτλ. Entbehrliches und ergänzendes Partizip. Von Leif Bergson, 65–68

ἀλλὰ ... μήν, ἀλλὰ ... μέντοι, and Atticistic particle usage. By Jerker Blomqvist, 3–23

Ignatius, Judaism and Judaizing. By Mark Edwards, 69–77

Latin Literature i 17th-century Rome. By Jozef IJsewijn, 78–99

The Medisers of Thessaly. By Arthur Keaveney, 30–38

Amores 3.12.11–12: the couplet that forges a deliberate link between the Amores and the Ars Amatoria. By Naomi Lacey, 24–29

The prolaliae to Lucian's Verae Historiae. By Aristoula Georgiadou and David H.J. Larmour, 100–112

The date of Catullus 52. By F. X. Ryan, 113–121

Peripatetic Epistemology before Alexander of Aphrodisias: The Case of Alexander of Damascus. By Robert B. Todd, 122–128

The Homerische Thebais und die Amphiaraos-Ausfhart. Von José Torres Guerra, 39–48

Opium für die Optimaten? Religiöses Argumentieren in Ciceros Miloniana. Von Meinolf Vielberg, 49–64

Vol. XCIV (1996)

In Commonitorium Orientii adnotatiunculae. Scripsit Sven Blomgren, 1–4

Quelques interrogations à propos de la Vie de Syméon Stylite le Jeune. Par V. Déroche, 65–83

How Not to Translate Medieval Latin. By Charles J. Donovan, 5–7

The word speirokephalon. By Johan Flemberg, 8–11

Some Topographical Remarks on Caesar's Bellum Gallicum. By Åke Fridh †, 12–20

Bringt Pax der Welt den Frieden? – Zur Textkonstitution von Modoin, ecl. 2, 53–57. Von Irene Frings, 84–87

Florilegium Nazianzenum ineditum. By Dimitrios Iordanoglou, 88–110

A Note on Aeneid 6.893–8. By Arne Jönsson and Bengt-Arne Roos, 21–28

A Look Back at Propertius 4.1.150. By Shelley D. Kaufhold, 29–33

Double entendres in skolia: the etymology of skolion. By Vayos Liapis, 111–122

Zu den sog. Ioca Monachorum. Von Bengt Löfstedt, 34–36

Aphrodite's Hair: Colluthus and Hairstyles in the Epic Tradition. By V. J. Matthews, 37–39

Περὶ ὕψους 4.4, 9.10–11. By Pär Sandin, 40–47

Lucretius on the Use and Abuse of Animals. By Jo-Ann Shelton, 48–64

Ten notes on Calpurnius Flaccus, Declamationum Excerpta. By W. S. Watt, 123–127

Miscellanea

How did Xantias run? Frogs 193. By Barry Baldwin, 128

Vol. XCV (1997)

A Note on Jerome, Epist. 54,9,3. By Neil Adkin, 1–9

The Bride-show of Theofilos: Some Notes on the Sources. By Dimitry E. Afinogenov, 10–18

Corbulo's Socratic Shadow. By June W. Allison, 19–25

On the Psychology of Aelius Aristides. By Paul Andersson and Bengt-Arne Roos, 26–38

Kaiserliche Lobrede und Politisches Programm: Die Dritte Rede des Julianus Caesars. Von Florin Curta, 39–56

Homer and the Sophoclean Prophet Motif. By J. F. Davidson, 57–61

Who or What Was the Copper Fly? The riddle of χαλκῆ μυῖα. By Kimmo Järvinen, 62–77

Πῶς δὲ κατασκευάζεται ... σημαίνων εἶπε. Die Beschreibung des Pfluges in Hesiods Erga. Von Georg Rechenauer, 78–88

Explaining Suetonius (Tib. 16.1): Tiberius' Tribunicia Potestas in A.D. 4. By F. E. Rohmer, 89–98

Zu einer Verwendung von fides (Servius ad Aen. V 122). Von Anne Uhl, 99–107

Eulogizing Rulers and the Rules of Eulogy. Neo-Latin Funeral Literature in Honour of the Archduke Albert (1621–1622). By Toon Van Houdt and Jan Papy, 108–124

Miscellanea

Prop. 3,15,23f.: Cognosce Iovem! Von Klaus Lennartz, 125–126

Zum velaren Nasal im Lateinischen. Von Bengt Löfstedt, 127

Once Again Crocodile Tears. By Roger White, 128

Vol. XCVI (1998)

Programme and Persona in Horace, Odes 1.5. By David J. Coffta, 26–31

Venantius Fortunatus: the end game. By Judith W. George, 32–43

Hermogenes' biographers. By Malcolm Heath, 44–54

Jan-Olof Tjäder 1921–1998. By Monica Hedlund, 2–10

Pré-Parryana. Les épithètes homériques au miroir d'une tradition exégétique féconde ou pour la relativisation d'une trouvaille. Par Pascale Hummel, 55–71

Adnoten zu den Ioca monachorum. Von Rainer Jacobi, 72–74

Hadrian und die Juden: ein Beitrag zur Glaubwürdigkeit von Movses Horenaci II 60. Von Erich Kettenhofen, 75–91

Hephaistos' ϑεῖος ἀοιδός and the Cretan Dance. By Norman Postlethwaite, 92–104

An emendation in Hippolytus 1014. By Pär Sandin, 105–107

Hecules und das Horn des Achelous (O. Met. 9.98). Von Werner J. Schneider, 108–113

Antony the Meretrix audax: Cicero's Novel Invective in Philippic 2.44–46. By Lewis A. Sussman, 114–128

Der Papyrus Marini 84 – Versuch einer vollständigen Rekonstruktion. Von Jan-Olof Tjäder †, 11–25

Vol. XCVII (1999)

Imperial Repentance: The Solemn Procession in Constantinople on March 11, 843. By Dmitry Afinogenov, 1–10

The Mixed Constitution in Polybius. By J. M. Alonso-Núñez, 11–19

Studia critica in Historia calamitatum inque epistolas Abaelardi et Heloisae. Scripsit Birgerus Bergh, 20–23

Strophic Displacement in Greek Tragedy. By Roger Dawe, 24–44

Der Turmbau zu Babel bei Walter von Châtillon und der englische Bibeldichter Laurentius von Durham – eine neue Quelle der 'Alexandreis'. Von Thomas Gärtner, 45–49

[Ps.–Virg.] Copa 3. By M. A. Paulinus Greenwood, 50–53

Leaves in Pindar. By R. Drew Griffith, 54–58

Vitulus iuvenescens. A note on Martial, Epigrams 9,42,11 and Horace, Odes 4,2,54–56. By Christer Henriksén, 59–61

Dionysus' thunder – a note an Aristophanes' Frogs vv. 238–239. By Dimitrios Iordanoglou, 62–67

Xenophon und "Maximus". Von Sibylle Ihm, 68–85

'Slow writers' – βραδέως γράϕοντες: what, how much, and how did they write? By Thomas J. Kraus, 86–97

Classifying the Hills of Rome. By Merle K. Langdon, 98–107

Alcidamas' On the Sophists: a Reappraisal. By Yosef Z. Liebersohn, 108–124

Miscellanea

Thuc. 5.90: ἐπὶ μεγίστῃ τιμωρία σϕαλέντες. Von Klaus Lennartz, 125–126

Sprachliches zu einem merowingischen Testament. Von Bengt Löfstedt, 127

Vol. XCVIII (2000)

The Death of Agrippa Postumus and Escape of Clemens. By Jane Bellemore, 93–114

Tibullus 2.6.27–40: Nemesis' Dead Sister. By Francis Cairns, 65–74

Der Selbstmord des Judas Iskariot bei Milo von St. Amand. Von Thomas Gärtner, 123–127

Memory and Silence in Cicero's Brutus. By Alain Gowing, 39–64

Why "Phoenician" Women? By Karelisa Hartigan, 25–31

Did Trimalchio Have a Cuckoo-clock? A Comment on Petron. Sat. 26.9. By Erik Magnusson, 115–122

The Point of Sophocles, fr. 453. By C.W Marshall, 1–8

Sex and the Single Racehorse: A Response to Cameron on Equestrian Double Entendres in Posidippus. By Victor Matthews, 32–38

Plotting in Ovidian Rape Narratives. By Paul Murgatroyd, 75–92

A Problem of Conception: What Is Breeding at Soph., OT 873? By F. E. Romer, 9–24

Vol. XCIX (2001)

Two Misunderstood Passages in Jerome's Euology of Lea (Epist. 23,2–3). By Neil Adkin, 65–68

POTUISSET FECISSE. De infinitivo temporis loco praesentis adhibito. Scripsit Birgerus Bergh, 1–3

Abiit ad plures. Scripserunt Birgerus Bergh et Laurentius Gårding, 69–71

A Rare Meaning of the Verb τέμνω. By E. K. Borthwick, 72–74

Parmenides' Theology. By Adam Drozdek, 4–15

Speirokephalon – an addendum. By Johan Flemberg, 16–17

Kritisch-Exegetisches zur Marcellus-Vita des Vulfinus von Die (MGH poet. lat. IV 3 p. 963–976 Strecker). Von Thomas Gärtner, 18–27

The Conjecture of a Sleeping Mind: Dreams and the Power of Clytemnestra in the Orestia. By Lisa Rengo George, 75–86

Where Were the Women When the Men Laughed at Lysistrata? An inquiry into the question whether the audience of the Old Comedy also included female spectators. By Eva-Carin Gerö and Hans-Roland Johnsson, 87–99

Three Passages in Fulgentius. By Gregory Hays, 100–102

Exzerpte aus griechischen Rednern im Florilegium des Ps.-Maximus. Von Sibylle Ihm, 114–128

Some Divine Interventions in the Iliad. By Stephen Instone, 103–113

Rhetorik statt Grammatik: eine unerkannte Aposiopese in Ov. Met. 8.326 f. Von Martin Korenjak, 28–30

Zu den Bibelkommentaren von Theodor und Hadrian. Von Bengt Löfstedt, 34–37

De tribus Quinti Smyrnaei locis Homero pendentibus. Scripsit Carolus Martinus Lucarini, 31–33

The Ever-Present Odysseus: Eavesdropping and Disguise in Sophocles' Philoctetes. By Hanna M. Roisman, 38–53

Reviews of New Dissertations in the Field of Classical Philology

Krister Östlund: Johan Ihre on the Origins and History of the Runes. Three Latin Dissertations from the mid 18th Century edited with translation and commentary (2001). By Egil Kraggerud, 54–62

Vol. C (2002)

A Lost 8th Century Pamphlet Against Leo III and Constantine V? By Dmitry Afinogenov, 1–17

ὀπίσω with Genitive in Extra-Biblical Greek. By Sanita Balode and Jerker Blomqvist, 101–108

Who Were Privileged to See the Gods? By M. W. Dickie, 109–127

The Meaning of megethei megas in Pausanias. A Note on Some Translations. By Johan Flemberg, 18–22

Four Epigrams in the Greek Anthology AP 7.365, 7.651, 6.276 and 7.79. By Staffan Fogelmark, 23–37

To Bee or Not To Bee? Antipater AP 7.34: A Mistaken Interpretation. By Staffan Fogelmark, 128–136

A Comment on the Lekythion-scene in Aristophanes' Frogs. By Eva-Carin Gerö and Hans-Roland Johnsson, 38–50

Epiphany in the Greek Novels: the Emplotment of a Metaphor. By Thomas Hägg, 51–61

Sprachliches zur Margarita Philosophica. Von Bengt Löfstedt, 62–65

"Fearing the Violence of Slaves". Paganism and Christianity in the Spanish Countryside. By Hugo Montgomery, 137–145

Lennart Rydén, 1931–2002. By Jan Olof Rosenqvist, 74–85

The Life of St Philaretos the Merciful as a Work of Literature. By Lennart Rydén †, 86–100

Critical Notes on Aeschylus. By Pär Sandin, 146–160

Ov. Met. 7.363ff. and Ps.-Lactantius' Comment. By Konstantinos Spanoudakis, 161–165

Gorgias' Encomium of Helen and Euripides' Troades. By Dimos Spatharas, 166–174

The Poetics of Epiphany in Callimachus' Hymns to Apollo and Pallas. By Gjert Vestrheim, 175–183

Reviews of Swedish Dissertations in the Field of Classical Philology

Ingela Nilsson: Erothic Pathos, Rhetorical Pleasure. Narrative Technique and Mimesis in Eumathios Makrembolites' Hysmine and Hysminias. By Maarit Kaimio, 66