Publisher:
Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK
Jupiter the antiquarian: the name of Iulus (Virgil, Aeneid I.267-8) -- Neglected and unnoticed addtions in the text of three speeches of Cicero (In Verrem II. 5, Pro Murena, Pro Milone) -- Some problems in the text and transmission of Lucretius -- On...
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Universitätsbibliothek der Eberhard Karls Universität
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Jupiter the antiquarian: the name of Iulus (Virgil, Aeneid I.267-8) -- Neglected and unnoticed addtions in the text of three speeches of Cicero (In Verrem II. 5, Pro Murena, Pro Milone) -- Some problems in the text and transmission of Lucretius -- On the text of the Aeneid: an editor's experience -- Overlooked manuscript evidence for interpolations in Lucretius? The rubricated lines -- Aliquid putare nugas: literary filiation, critical communities and reader-response in Catullus -- Dogs, snakes and heroes: hybridism and polemic in Lucretius' De rerum natura -- Authenticity and other textual problems in Heroides -- Maritime Maro: Virgil's fourth Eclogue in Renaissance Venice -- Illa domus, illa mihi sedes: on the interpretation of Catullus -- Acidalius on Tacitus -- On the good ship ingenium: Tristia 1.10 -- The editio princeps of Priscian's Periegesis and its relatives -- A new critical edition of Horace. This is a series of innovative studies in the textual and literary criticism of Latin literature, exploring how these two branches of the discipline are mutually supportive. The contributors include many leading scholars in the field. Individual essays are devoted to Catullus, Cicero, Horace, Lucretius, Ovid, Tacitus and Virgil, and there are also essays on the Renaissance reception of Virgil and on principles of editorial practice. The collection celebrates the extraordinary contribution which Michael Reeve has made and continues to make to Latin studies