Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-76fb5796d-wq484 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-25T16:59:43.936Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Bibliography

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 September 2009

Elizabeth Irwin
Affiliation:
Columbia University, New York
Emily Greenwood
Affiliation:
University of St Andrews, Scotland
Get access
Type
Chapter
Information
Reading Herodotus
A Study of the Logoi in Book 5 of Herodotus' Histories
, pp. 311 - 329
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2007

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Abbott, E. (1893) Herodotus. Books Ⅴ and Ⅵ. Terpsichore and Erato.Oxford.Google Scholar
Ahl, F. (1984) ‘The art of safe criticism in Greece and Rome’, AJPh 105: 174–208.Google Scholar
Alden, M. J. (2000) Homer beside Himself. Oxford.Google Scholar
Alty, J. (1982) ‘Dorians and Ionians’, JHS 102: 1–14.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Aly, W. (1969 2) Volksmärchen, Sage und Novelle bei Herodot und seinen Zeitgenossen. Eine Untersuchung über die volkstümlichen Elemente der altgriechischen Prosaerzählung. Göttingen.Google Scholar
Andrewes, A. (1956) The Greek Tyrants. London.Google Scholar
Antonaccio, C. (1998) An Archaeology of Ancestors. Tomb Cult and Hero Cult in Early Greece. London.Google Scholar
Antoniadis, L. (1981) ‘L’Institution de la royauté en Chypre antique’, Κυπριακα⋯ Σπουδα⋯ 45: 29–53.Google Scholar
Armayor, O. K. (1985) Herodotus’ Autopsy of the Fayoum: Lake Moeris and the Labyrinth of Egypt. Amsterdam.Google Scholar
Armayor, O. K. (2004) ‘Herodotus, Hecataeus and the Persian Wars’, in Karageorghis and Taifacos (eds.) (2004): 321–35.
Arnold, T. (1830) The History of the Peloponnesian War by Thucydides.Oxford.Google Scholar
Asheri, D. (1988a) ‘Carthaginians and Greeks’, in Cambridge Ancient History IV 2: 739–80.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Asheri, D. (1988b) Erodoto. Le Storie, Libro Ⅰ. Milan.Google Scholar
Asheri, D. (1990) ‘Herodotus on Thracian society and history’, Fondation Hardt 35: 131–69.Google Scholar
Asheri, D., Lloyd, A. and Corcella, A. (2007) A Commentary on Herodotus Books Ⅰ–Ⅳ, ed. Murray, O. and Moreno, A.. Oxford.Google Scholar
Aupert, P. and Hellmann, M.-C. (eds.) (1984) Amathonte Ⅰ. Testimonie 1: Auteurs anciens monnayages,voyageurs, fouilles, origines, geographie. Paris.Google Scholar
Austin, C. and Olson, S. D. (2004) Aristophanes. Thesmophoriazusae.Oxford.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Austin, M. J., Harries, J., and Smith, C. (eds.) (1998) Modus Operandi. Essays in Honour of Geoffrey Rickman. London.Google Scholar
Austin, M. M. (1990) ‘Greek tyrants and the Persians, 546–479 bc’, CQ 40: 289–306.CrossRef
Badian, E. (1982) ‘Greeks and Macedonians’, in Barr-Sharrar and Borza (eds.) (1982): 33–51.
Badian, E. (1993) From Plataea to Potidaea. Studies in the History and Historiography of the Pentecontaetia. Baltimore.Google Scholar
Badian, E. (1994) ‘Herodotus on Alexander I of Macedon: a study in some subtle silences’, in Hornblower, S. (ed.), Greek Historiography. Oxford: 107–30.Google Scholar
Bakker, E. J., Jong, I. J. F., and Wees, H. (eds.) (2002) Brill’s Companion to Herodotus. Leiden, Boston and Cologne.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Balot, R. K. (2004) ‘Free speech, courage, and democratic deliberation’, in Sluiter and Rosen (eds.) (2004): 233–60.
Barney, R. (2001) Names and Nature in Plato’s Cratylus. Cambridge, Mass.Google Scholar
Barr-Sharrar, B. and Borza, E. (eds.) (1982) Macedonia and Greece in Late Classical and Early Hellenistic Times (Studies in the History of Art 10). Washington DC.Google Scholar
Barrett, D. S. (1979) ‘Herodotus’ Sigynnai (5.9) and gypsies’, G&R 26: 58–9.Google Scholar
Barron, J. P. (1966) The Silver Coins of Samos. London.Google Scholar
Baurain, C. (1980) ‘Kinyras. La Fin de l’âge du bronze à Chypre et la tradition antique’, BCH 104: 277–308.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Baurain, C. (1984) ‘Réflexions sur les origines de la ville d’après les sources littéraires’, in Aupert and Hellmann (eds.) (1984): 109–17.
Baxter, T. (1992) The Cratylus. Plato’s Critique of Naming. Leiden.Google Scholar
Bertelli, L. (2001) ‘Hecataeus: from genealogy to historiography’, in Luraghi (ed.) (2001a): 67–94.
Bichler, R., and Rollinger, R. (2001) Herodot. Hildesheim.Google Scholar
Bischoff, H. (1932) ‘Der Warner bei Herodot’. Diss. Marburg.Google Scholar
Blaineau, A. (2004) ‘Charge de cavalerie, choc ou esquive: sur un problème rencontré dans l’Hipparque de Xénophon’, in Bois (ed.) (2004): 15–25.CrossRef
Blok, J. (2002) ‘Women in HerodotusHistories’, in Bakker, et al. (eds.) (2002): 225–42.Google Scholar
Blösel, W. (2001) ‘The Herodotean picture of Themistocles: a mirror of fifth-century Athens’, in Luraghi (ed.) (2001a): 179–97.
Boedeker, D. (1988) ‘Protesilaos and the end of Herodotus’ Histories’, ClAnt 7: 30–48.Google Scholar
Boedeker, D. (2002) ‘Epic heritage and mythical patterns in Herodotus’, in Bakker et al.(eds.) (2002): 97–116.
Boedeker, D. (2003) ‘Pedestrian fatalities: the prosaics of death in Herodotus’, in Derow and Parker (eds.) (2003): 17–36.
Bois, J.-P. (ed.) (2004) Dialogue militaire entre anciens et modernes. Rennes.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bolger, D. L. (1989) ‘Regionalism, cultural variation and culture-area concept in later Prehistoric Cypriot studies’, in Peltenburg (ed.) (1989): 142–52.
, Bonfante L. and Karageorghis, V. (eds.) (2001) Italy and Cyprus in Antiquity: 1500–450 bc. Nicosia.Google Scholar
Bondi, S. F. (1990) ‘I Fenici in Erodoto’, Fondation Hardt 35: 235–86.Google Scholar
Borza, E. N. (1990a) ‘Athenians, Macedonians, and the origins of the Macedonian royal house’, in Studies in Attic Epigraphy, History and Topography Presented to Eugene Vanderpool (Hesperia Supplement 19): 7–13.Google Scholar
Borza, E. N. (1990b) In the Shadow of Olympus. The Emergence of Macedon. Princeton.Google Scholar
Borza, E. N. (1995) ‘The symposium at Alexander’s court’, in Makedonika. Claremont: 159–71 (reprinted from Arkhaia Makedonia 3 (1983) 45–55).Google Scholar
Borza, E. N. (1999) Before Alexander. Constructing Early Macedonia (Publications of the Association of Ancient Historians 6). Claremont.Google Scholar
Bowen, A. J. (ed.) (1992) Plutarch: Malice of Herodotus. Text with Translation, Commentary and Notes. Worminster.Google Scholar
Bowie, A. M. (2003) ‘Fate may harm me, I have dined today: near-Eastern royal banquets and Greek symposia in Herodotus’, in Symposium: banquet et représentations en Grèce et à Rome (Pallas 61). Toulouse: 99–109.Google Scholar
Braund, D. (1998), ‘Herodotus on the problematics of reciprocity’, in Gill, C., Postlethwaite, N., and Seaford, R. (eds.), Reciprocity in Ancient Greece. Oxford: 159–80.Google Scholar
Braund, D. (2004) ‘Herodotus’ Spartan Scythians’, in Tuplin, C. (ed.), Pontus and the Outside World. Leiden and Boston: 25–41.Google Scholar
Bremmer, J. N. (1983) The Early Greek Concept of the Soul. Princeton.Google Scholar
Briant, P. (1982) Rois, tributs et paysans: études sur les formations tributaires du Moyen Orient ancien. Paris.Google Scholar
Briant, P. (1990) ‘Hérodote et la société Perse’, Fondation Hardt 35: 69–113.Google Scholar
Briant, P. (1996) Histoire de l’Empire perse de Cyrus à Alexandre. Vol. Ⅰ. Paris.Google Scholar
Briant, P. and Herrenschmidt, C. (eds.) (1989) Le Tribut dans l’Empire perse: actes de la Table Ronde de Paris 12–13 décembre 1986. Louvain and Paris.Google Scholar
Brock, R. (2003) ‘Authorial voice and narrative management in Herodotus’, in Derow and Parker (eds.) (2003): 3–16.
Brock, R. (2004) ‘Political imagery in Herodotus’, in Karageorghis and Taifacos (eds.) (2004): 169–77.
Brown, T. S. (1981) ‘Aeneas Tacticus, Herodotus and the Ionian Revolts’, Historia 30: 385–93.Google Scholar
Browning, R. (1961) ‘Herodotus v. 4 and Euripides Cresphontes fr. 449 N.’, CR ns 9: 201–2.Google Scholar
Budelmann, F. and Michelakis, P. (eds.) (2001) Homer, Tragedy and Beyond. Essays in Honour of P. E. Easterling. London.Google Scholar
Burn, A. R. (1984) Persia and the Greeks: the Defence of the West c. 546–478 bc, 2nd edn. with a postscript by D. M. Lewis. London.Google Scholar
Cagnazzi, S. (1975) ‘Tavola dei 28 logoi di Erodoto’, Hermes 103: 385–423.Google Scholar
Cambiano, G. (1988) ‘La Démonstration géométrique’, in Detienne (ed.) (1988b): 251–72.
Cameron, H. D. (1970) ‘The power of words in the Seven Against Thebes’, TAPhA 101: 95–118.Google Scholar
Carter, D. M. (2004) ‘Citizen attribute, negative right: a conceptual difference between ancient and modern ideas of freedom of speech’, in Sluiter and Rosen (eds.) (2004): 197–220.CrossRef
Cartledge, P. (1993) The Greeks. Oxford.Google Scholar
Cawkwell, G. (2005) The Greek Wars. The Failure of Persia. Oxford.Google Scholar
Ceccarelli, P. (1993) ‘Sans thalassocracie, pas de Démocratie? Le Rapport entre thalassocratie et démocratie à Athènes dans la discussion du Ⅴe et Ⅳe siècle’, Historia 42: 444–70.Google Scholar
Ceccarelli, P. (2005) ‘Messaggio scritto e messaggio orale: strategie narrative erodotee’, in Giangiulio, M. (ed.), Erodoto e il 'modello Erodoteo. Formazione e trasmissione delle tradizioni storiche in Grecia. Trento: 13–16.Google Scholar
Ceccarelli, P. (1996) ‘De la Sardaigne à Naxos: le rôle des îles dans les Histoires d’Hérodote’, in Létoublon (ed.) (1996): 42–55.
Chadwick, J. (1996) Lexicographica Graeca. Oxford.Google Scholar
Chamberlain, D. (2001) ‘“We the others”: interpretative community and plural voice in Herodotus’, ClAnt 20: 5–34.Google Scholar
Christ, M. R. (1994) ‘Herodotean kings and historical enquiry’, ClAnt 13: 167–202.Google Scholar
Clarke, K. J. (2003): ‘Polybius and the nature of late Hellenistic historiography’, in Yanguas, J. Santos and Pagola, E. Torregaray (eds.), Polibio y la Península Ibérica. Vittoria: 69–87.Google Scholar
Classen, J. (1914) Thukydides, Vol. Ⅱ. Berlin.Google Scholar
Clay, J. S. (1989) The Politics of Olympus. Form and Meaning in the Major Homeric Hymns. Princeton.Google Scholar
Cobet, J. (2002) ‘The organization of time in the Histories’, in Bakker et al. (eds.) (2002): 387–412.
Coleman, R. (1977) Vergil. Eclogues. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Colombier, A. M. (1991) ‘Organisation du territoire et pouvoirs locaux dans l’île de Chypre à l’époque perse’, Transeuhratène 4: 21–43.Google Scholar
Colombier, A. M. (2003) ‘Quelques jalons pour une histoire de l’identité chypriote à l’époque des Royaumes autonomes’, in Chehub, M., Ioannou, Y., and Métral, F. (eds.) Méditerranée ruptures et continuités. Actes du colloque tenu à Nicosie les 20–22 octobre 2001. Lyons: 139–150.Google Scholar
Connor, W. R. (1993) ‘The Ionian era of Athenian civic identity’, PAPS 137: 194–206.Google Scholar
Constantakopoulou, C. (2002) The Dance of the Islands. Perceptions of Insularity in Classical Greece. Unpublished PhD thesis. Oxford.Google Scholar
Cooper, G./Krüger, K. (2002) Greek Syntax. Vol. Ⅲ. Ann Arbor.Google Scholar
Costa, E. A (1974) ‘Evagoras I and the Persians’, Historia 23: 40–56.Google Scholar
Craddock, P. (ed.) (1972) The English Essays of Edward Gibbon. Oxford.Google Scholar
Creuzer, Fr. (1869) Herodoti Halicarnassensis Musae Ⅲ. Leipzig.Google Scholar
Croiset, A. (1886) Thucydide. Livres Ⅰ–Ⅱ. Paris.Google Scholar
Crowther, N. B. (2000) ‘Resolving an impasse: draws, dead heats and similar decisions in Greek athletics’, Nikephoros 13: 125–40.Google Scholar
Darbo-Peschanski, C. (1987), Le Discours du particulier. Essai sur l’enquête hérodotéenne. Paris.Google Scholar
Darbo-Peschanski, C. (1988) ‘La Vie des morts. Représentations et fonctions de la mort et des morts dans les Histoires d’Hérodote’, AION 10: 41–51.Google Scholar
Davies, J. K. (1971) Athenian Propertied Families, 600–300 bc. Oxford.Google Scholar
Jong, I. J. F. (1998) ‘Aspects narratologiques des Histoires d’ Hérodote’, Lalies 19: 217–75.Google Scholar
Jong, I. J. F. (2001) ‘The anachronical structure of HerodotusHistories’, in Harrison, (ed.) (2001): 93–116.Google Scholar
de Jong, I. J. F. (2002) ‘Narrative unity and units’, in Bakker et al. (eds.) (2002): 245–66.
Romilly, J. (1971) ‘La Vengeance comme explication historique dans l’ oeuvre d’ Hérodote’, REG 84: 314–37.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Romilly, J. (1986) ‘Les Manies de Prodicos et la rigueur de la langue grecque’, MH 43: 1–18.Google Scholar
Croix, Ste G. E. M. (1972) The Origins of the Peloponnesian War. London.Google Scholar
de Ste Croix, G. E. M. (2004) Athenian Democratic Origins and Other Essays, ed. Harvey, D. and Parker, R.. Oxford.Google Scholar
Deffner, A. (1933) Die Rede bei Herodot und ihre Weiterbildung bei Thukydides. Diss. Munich.Google Scholar
Demand, N. (1988) ‘Herodotus and metoikésis in the Persian Wars’, AJPh 109: 416–23.Google Scholar
Demand, N. (1990) Urban Relocation in Archaic and Classical Greece. Norman, Okl.Google Scholar
Denniston, J. D. (1954) The Greek Particles (2nd edn.). Oxford.Google Scholar
Derian, Der J. (ed.) (1998) The Virilio Reader. Oxford.Google Scholar
Derow, P., and Parker, R. (eds.) (2003) Herodotus and his World. Essays From a Conference in Memory of George Forrest. Oxford.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Derrida, J. (1996) Archive Fever. Chicago.Google Scholar
Detienne, M. (1988a) ‘L’Espace de la publicité, ses opérateurs intellectuals dans la cité’, in Detienne (1988b): 29–81.
Detienne, M. (ed.) (1988b) Les Savoirs de l’écriture en Grèce ancienne. Lille.Google Scholar
Dewald, C. (1981) ‘Women and culture in Herodotus’ Histories’, in Foley, H. (ed.), Reflections of Women in Antiquity. New York: 91–125.Google Scholar
Dewald, C. (1985) ‘Practical knowledge and the historian’s role in Herodotus and Thucydides’, in Jameson, M. H. (ed.), The Greek Historians. Literature and History. Papers Presented to A. E. Raubitschek. Saratoga: 47–63.Google Scholar
Dewald, C. (1987) ‘Narrative structure and authorial voice in Herodotus’ Histories’, Arethusa 20: 147–70.Google Scholar
Dewald, C. (1997) ‘Wanton kings, pickled heroes, and gnomic founding fathers: strategies of meaning at the end of Herodotus’s Histories’, in Roberts et al. (eds.) (1997): 62–82.
Dewald, C. (1998) ‘Introduction and notes’, in Waterfield, R., trans., Herodotus. The Histories. Oxford.
Dewald, C. (1999) ‘The figured stage: focalizing the initial narratives of Herodotus and Thucydides’, in Felson, N., Konstan, D., and Falkner, T. (eds.), Contextualizing Classics. Ideology, Performance, Dialogue. Festschrift for John Peradotto. Lanham: 229–61.Google Scholar
Dewald, C. (2002) ‘“I didn’t give my own genealogy”: Herodotus and the authorial persona’, in Bakker et al. (eds.) (2002): 267–89.
Dewald, C. (2003) ‘Form and content: the question of tyranny in Herodotus’, in Morgan (ed.) (2003): 25–58.
Dewald, C., and Marincola, J. (eds.) (2006) The Cambridge Companion to Herodotus. Cambridge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dillery, J. (1996) ‘Reconfiguring the past: Thyrea, Thermopylae, and narrative patterns in Herodotus’, AJPh 117: 217–54.Google Scholar
Dobrov, G. (1993) ‘The tragic and the comic Tereus’, AJPh 114: 189–243.Google Scholar
Dorati, M. (2000) Le Storie di Erodoto: etnografia e racconto. Pisa and Rome.Google Scholar
Dougherty, C. and Kurke, L. (eds.) (1993) Cultural Poetics in Archaic Greece. Cult, Performance, Politics. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Dougherty, C., and Kurke, L. (eds.) (2003) The Cultures within Ancient Greek Culture. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Dover, K. J. (1998) ‘Herodotean implausibilities’, in Austin et al. (eds.) (1998): 219–25.
Drexler, H. (1972) Herodot-Studien. Hildesheim and New York.Google Scholar
Dunbabin, T. (1936–7) ‘Ἐχθρ⋯ παλα⋯η’, Annual of the British School at Athens 37: 83–91.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dunbabin, T. J. (1948) The Western Greeks. The History of Sicily and South Italy from the Foundation of the Greek Colonies to 480 bc. Oxford.Google Scholar
Dunbar, N. (1995) Aristophanes. Birds, edited with introduction and commentary. Oxford.Google Scholar
Edwards, M. (1991) The Iliad. A Commentary, Vol. Ⅴ. Cambridge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Errington, R. M. (1981) ‘Alexander the philhellene and Persia’, in Dell, H. (ed.), Ancient Macedonian Studies in Honor of Charles F. Edson. Thessaloniki: 139–43.Google Scholar
Errington, R. M. (1990) A History of Macedonia (trans. C. Errington). Berkeley.Google Scholar
Evans, J. A. S. (1976) ‘Herodotus and the Ionian revolt’, Historia 25: 31–7.Google Scholar
Evans, J. A. S. (1991) Herodotus Explorer of the Past. Princeton.Google Scholar
Farnell, L. R (1921) Greek Hero Cults and Ideas of Immortality. Oxford.Google Scholar
Fearn, D. W. (forthcoming, 2007) Bacchylides. Politics, Performance, Poetic Tradition.Oxford.Google Scholar
Fehling, D. (1989) Herodotus and his ‘Sources’. Citation, Invention, and Narrative Art (tr. J. G. Howie; German original 1972). Leeds.Google Scholar
Ferrill, A. (1978) ‘Herodotus on tyranny’, Historia 27: 385–98.Google Scholar
Figueira, T. (1985) ‘Herodotus on the early hostilities between Aegina and Athens’, AJPh 106: 49–74 (reprinted in Figueira, T. (1993) Excursions in Epichoric History: Aeginetan Essays. Lanham: 35–60).Google Scholar
Fisher, N. (2002) ‘Popular morality in Herodotus’, in Bakker et al. (2002): 199–224.
Fitzpatrick, D. (2001) ‘Sophocles’ Tereus’, CQ 51: 90–101.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Flory, S. G. (1978) ‘Laughter, tears, and wisdom in Herodotus’, AJPh 99: 145–53.Google Scholar
Flory, S. G. (1980) ‘Who read Herodotus’ Histories?’, AJPh 101: 12–28.Google Scholar
Flory, S. G. (2004) ‘Rev. of Derow and Parker (eds.) (2003)’, BMCR 2004.02.03, http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/bmcr/2004/2004-02-03.html.Google Scholar
Flower, M. A. (2000) ‘From Simonides to Isocrates: the fifth-century origins of fourth-century panhellenism’, ClAnt 19: 65–101.Google Scholar
Flower, M. A., and Marincola, J. (2002) Herodotus. Histories Book Ⅸ. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Ford, A. (1992) Homer. The Poetry of the Past. Ithaca.Google Scholar
Ford, A. (1997) ‘Epic as genre’, in Morris, I. and Powell, B. (eds.), A New Companion to Homer. Leiden: 396–414.Google Scholar
Fornara, C. W. (1971a) ‘Evidence for the date of Herodotus’ publication’, JHS 91: 25–34.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fornara, C. W. (1971b) Herodotus. An Interpretative Essay. Oxford.Google Scholar
Fornara, C. W. (1981) ‘Herodotus’ knowledge of the Archidamian War’, Hermes 109: 149–56.Google Scholar
Fornara, C. W. and Samons, L. J. (1991) Athens from Cleisthenes to Pericles. Berkeley.Google Scholar
Forrest, W. G. G. (1969) ‘The tradition of Hippias’ expulsion from Athens’, GRBS 10: 277–86.Google Scholar
Forrest, W. G. G. (1979) ‘Motivation in Herodotus: the case of the Ionian Revolt’, International History Review 1: 311–22.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Forsdyke, S. (1999) ‘From aristocratic to democratic ideology and back again: the Thrasybulus anecdote in Herodotus’ Histories and Aristotle’s Politics’, CPh 94: 361–72.Google Scholar
Forsdyke, S. (2001) ‘Athenian democratic ideology and Herodotus’ Histories’, AJPh 122: 333–62.Google Scholar
Forsdyke, S. (2002) ‘Greek history, c. 525–480 bc’, in Bakker et al. (eds.) (2002): 521–49.
Fourrier, S. (2002) ‘Les Territoires des royaumes chypriotes archaïques: une esquisse de géographie historique’, in Hermary, A. (ed.), Hommage à Marguerite Yon, Actes du Colloque international ‘Le temps de royaumes de Chypre, ⅩⅢ-Ⅳe s. av. J. C.’ Lyon, 20–22 juin. Paris. 135–46.Google Scholar
Fowler, D. P., and P. G. Fowler (1996) ‘Literary theory and classical studies’, in Hornblower and Spawforth (eds.) (1996): 871–5.
Fowler R. (2003) ‘Herodotus and Athens’, in Derow and Parker (eds.) (2003): 305–18.
Fowler, R. L. (1996) ‘Herodotus and his contemporaries’, JHS 116: 62–87.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fowler, R. L. (2001) ‘Early historiē and literacy’, in Luraghi (ed.) (2001a): 95–115.
Fowler, R. L. (2003) ‘Herodotus and Athens’, in Derow and Parker (eds.) (2003): 305–18.
Fraenkel, E. (1950) Aeschylus. Agamemnon (3 vols). Oxford.Google Scholar
French, A. (1972) ‘Topical influences on Herodotos’ narrative’, Mnemosyne 25: 9–27.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Friedrich, P. (1977) ‘Sanity and the myth of honor: the problem of Achilles’, Ethos 5: 281–305.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fritz, K. (1967) Die griechische Geschichtsschreibung, vol. Ⅰ: Von den Anfängen bis Thukykides. Berlin.Google Scholar
Frontisi-Ducroux, F., and F. Lissarrague (1990) ‘From ambiguity to ambivalence: a Dionysiac excursion through the “Anakreontic” vases’, in Halperin, D., Winkler, J., and Zeitlin, F. (eds.), Before Sexuality. The Construction of Erotic Experience in the Ancient Greek World. Princeton: 211–56.Google Scholar
Gabrielsen, V. (1994) Financing the Athenian Fleet. Public Taxation and Social Relations. Baltimore and London.Google Scholar
Gallo, I. (1976) ‘Solone a Soli’, QUCC 21: 29–36.Google Scholar
Garland, R. (1987) The Piraeus. London.Google Scholar
Garland, R. (1990) ‘Priests and power in classical Athens’, in Beard, M. and North, J. (eds.), Pagan Priests. London: 73–91.Google Scholar
Garland, R. (1992) Introducing New Gods. London.Google Scholar
Georges, P. (2000) ‘Persian Ionia under Darius: the revolt reconsidered’, Historia 49: 1–39.Google Scholar
Gibson, R. K. and Kraus, C. S. (eds.) (2002) The Classical Commentary. Histories, Practices, Theory. Leiden.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Giraudeau, M. (1984) Les Notions juridiques et socials chez Hérodote. Études sur le vocabulaire. Paris.Google Scholar
Gnoli, G. and Vernant, J.-P. (eds.) (1982) La Mort, les morts dans les sociétés anciennes. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Goldhill, S. (1990) ‘The Great Dionysia and civic ideology’, in Winkler, J. and Zeitlin, F. (eds.), Nothing to Do with Dionysos? Athenian Drama in its Social Context. Princeton: 97–129.Google Scholar
Goldhill, S. (2002) The Invention of Prose (Greece and Rome New Surveys in the Classics 32). Oxford.Google Scholar
Gomme, A. W. (1956) A Historical Commentary on Thucydides. Vol. Ⅱ. Oxford.Google Scholar
Gontier, P. (ed.) (1995) Kyprios Character, Quelle identité chypriote? Sources, Travaux historiques 43/4.Google Scholar
Goodwin, W. W. (1889) Syntax of the Moods and Tenses of the Greek Verb. London.Google Scholar
Gould, J. (1989) Herodotus. London.Google Scholar
Gould, J. (2001) ‘Give and take in Herodotus’, in id., Myth, Ritual, Memory, and Exchange. Essays in Greek Literature and Culture. Oxford: 283–303.Google Scholar
Gray, V. J. (1996) ‘Herodotus and images of tyranny: the tyrants of Corinth’, AJPh 117: 361–89.Google Scholar
Gray, V. J. (1997) ‘Reading the rise of Pisistratus: Herodotus 1.56–68’, Histos 1: http://www.dur.ac.uk/Classics/histos/1997/gray.html.Google Scholar
Gray, V. J. (2002) ‘Short stories in HerodotusHistories’, Bakker, al et. (eds.) (2002): 291–317.Google Scholar
Graziosi, B., and Haubold, J. (2005) Homer. The Resonance of Epic. London.Google Scholar
Griffin, J. (1980) Homer on Life and Death. Oxford.Google Scholar
Griffiths, A. (1989) ‘Was Kleomenes mad?’ in Powell (ed.) (1989): 51–78.
Griffiths, A. (2001) ‘Kissing cousins: some curious cases of adjacent material in Herodotus’, in Luraghi (ed.) (2001): 161–78.
Hainsworth, J. B. (1993) The Iliad. A Commentary, Vol. Ⅲ. Cambridge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hall, E. (1989) Inventing the Barbarian. Greek Self-Definition through Tragedy. Oxford.Google Scholar
Hall, J. M. (1997) Ethnic Identity in Greek Antiquity. Cambridge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hall, J. M. (2001) ‘Contested ethnicities: perceptions of Macedonia within evolving definitions of Greek Identity’, in Malkin (ed.) (2001): 159–86.
Hall, J. M. (2002) Hellenicity. Between Ethnicity and Culture. Chicago.Google Scholar
Halliwell, S. (1987) The Poetics of Aristotle. Translation and Commentary. London.Google Scholar
Harder, A. (1985) Euripides’ Kresphontes and Archelaos. Leiden.Google Scholar
Harrison, S. J. (ed.) (2001) Texts, Ideas, and the Classics. Oxford.Google Scholar
Harrison, T. (1997) ‘Herodotus and the ancient Greek idea of rape’, in Deacy, S. and Pearce, K. (eds.), Rape in Antiquity. Sexual Violence in the Greek and Roman Worlds. London: 185–208.Google Scholar
Harrison, T. (1998). ‘Herodotus’ conception of foreign languages’, Histos 2: http://www.dur.ac.uk/Classics/histos/1998/harrison.html.Google Scholar
Harrison, T. (2000) Divinity and History. The Religion of Herodotus. Oxford.Google Scholar
Harrison, T. (2003) ‘“Prophecy in reverse”? Herodotus and the origins of history’, in Derow and Parker (eds.) (2003): 237–55.
Harrison, T. (2004) ‘Truth and lies in Herodotus’ Histories’, in Karageorghis and Taifacos (eds.) (2004): 255–63.
Hart, J. (1982) Herodotus and Greek History. London.Google Scholar
Hartog, F. (1988) The Mirror of Herodotus (tr. J. Lloyd; French original 1980, second French edn. 1991). Berkeley, Los Angeles and London.Google Scholar
Haubold, J. (2001) ‘Epic with an end: an interpretation of Homeric Hymns 15 and 20’, in Budelmann and Michelakis (eds.) (2001): 23–41.
Heath, M. (1989) Unity in Greek Poetics. Oxford.Google Scholar
Hellmann, F. (1934) Herodots Kroisos-Logos (Neue Philol. Untersuch. 9). Berlin.Google Scholar
Henderson, J. (1987) Aristophanes’ Lysistrata. Oxford.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Henderson, J. (1997) ‘The name of the tree: recounting Odyssey 24.340–2’, JHS 107: 87–116.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Henige, D. (1974) The Chronology of Oral tradition. Quest for a Chimera. Oxford.Google Scholar
Heygi, D. (1966) ‘The historical background of the Ionian Revolt’, AAnt.Hung. 14: 285–302.Google Scholar
Hodder, I. (ed.) (1978) The Spatial Organization of Culture. London.Google Scholar
Hodkinson, S. (2000) Property and Wealth in Classical Sparta. London.Google Scholar
Hohti, P. (1974) ‘Freedom of speech in the speech sections in the Histories of Herodotus’, Arctos 8: 19–27.Google Scholar
Hohti, P. (1975) ‘Über die Notwendigkeit bei Herodot’, Arctos 9: 31–7.Google Scholar
Hohti, P. (1977) ‘συμβ⋯λλεσθαι: a note on conjectures in Herodotus’, Arctos 11: 5–14.Google Scholar
Hornblower, S. (1987) Thucydides, London.Google Scholar
Hornblower, S. (1991) A Commentary on Thucydides, Vol. Ⅰ. Oxford.Google Scholar
Hornblower, S. (1992) ‘Thucydides’ use of Herodotus’, in Sanders, J. M. (ed.), Philolakon. Lakonian Studies on Honor of H. Catling. Athens: 141–54.Google Scholar
Hornblower, S. (1996) A Commentary on Thucydides, Vol. Ⅱ. Oxford.Google Scholar
Hornblower, S. (2003) ‘Panionios of Chios and Hermotimos of Pedasa (Hdt. 8.104–6)’, in Derow and Parker (eds.) (2003): 37–57.
Hornblower, S. (2004) Thucydides and Pindar. Historical Narrative and the World of Epinician Poetry. Oxford.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hornblower, S., and Spawforth, A. (eds.) (1996) Oxford Classical Dictionary, 3rd edn. Oxford.Google Scholar
How, W. W., and Wells, J. (1912) A Commentary on Herodotus (2 vols). Oxford.Google Scholar
Huber, L. (1963) Religiöse und politische Beweggründe des Handelns in der Geschichtsschreibung des Herodot. Diss. Tübingen.Google Scholar
Hutton, W. (2005) Describing Literature. Landscape and Literature in the Periegesis of Pausanias. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Immerwahr, H. R. (1956) ‘Aspects of historical causation in Herodotus’, TAPhA 87: 247–80.Google Scholar
Immerwahr, H. R. (1957) ‘The Samian stories of Herodotus’, CJ 52: 312–22.Google Scholar
Immerwahr, H. R. (1960) ‘Ergon: history as monument in Herodotus and Thucydides’, AJPh 81: 261–90.Google Scholar
Immerwahr, H. R. (1966) Form and Thought in Herodotus. Cleveland, Ohio (reprinted 1986).Google Scholar
Irwin, E. (1999) ‘Solicising in Solon’s Colony’, BICS 43: 187–95.Google Scholar
Irwin, E. (2005a) ‘Gods among men? The social and political dynamics of the Hesiodic Catalogue of Women’, in Hunter, R. (ed.), The Hesiodic Catalogue of Women. Constructions and Reconstructions. Cambridge: 35–84.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Irwin, E. (2005b) Solon and Early Greek Poetry. The Politics of Exhortation. Cambridge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Irwin, E. (2007) ‘The politics of precedence: first historians on first thalassocrats’, in Osborne, R. (ed.), Anatomy of a Cultural Revolution. Athens 430–380 bc.Google Scholar
Isaac, B. (1986) The Greek Settlements in Thrace until the Macedonian Conquest. Leiden.Google Scholar
Jacob, C. (1988) ‘Inscrire la terre habitée sur une tablette. Réflexions sur la fonction de la carte géographique en Grèce ancienne’, in Detienne (ed.) (1988b): 273–304.
Jacoby, F. (1913) ‘Herodotus’, REA Suppl. 2: 205–520.Google Scholar
Jebb, R. C. (1885) Sophocles, the Plays and Fragments. Part Ⅱ: Oedipus Coloneus. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Jeffery, L. H. (1976) Archaic Greece. The City-States c. 700–500 bc. London and Tonbridge.Google Scholar
Johnson, D. M. (2001) ‘Herodotus’ story-telling speeches: Socles (5.92) and Leotychidas (6.86)’, CJ 97: 1–26.Google Scholar
Johnson, W. A. (1994) ‘Oral performance and the composition of Herodotus’ Histories’, GRBS 35: 229–54.Google Scholar
Johnson, W. A (2004) Book Rolls and Scribes in Oxyrhynchus. Toronto.Google Scholar
Jones, C. P. (1987) ‘Stigma: tattooing and branding in Graeco-Roman antiquity’, JRS 77: 139–55.Google Scholar
Jones, C. P. (1999) Kinship Diplomacy in the Ancient World. Cambridge, Mass.Google Scholar
Kallet, L. (2001) Money and the Corrosion of Power in Thucydides. The Sicilian Expedition and its Aftermath. Berkeley.Google Scholar
Kallet, L. (2003) ‘Dēmos tyrannos: wealth, power, and economic patronage’, in Morgan (ed.) (2003): 117–53.
Kallet-Marx, L. (1993) Money, Expense and Naval Power in Thucydides’ History 1–5.24. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Kamerbeek, J. (1984) Plays of Sophocles. Commentaries. Part Ⅶ: Oedipus Coloneus. Leiden.Google Scholar
Karageorghis, V. (1973) ‘Contribution to the early history of Soloi in Cyprus’, AAA 6: 145–9.Google Scholar
Karageorghis, V. (ed.) (1986) Acts of the International Archaeological Symposium Cyprus between the Orient and the Occident. Nicosia.Google Scholar
Karageorghis, V. (1991) Les Anciens Chypriotes. Paris.Google Scholar
Karageorghis, V. (1994) ‘The prehistory of an ethnogenesis’, in Karageorghis and Michaelides (eds.) (1994): 1–9.
Karageorghis, V. (2002) Κ⋯προς, το σταυροδρ⋯μι της Μεσογε⋯ου 1600–500 Π.Χ. Milan.Google Scholar
Karageorghis, V. (2004) ‘Herodotus and Cyprus’, in Karageorghis and Taifacos (eds.) (2004): 1–9.
Karageorghis, V. and Michaelides, D. (eds.) (1994) Proceedings of the International Symposium Cyprus in the 11th Century bc. Nicosia.Google Scholar
Karageorghis, V. and Michaelides, D. (eds.) (1995) Proceedings of the International Symposium Cyprus and the Sea. Nicosia.Google Scholar
Karageorghis, V., and Taifacos, I. (eds.) (2004) The World of Herodotus. Proceedings of an International Conference held at the Foundation Anastasios G. Leventis, Nicosia, September 18–21, 2003. Nicosia.Google Scholar
Kerferd, G. (1981) The Sophistic Movement. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Kirk, G. S. (1985) The Iliad. A Commentary, Vol. Ⅰ. Cambridge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Knapp, B. (1993) ‘Thalassocracies in Bronze Age eastern Mediterranean trade: making and breaking a myth’, World Archaeology 24: 332–47.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Konstan, D. (1987) ‘Persians, Greeks and empire’, Arethusa 20: 59–73.Google Scholar
Kramer, L., and Maza, S. (eds.) (2002) A Companion to Western Historical Thought. Oxford.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kraus, C. S. (2002) ‘Introduction: reading commentaries/commentaries as reading’, in Gibson and Kraus (eds.) (2002): 1–27.
Kraus, C. S. (ed.) (1999) The Limits of Historiography. Genre and Narrative in Ancient Historical Texts. Leiden, Boston and Cologne.Google Scholar
Kühner, R., and Gerth, B. (1898–1904) Ausführliche Grammatik der griechischen Sprache. Zweiter Teil: Satzlehre (2 vols; 3rd edn.). Hanover and Leipzig.Google Scholar
Kurd, P. (1991) ‘Knowledge and unity in Heraclitus’, Monist 74: 531–50.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kurke, L. (1992) ‘The politics of habrosunē in archaic Greece’, ClAnt 11: 90–121.Google Scholar
Kurke, L. (1999) Coins, Bodies, Games, and Gold. The Politics of Meaning in Archaic Greece. Princeton.Google Scholar
Kurtz, D. C., and Boardman, J. (1985) ‘Booners’, in Greek Vases in the J. Paul Getty Museum (Occasional Papers on Antiquities, 2). Malibu: 35–70.Google Scholar
Lang, M. (1968) ‘Herodotus and the Ionian Revolt’, Historia 17: 24–36.Google Scholar
Lang, M. L. (1984) Herodotean Narrative and Discourse. Cambridge, Mass. and London.Google Scholar
Lateiner, D. (1977) 'No laughing matter: a literary tactic in Herodotus, TAPhA 107: 173–82.Google Scholar
Lateiner, D. (1982a) ‘The failure of the Ionian Revolt’, Historia 31: 129–60.Google Scholar
Lateiner, D. (1982b) ‘A note on the perils of prosperity in Herodotus’, RM 125: 97–101.Google Scholar
Lateiner, D. (1989) The Historical Method of Herodotus. Toronto.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lateiner, D. (1990) ‘Deceptions and delusions in Herodotus’, ClAnt 9: 230–46.Google Scholar
Lateiner, D. (2005) ‘Signifying names and other ominous accidental utterances in classical historiography’, GRBS 45: 35–57.Google Scholar
Lavelle, B. (1991) ‘The compleat angler: observations on the rise of Peisistratus in Herodotus (1.59–64),’ CQ 41: 317–24.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lavelle, B. (1993) The Sorrow and the Pity. A Prolegomenon to a History of Athens under the Peisistratids, c. 560–510 bc. Stuttgart.Google Scholar
Legrand, Ph. (1946) Hérodote, Histoires. Vol. Ⅴ; 1st edn. Paris.Google Scholar
Lemos, I. (2001) ‘The Lefkandi connection: networking in the Aegean and the Eastern Mediterranean’, in Bonfante and Karageorghis (eds.) (2001): 215–27.
, Létoublon F. (ed.) (1996) Impressions d’îles. Toulouse.Google Scholar
Lévêque, P., and Vidal-Naquet, P. (1964) Clisthène l’Athénien. Essai sur la representation de l’espace et du temps dans la pensée politique grecque de la fin du Ⅵe siècle à la mort de Plato. Besançon (tr. D. A. Curtis as Cleisthenes the Athenian. New Jersey. 1996).Google Scholar
Lewis, D. M. (1989) ‘Persian gold and Greek international relations’, REA 91: 227–35.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lewis, D. and Stroud, R. (1979) ‘Athens honors King Evagoras of Salamis’, Hesperia 48: 180–93.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lloyd, A. B. (1975–88) Herodotus Book Ⅱ (3 vols). Leiden.Google Scholar
Loraux, N. (1985) ‘La Cité, l’historien, les femmes’, Pallas 32: 7–29.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Loraux, N. (1986) The Invention of Athens. The Funeral Oration in the Classical City (tr. A. Sheridan). Cambridge, Mass.Google Scholar
Loraux, N. (2000) Born of the Earth (tr. S. Stewart). Ithaca.Google Scholar
Loraux, N. (2002) The Divided City. On Remembering and Forgetting in Ancient Athens (tr. C. Pache and J. Fort). New York (originally published in Paris, 1997).Google Scholar
Loucas-Durie, E. (1989) ‘Kinyras et la sacralisation de la fonction technique à Chypre’, Métis 4: 117–27.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Luraghi, N. (ed.) (2001a) The Historian’s Craft in the Age of Herodotus. Oxford.Google Scholar
Luraghi, N. (2001b) ‘Local knowledge in HerodotusHistories’, in Luraghi, (ed.) (2001a): 138–60.Google Scholar
Macan, R. (1895) Herodotus. The Fourth, Fifth, and Sixth Books (2 vols). London.Google Scholar
Maehler, H. (2004) Bacchylides. A Selection. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Malkin, I. (ed.) (2001) Ancient Perceptions of Greek Ethnicity. Cambridge, Mass. and London.Google Scholar
Manville, P. B. (1990) The Origins of Citizenship in Ancient Athens. Princeton.Google Scholar
Marchant, E. (1891) Thucydides. Book Ⅱ. London.Google Scholar
Marg, W. (1965) Herodot (Wege der Forschung, 26, 2nd edn.). Munich.Google Scholar
Marincola, J. (1987) ‘Herodotean narrative and the narrator’s presence’, Arethusa 20: 121–37.Google Scholar
Marincola, J. (1997) Authority and Tradition in Ancient Historiography. Cambridge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Masson, O. (1960) Inscriptions chypriotes syllabiques. Paris.Google Scholar
Mau, J., and Schmidt, E. G. (eds.) (1964) Isonomia. Studien zur Gleichheitsvorstellung im griechischen Denken. Berlin.Google Scholar
Mavrogiannis, T. (2004) ‘Herodotus and the Phoenicians’, in Karageorghis and Taifacos (eds.) (2004): 53–71.
McGlew, J. F. (1993) Tyranny and Political Culture in Ancient Greece. Ithaca.Google Scholar
McInerney, J. (2004) ‘Nereids, colonies and the origins of isēgoria’, in Sluiter and Rosen (eds.) (2004): 21–40.
McNellen, B. (1997) ‘Herodotean symbolism’, ICS 22: 11–23.Google Scholar
Meiggs, R. (1972) The Athenian Empire. Oxford.Google Scholar
Mikalson, J. D. (2002) ‘Religion in Herodotus’, in Baker, de Jong and van Wees (eds.) (2002): 187–98.
Mikalson, J. D. (2003) Herodotus and Religion in the Persian Wars. Chapel Hill.Google Scholar
Miller, M. C. (1997) Athens and Persia in the Fifth Century bc: A Study in Cultural Receptivity. New York.Google Scholar
Moles, J. L. (1993). ‘Truth and untruth in Herodotus and Thucydides’, in Gill, C. and Wiseman, T. P. (eds.), Lies and Fiction in the Ancient World. Exeter: 88–121.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Moles, J. L. (1996) ‘Herodotus warns the Athenians’, PLLS 9: 259–84.Google Scholar
Moles, J. L. (1998) ‘Cry freedom: Tacitus, Annals 4.32–35’, Histos 2. http://www.dur.ac.uk/Classics/histos/1998/moles.html.Google Scholar
Moles, J. L. (1999) ‘Anathema kai ktema: the inscriptional inheritance of ancient historiography’, Histos 3: http://www.dur.ac.uk/Classics/histos/1999/moles.html.Google Scholar
Moles, J. L. (2001) ‘A false dilemma: Thucydides’ History and historicism’, in Harrison, S. J. (ed.), Texts, Ideas, and the Classics. Oxford: 195–219.Google Scholar
Moles, J. L. (2002) ‘Herodotus and Athens’, in Bakker et al. (eds.) (2002): 33–52.
Morgan, K. (ed.) (2003) Popular Tyranny. Sovereignty and its Discontents in Ancient Greece. Austin: 95–115.Google Scholar
Most, G. W. (1994) ‘Simonides’ Ode to Scopas in Contexts’, in Jong, I. and Sullivan, J. (eds.), Modern Critical Theory and Classical Literature (Mnemosyne Supplement 130). Leiden: 127–52.Google Scholar
Muellner, L. (1996) The Anger of Achilles. Menis in Greek Epic. Ithaca.Google Scholar
Muhly, J. D. (1986) ‘The role of Cyprus in the economy of the eastern Mediterranean during the Second Millenium bc’, in Karageorghis (ed.) (1986): 45–68.
Munson, R. V. (1993) ‘Herodotus’ use of prospective sentences and the story of Rhampsinitus and the thief in the Histories’, AJPh 114: 27–44.Google Scholar
Munson, R. V. (2001a) ‘Ananke in Herodotus’, JHS 121: 30–50.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Munson, R. V. (2001b) Telling Wonders. Ethnographic and Political Discourse in the Work of Herodotus. Ann Arbor.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Munson, R. V. (2005) Black Doves Speak. Herodotus and the Language of Barbarians. Cambridge, Mass. and London.Google Scholar
Murray, O. (1972) ‘Herodotus and Hellenistic culture’, CQ 76: 200–13.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Murray, O. (1988) ‘The Ionian Revolt’, Cambridge Ancient History IV 2: 461–90.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Murray, O. (1993) Early Greece (2nd edn.). London.Google Scholar
Murray, O. (2001a) ‘Herodotus and oral history’, in Luraghi, (ed.) (2001): 16–44 (reprinted from Sancisi-Weerdenburg, H. and Kuhrt, A. (eds.) (1987), Achaemenid History Ⅱ. The Greek Sources. Leiden: 93–115).Google Scholar
Murray, O. (2001b) ‘Herodotus and oral history reconsidered’, in Luraghi (ed.) (2001): 314–25.
Myres, J. (1907) ‘The Sigynnae of Herodotus: an ethnological problem of the early Iron Age’, in Balfour, H. (ed.), Anthropological Essays Presented to Edward Burnett Tylor in Honour of his 75th Birthday. Oxford: 255–76.Google Scholar
Nagler, M. N. (1974) Spontaneity and Tradition. A Study in the Oral Art of Homer. Berkeley.Google Scholar
Nagy, G. (1996) Poetry as Performance. Homer and Beyond. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Naiden, F. S. (1999) ‘The prospective imperfect in Herodotus’, HSCPh 99: 135–49.Google Scholar
Nenci, G. (1994) Erodoto. La rivolta della Ionia. Ⅴ Libro delle Storie. Milan.Google Scholar
Nenci, G. (1998) Erodoto. La battaglia di Maratona. Ⅵ libro delle Storie. Milan.Google Scholar
Neville, J. (1979) ‘Was there an Ionian Revolt?’, CQ 29: 268–75.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nicolaou, K. (1976) The Historical Topography of Kition. Göteburg.Google Scholar
Ober, J. (1993) ‘The Athenian Revolution of 508/7 BCE: violence, authority, and the origins of democracy’, in Dougherty and Kurke (eds.) (1993): 215–32.
Ober, J. (1996) ‘The Athenian revolution of 508/7 bc’, in id., The Athenian Revolution. Princeton: 32–52.Google Scholar
Ogden, D. (1993) ‘Cleithenes of Sicyon λευστ⋯ρ’, CQ 43: 353–63.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hara, O’ J. (1996) True Names. Vergil and the Alexandrian Tradition of Etymological Wordplay. Ann Arbor.Google Scholar
Olson, S. D. (2002) Aristophanes. Acharnians. Oxford.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Oost, S. I. (1972) ‘Cypselus the Bacchiad’, CPh 67: 10–30.Google Scholar
Osborne, R. G. (1996) Greece in the Making. London.Google Scholar
Osborne, R. G. and Hornblower, S. (eds.) (1994) Ritual, Finance, Politics. Athenian Democratic Accounts Presented to David Lewis. Oxford.Google Scholar
Osborne, R. G. and Rhodes, P. J. (2003) Greek Historical Inscriptions 404–323 bc. Oxford.Google Scholar
Owen, A. S. (1939) Ion. Edition and Commentary. Oxford.Google Scholar
Parker, R. (1996) Athenian Religion. A History. Oxford.Google Scholar
Parsons, P. (1974) ‘P. Oxy 3013’, Oxyrhynchus Papyri 42. London.Google Scholar
Payen, P. (1997) Les Îles nomades. Conquérir et résister dans l’enquête d’Hérodote. Paris.Google Scholar
Pelling, C. B. R. (ed.) (1990) Characterization and Individuality in Greek Literature. Oxford.Google Scholar
Pelling, C. B. R. (1993) ‘Tacitus and Germanicus’, in Luce, T. J. (ed.), Tacitus and the Tacitean Tradition. Princeton: 59–85.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pelling, C. B. R. (1997) ‘East is east and west is west – or are they? National stereotyping in Herodotus’, Histos 1: http://www.dur.ac.uk/Classics/histos/1997/pelling.html.Google Scholar
Pelling, C. B. R. (1999) ‘Epilogue’, in Kraus (ed.) (1999): 325–60.
Pelling, C. B. R. (2000) Literary Texts and the Greek Historian. London.Google Scholar
Pelling, C. B. R. (2002) ‘Speech and narrative: Herodotus’ debate on the constitutions’, PCPS 48: 123–58.Google Scholar
Pelling, C. B. R. (2006) ‘Educating Croesus: talking and learning in HerodotusLydian logos’, ClAnt 25.1:Google Scholar
Pelling, C. B. R. (2006b) ‘Homer and Herodotus’, in Clarke, M. J.et al. (eds.), Epic Interactions. Perspectives on Homer, Virgil, and the Epic Tradition Presented to Jasper Griffin by Former Pupils. Oxford: 75–104.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Peltenburg, E. (ed.) (1989) Early Society in Cyprus. Edinburgh.Google Scholar
Peradotto, J. J. (1969) ‘Cledonomancy in the Oresteia’, AJPh 90: 1–21.Google Scholar
Perlman, S. (1976) ‘Panhellenism, the polis and imperialism’, Historia 25: 1–30.Google Scholar
Petit, Th. (1995) ‘Amathous (Autochthones eisin) de l’identité Amathousienne à l’époque des Royaumes (Ⅷe–Ⅳe siècles av. J-C)’, in Gontier (ed.) (1995): 51–64.
Petit, , Th. (1996) ‘Religion et royauté à Amathonte de Chrypre’, Transeuphratène 12: 97–120.Google Scholar
Petit, Th. (1998) ‘Amathousiens, Ethiopiens et Perses’, Cahiers du Centre d’études chypriotes, 28: 73–86.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Petit, Th. (2004) ‘Herodotus and Amathus’, in Karageorghis and Taifacos (eds.) (2004): 9–26.
Petropoulou, A. (1986–7) ‘The Thracian funerary rites (Hdt. 5.8) and similar Greek practices’, Talanta 18–19: 29–47.Google Scholar
Pirenne-Delforge, V. and Suàrez de la Torre, E. (eds.) (2000) Héros et héroines dans les mythes et les cultes grecs. Liège.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pouilloux, J. (1975) ‘Athènes et Salamine de Chypre’, RDAC 1975: 111–22.Google Scholar
Pouilloux, J. (1976) ‘L’Hellénisme à Salamine de Chypre’, BCH 100: 449–59.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pouilloux, J. (1995) ‘Chypre entre l’Orient et l’Occident’, in Κ⋯προς απο την Προιστορ⋯α στους Ν⋯οτερους (Cultural Foundation of the Bank of Cyprus). Nicosia: 11–36.Google Scholar
Powell, A. (ed.) (1989) Classical Sparta. The Techniques behind her Success. Norman and London.Google Scholar
Powell, J. E. (1937) ‘Puns in Herodotus’, CR 51: 103–5.Google Scholar
Powell, J. E. (1939a) Herodotus Book Ⅷ. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Powell, J. E. (1939b) The History of Herodotus. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Powell, J. E. (1966 2) A Lexicon to Herodotus. Hildesheim.Google Scholar
Pritchett, W. K. (1993) The Liar School of Herodotos. Amsterdam.Google Scholar
Raaflaub, K. A. (1979) ‘Polis Tyrannos: zur Entstehung einer politischen Metapher’, in Bowersock, G. W., Burkert, W. and Putnam, M. C. J. (eds.), Arktouros. Hellenic Studies Presented to Bernard Knox. Berlin: 237–52.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Raaflaub, K. A. (1987) ‘Herodotus, political thought, and the meaning of history’, Arethusa 20: 221–48.Google Scholar
Raaflaub, K. A. (2002) ‘Philosophy, science, politics: Herodotus and the intellectual trends of his time’, in Bakker et al. (eds.) (2002): 149–86.
Raaflaub, K. A. (2004) ‘Aristocracy and freedom of speech in the Greco-Roman world’, in Sluiter and Rosen (eds.) (2004): 41–62.
Raptou, E. (1999) Athènes et Chypre à l’époque Perse. Lyons.Google Scholar
Redfield, J. M. (1985) ‘Herodotus the tourist’, CPh 80: 97–118.Google Scholar
Rehm, A. (1914) Milet Ⅲ. Das Delphinion. Berlin.Google Scholar
Rennie, W. (1909) The Acharnians of Aristophanes. London.Google Scholar
Rhode, E. (1952) Psyché. Le Culte de l’âme chez les Grecs et leur croyance à l’immortalité. Paris.Google Scholar
Rhodes, P. J. (1981) Commentary on the Aristotelian Athenaion Politeia. Oxford.Google Scholar
Robb, K. (1991) ‘The witness in Heraclitus and in early Greek law’, Monist 74: 638–76.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Roberts, D. H., Dunn, F. M. and Fowler, D. P. (eds.) (1997) Classical Closure. Reading the End in Greek and Latin Literature. Princeton.Google Scholar
Rolling, R. (2004) ‘Herodotus, human violence and the Ancient Near East’, in Karageorghis and Taifacos (eds.): 121–51.
Romm, J. S. (1992) The Edges of the Earth in Ancient Thought. Princeton.Google Scholar
Romm, J. S. (1998) Herodotus. New Haven.Google Scholar
Rood, T. C. B. (1998) Thucydides. Narrative and Explanation. Oxford.Google Scholar
Rosselini, M., and Said, S. (1978) ‘Usages des femmes et autres nomoi chez les “sauvages” d’Hérodote: essai de lecture structurale’, ASNP (ser. 3) 8: 949–1005.Google Scholar
Roux, G. (1963), Κυψελ⋯: où avait-on caché le petit Kypselos?’, Revue des études anciennes 65: 279–89.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rusten, J. (1989) Thucydides. The Peloponnesian War. Book Ⅱ. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Rutherford, R. B. (1994) ‘Learning from history: categories and case-histories’, in Osborne and Hornblower (eds.) (1994): 53–68.
Sahlins, M. (2004) Apologies to Thucydides. Understanding History as Culture and Vice Versa. Chicago.Google Scholar
Said, S. (2002a) ‘Greeks and barbarians in Euripides’ tragedies: the end of difference?’ in Harrison, T. (ed.), Greeks and Barbarians. Edinburgh: 62–100.Google Scholar
Said, S. (2002b) ‘Herodotus and tragedy’, in Bakker et al. (eds.) (2002): 117–48.
Sakellariou, M. B. (1990) Between Memory and Oblivion. The Transmission of Early Greek Historical Traditions. Athens.Google Scholar
Salmon, J. B. (1984) Wealthy Corinth. A History of the City to 338 bc. Oxford.Google Scholar
Sancisi-Weerdenburg, H. (1989) ‘Gifts in the Persian Empire’, in Briant and Herrenschmidt (eds.) (1989): 129–46.
Sancisi-Weerdenburg, H. and Kuhrt, A. (eds.) (1990) Centre and Periphery. Proceedings of the Groningen 1986 Achaemenid History Workshop, Achaemenid History Ⅳ. Leiden.Google Scholar
Sansone, D. (1985) ‘The date of Herodotus’ publication’, ICS 10: 1–10.Google Scholar
Scaife, R. (1989) ‘Alexander I in the Histories of Herodotus’, Hermes 117: 129–37.Google Scholar
Schirripa, P. (2004) ‘Il confine mobile della Tracia e la fantasia tragica: miti traci a teatro’, in id., I Traci tra l’Egeo e il Mar Nero. Milan: 65–84.Google Scholar
Seaford, R. (2003) ‘Tragic tyranny’, in Morgan (ed.) (2003): 95–115.
Scott, L. (2005). A Historical Commentary on Herodotus 6 (Mnemosyne Supplement 268). Leiden.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sélincourt, De A. (1996) Herodotus. The Histories. New edn., translated by A. De Sélincourt, revised with introduction and notes by J. Marincola. London.Google Scholar
Serghidou, A. (1995) ‘L’Altérité du Chypriote dans le discours grec antique’, in Gontier (ed.) (1995): 25–39.
Serghidou, A. (2004) ‘Herodotus and the rhetoric of slavery’, in Karageorghis and Taifacos (eds.) (2004): 179–97.
Serghidou, A. (2006) ‘Discours ethnographique et quêtes identitaires en Chypre ancienne’, in Fourrier, S. and Grivaud, G. (eds.), Identités croisées en un milieu méditerranéen. Le Cas de Chypre. Rouen: 165–87.Google Scholar
Shear, J. L. (2003) ‘Prizes from Athens: the list of Panathenaic prizes and the sacred oil’, ZPE 142: 87–108.Google Scholar
Shilleto, R. (1880) Thucydidis Ⅱ. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Silk, M. (2001) ‘Pindar meets Plato: theory, language, value, and the Classics’, in Harrison (ed.) (2001): 26–45.
Simms, R. (1988) ‘The cult of the Thracian goddess Bendis in Athens and Attica’, AncW 18: 59–76.Google Scholar
Sluiter, I. and Rosen, R. M. (eds.) (2004) Free Speech in Classical Antiquity. Leiden.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Smyth, H. W. (1956) Greek Grammar (rev. edn.). Cambridge, Mass.Google Scholar
Snodgrass, A. (1995) ‘Cyprus and early Greek history’, in Κ⋯προς απο την Προιστορ⋯α στους Νεοτερους (Cultural Foundation of the Bank of Cyprus). Nicosia: 99–123.Google Scholar
Solmsen, L. (1943) ‘Speeches in Herodotus’ account of the Ionian Revolt’, AJPh 64: 194–207.Google Scholar
Sommerstein, A. (1981) Aristophanes. Knights. Warminster.Google Scholar
Sommerstein, A. (1989) Aeschylus. Eumenides. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Sourvinou-Inwood, C. (1991) ‘Reading’ Greek Culture. Texts and Images, Rituals and Myths. Oxford.Google Scholar
Sourvinou-Inwood, C. (2002) ‘Greek perceptions of ethnicity and the ethnicity of the Macedonians’, in Castelnuovo, L. Moscati (ed.), Identità e prassi storica nel Mediterraneo greco. Milan: 173–203.Google Scholar
Sourvinou-Inwood, C. (2003) ‘Herodotus (and others) on Pelasgians: some perceptions of ethnicity’, in Derow and Parker (eds.) (2003): 103–44.
Stadter, P. A. (1992) ‘Herodotus and the Athenian arche’, ASNP (ser. 3) 22: 781–809.Google Scholar
Stadter, P. A. (2002) ‘Historical thought in ancient Greece’, in Kramer and Maza (eds.) (2002): 35–59.
Stahl, H.-P. (1975) ‘Learning through suffering? Croesus’ conversations in the history of Herodotus’, YCS 24: 1–36.Google Scholar
Stahl, J. M. (1907) Kritisch-historische Syntax des griechischen Verbums der klassischen Zeit. Heidelberg.Google Scholar
Stahl, M. (1983) ‘Tyrannis und das Problem der Macht. Die Geschichten Herodots über Kypselos und Periander von Korinth’, Hermes 111: 202–20.Google Scholar
Stanford, W. B. (1972) Ambiguity in Greek Literature. Studies in Theory and in Practice. New York and London.Google Scholar
Starkie, W. (1909) The Acharnians of Aristophanes. Amsterdam.Google Scholar
Stein, H. (1874) Herodotos. Dritter Band: Buch Ⅴ und Ⅵ. 3rd edn. Berlin.Google Scholar
Steiner, D. T. (1994) The Tyrant’s Writ. Myths and Images of Writing in Ancient Greece. Princeton.Google Scholar
Strasburger, H. (1955) ‘Herodot und das perikleische Athen’, Historia 4: 1–25 (reprinted in Marg (1965): 574–608).Google Scholar
Surikov, I. (2001) ‘Historico-geographical questions connected with Pericles’ Pontic expedition’, Ancient Civilizations from Scythia to Siberia 7: 341–66.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tancock, C. C. (1897) The Story of the Ionic Revolt and Persian War as Told by Herodotus. Selections from the Translation of Canon Rawlinson, Revised and Adapted to the Purposes of the Present Work. London.Google Scholar
Taylor, M. (1981) The Tyrant Slayers. New York.Google Scholar
Thomas, R. (1989) Oral Tradition and Written Record in Classical Athens. Cambridge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Thomas, R. (1993) ‘Performance and written publication in Herodotus and the Sophistic generation’, in Kullmann, W. and Althoff, J., Vermittlung und Tradierung von Wissen in der griechischen Kultur. Tübingen: 225–44.Google Scholar
Thomas, R. (2000) Herodotus in Context. Ethnography, Science and the Art of Persuasion. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Thomas, R. (2001a) ‘Ethnicity, genealogy, and Hellenism in Herodotus’, in Malkin (ed.) (2001): 213–86.
Thomas, R. (2001b) ‘Herodotus’ Histories and the floating gap’, in Luraghi (ed.) (2001a): 198–210.
Thomas, R. (2003) ‘Prose performance texts. Epideixis and written publication in the late fifth and early fourth centuries’, in Yunis, H. (ed.), Written Texts and the Rise of Literate Culture in Ancient Greece. Cambridge: 162–88.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Thomas, R. (2004) ‘Herodotus, Ionia and the Athenian Empire’, in Karageorghis and Taifacos (eds.) (2004): 27–42.
Thompson, S. (1958) Motif-Index of Folk-Literature, Vol. Ⅵ, Index. Copenhagen.Google Scholar
Töpffer, J. (1889) Attische Genealogie. Berlin.Google Scholar
Tozzi, P. (1978). La rivolta ionica. Pisa.Google Scholar
Veen, J. E. (1996). The Significant and the Insignificant. Five Studies in Herodotus’ View of History. Amsterdam.Google Scholar
Vandiver, E. (1991) Heroes in Herodotus. The Interaction of Myth and History. Frankfurt-am-Main.Google Scholar
Vernant, J.-P. (1982a). ‘From Oedipus to Periander: lameness, tyranny, incest, in legend and history’, Arethusa 15: 19–38.Google Scholar
Vernant, J.-P. (1982b) ‘La Belle Mort et le cadavre outragé’, in Gnoli and Vernant (eds.): 45–76.
Vernant, J.-P. (1983) Myth and Thought among the Greeks. London (French original 1965, 2nd edn. 1985).Google Scholar
Virilio, P. (1986) Speed and Politics. An Essay on Dromology. New York.Google Scholar
Vlastos, G. (1953) ‘Isonomia’, AJPh 64: 337–66.Google Scholar
Vlastos, G. (1964) ‘Ἰσονομ⋯α πολιτικ⋯’, in Mau and Schmidt (eds.) (1964): 1–35 (reprinted in Vlastos (1973): 164–73).
Vlastos, G. (1973) Platonic Studies. Princeton.Google Scholar
Wohl, V. (2002) Love Among the Ruins. The Erotics of Democracy in Classical Athens. Princeton.Google Scholar
Reden, Von S. (1995) Exchange in Ancient Greece. London.Google Scholar
Voutiras, E. (2000) ‘Le Cadavre et le serpent, ou l’héroïsation manquée de Cléomène de Sparte’, in Pirenne-Delforge and Suàrez de la Torre (eds.) (2000): 377–94.
Walbank, M. B (1987) ‘Athens honours Evagoras’, EMC 31: 229–33.Google Scholar
Walker, H. J. (1998) Theseus and Athens. Oxford.Google Scholar
Wallinga, H. T. (1984) ‘The Ionian Revolt’, Mnemosyne 37: 401–37.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Waters, K. H. (1971) Herodotus on Tyrants and Despots. A Study in Objectivity. Wiesbaden.Google Scholar
Waters, K. H. (1985) Herodotos the Historian. His Problems, Methods and Originality. London and Sydney.Google Scholar
Watkin, H. J. (1987) ‘The Cypriote surrender to Persia’, JHS 107: 154–63.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Weçowski, M. (1996) ‘Ironie et histoire’, AncSoc 27: 205–58.Google Scholar
West, M. (1966) Hesiod. Theogony, Oxford.Google Scholar
West, S. R. (1991) ‘Herodotus’ portrait of Hecataeus’, JHS 111: 144–60.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
West, S. R. (1999) ‘Sophocles’ Antigone and Herodotus Book Three’, in Griffin, J. (ed.), Sophocles Revisited. Oxford: 109–36.Google Scholar
West, S. R. (2004) ‘Herodotus and Scythia’, in Karageorghis and Taifacos (eds.) (2004): 73–89.
Westlake, H. D. (1969) ‘Irrelevant notes and minor excursuses in Thucydides’, in id., Essays on the Greek Historians and Greek History. New York: 1–39.Google Scholar
Wiesehofer, J. (1990) ‘Zypern unter persicher Herrschaft’, in Sancisi-Weerdenburg and Kuhrt (eds.) (1990): 239–52.
Wilamowitz-Moellendorf, U. (1931) Der Glaube der Hellenen, Vol. Ⅰ. Berlin.Google Scholar
Winton, R. (2000). ‘Herodotus, Thucydides and the sophists’, in Rowe, C. and Schofield, M. (eds.), The Cambridge History of Greek and Roman Political Thought. Cambridge: 89–121.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wood, H. (1972) The Histories of Herodotus. An Analysis of the Formal Structure. The Hague and Paris.Google Scholar
Woodhead, W. (1928) Etymologizing in Greek Literature from Homer to Philo Judaeus. Toronto.Google Scholar
Woodman, A. J. (1995) ‘Praecipuum munus annalium: the construction, convention and context of Tacitus, Annals 3.65.1’, MH 52: 111–26.Google Scholar
Yon, M. (1981) ‘Chypre entre Grèce et les Perses. La Conscience grecque de Chypre entre 530 et 330 a.c.’, Ktèma 6: 49–57.Google Scholar
Yon, M. (1995) ‘Kition et la mer à l’époque classique et hellénistique’, in Karageorghis and Michaelides (eds.) (1995): 119–30.
Yoshio, N. (1988) ‘Isegoria in Herodotus’, Historia 37: 257–75.Google Scholar
Zacharia, K. (2001) ‘“The rock of the nightingale”, kinship diplomacy and Sophocles’ Tereus’, in Budelmann and Michelakis (eds.) (2001): 91–112.
Zacharia, K. (2003) Converging Truths. Euripides’ Ion and the Athenian Quest for Self-Definition. Leiden.Google Scholar
Zörner, G. (1971) Kypselos und Pheidon von Argos. Untersuchungen zur frühen griechischen Tyrannis. Marburg.Google Scholar
Abbott, E. (1893) Herodotus. Books Ⅴ and Ⅵ. Terpsichore and Erato.Oxford.Google Scholar
Ahl, F. (1984) ‘The art of safe criticism in Greece and Rome’, AJPh 105: 174–208.Google Scholar
Alden, M. J. (2000) Homer beside Himself. Oxford.Google Scholar
Alty, J. (1982) ‘Dorians and Ionians’, JHS 102: 1–14.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Aly, W. (1969 2) Volksmärchen, Sage und Novelle bei Herodot und seinen Zeitgenossen. Eine Untersuchung über die volkstümlichen Elemente der altgriechischen Prosaerzählung. Göttingen.Google Scholar
Andrewes, A. (1956) The Greek Tyrants. London.Google Scholar
Antonaccio, C. (1998) An Archaeology of Ancestors. Tomb Cult and Hero Cult in Early Greece. London.Google Scholar
Antoniadis, L. (1981) ‘L’Institution de la royauté en Chypre antique’, Κυπριακα⋯ Σπουδα⋯ 45: 29–53.Google Scholar
Armayor, O. K. (1985) Herodotus’ Autopsy of the Fayoum: Lake Moeris and the Labyrinth of Egypt. Amsterdam.Google Scholar
Armayor, O. K. (2004) ‘Herodotus, Hecataeus and the Persian Wars’, in Karageorghis and Taifacos (eds.) (2004): 321–35.
Arnold, T. (1830) The History of the Peloponnesian War by Thucydides.Oxford.Google Scholar
Asheri, D. (1988a) ‘Carthaginians and Greeks’, in Cambridge Ancient History IV 2: 739–80.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Asheri, D. (1988b) Erodoto. Le Storie, Libro Ⅰ. Milan.Google Scholar
Asheri, D. (1990) ‘Herodotus on Thracian society and history’, Fondation Hardt 35: 131–69.Google Scholar
Asheri, D., Lloyd, A. and Corcella, A. (2007) A Commentary on Herodotus Books Ⅰ–Ⅳ, ed. Murray, O. and Moreno, A.. Oxford.Google Scholar
Aupert, P. and Hellmann, M.-C. (eds.) (1984) Amathonte Ⅰ. Testimonie 1: Auteurs anciens monnayages,voyageurs, fouilles, origines, geographie. Paris.Google Scholar
Austin, C. and Olson, S. D. (2004) Aristophanes. Thesmophoriazusae.Oxford.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Austin, M. J., Harries, J., and Smith, C. (eds.) (1998) Modus Operandi. Essays in Honour of Geoffrey Rickman. London.Google Scholar
Austin, M. M. (1990) ‘Greek tyrants and the Persians, 546–479 bc’, CQ 40: 289–306.CrossRef
Badian, E. (1982) ‘Greeks and Macedonians’, in Barr-Sharrar and Borza (eds.) (1982): 33–51.
Badian, E. (1993) From Plataea to Potidaea. Studies in the History and Historiography of the Pentecontaetia. Baltimore.Google Scholar
Badian, E. (1994) ‘Herodotus on Alexander I of Macedon: a study in some subtle silences’, in Hornblower, S. (ed.), Greek Historiography. Oxford: 107–30.Google Scholar
Bakker, E. J., Jong, I. J. F., and Wees, H. (eds.) (2002) Brill’s Companion to Herodotus. Leiden, Boston and Cologne.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Balot, R. K. (2004) ‘Free speech, courage, and democratic deliberation’, in Sluiter and Rosen (eds.) (2004): 233–60.
Barney, R. (2001) Names and Nature in Plato’s Cratylus. Cambridge, Mass.Google Scholar
Barr-Sharrar, B. and Borza, E. (eds.) (1982) Macedonia and Greece in Late Classical and Early Hellenistic Times (Studies in the History of Art 10). Washington DC.Google Scholar
Barrett, D. S. (1979) ‘Herodotus’ Sigynnai (5.9) and gypsies’, G&R 26: 58–9.Google Scholar
Barron, J. P. (1966) The Silver Coins of Samos. London.Google Scholar
Baurain, C. (1980) ‘Kinyras. La Fin de l’âge du bronze à Chypre et la tradition antique’, BCH 104: 277–308.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Baurain, C. (1984) ‘Réflexions sur les origines de la ville d’après les sources littéraires’, in Aupert and Hellmann (eds.) (1984): 109–17.
Baxter, T. (1992) The Cratylus. Plato’s Critique of Naming. Leiden.Google Scholar
Bertelli, L. (2001) ‘Hecataeus: from genealogy to historiography’, in Luraghi (ed.) (2001a): 67–94.
Bichler, R., and Rollinger, R. (2001) Herodot. Hildesheim.Google Scholar
Bischoff, H. (1932) ‘Der Warner bei Herodot’. Diss. Marburg.Google Scholar
Blaineau, A. (2004) ‘Charge de cavalerie, choc ou esquive: sur un problème rencontré dans l’Hipparque de Xénophon’, in Bois (ed.) (2004): 15–25.CrossRef
Blok, J. (2002) ‘Women in HerodotusHistories’, in Bakker, et al. (eds.) (2002): 225–42.Google Scholar
Blösel, W. (2001) ‘The Herodotean picture of Themistocles: a mirror of fifth-century Athens’, in Luraghi (ed.) (2001a): 179–97.
Boedeker, D. (1988) ‘Protesilaos and the end of Herodotus’ Histories’, ClAnt 7: 30–48.Google Scholar
Boedeker, D. (2002) ‘Epic heritage and mythical patterns in Herodotus’, in Bakker et al.(eds.) (2002): 97–116.
Boedeker, D. (2003) ‘Pedestrian fatalities: the prosaics of death in Herodotus’, in Derow and Parker (eds.) (2003): 17–36.
Bois, J.-P. (ed.) (2004) Dialogue militaire entre anciens et modernes. Rennes.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bolger, D. L. (1989) ‘Regionalism, cultural variation and culture-area concept in later Prehistoric Cypriot studies’, in Peltenburg (ed.) (1989): 142–52.
, Bonfante L. and Karageorghis, V. (eds.) (2001) Italy and Cyprus in Antiquity: 1500–450 bc. Nicosia.Google Scholar
Bondi, S. F. (1990) ‘I Fenici in Erodoto’, Fondation Hardt 35: 235–86.Google Scholar
Borza, E. N. (1990a) ‘Athenians, Macedonians, and the origins of the Macedonian royal house’, in Studies in Attic Epigraphy, History and Topography Presented to Eugene Vanderpool (Hesperia Supplement 19): 7–13.Google Scholar
Borza, E. N. (1990b) In the Shadow of Olympus. The Emergence of Macedon. Princeton.Google Scholar
Borza, E. N. (1995) ‘The symposium at Alexander’s court’, in Makedonika. Claremont: 159–71 (reprinted from Arkhaia Makedonia 3 (1983) 45–55).Google Scholar
Borza, E. N. (1999) Before Alexander. Constructing Early Macedonia (Publications of the Association of Ancient Historians 6). Claremont.Google Scholar
Bowen, A. J. (ed.) (1992) Plutarch: Malice of Herodotus. Text with Translation, Commentary and Notes. Worminster.Google Scholar
Bowie, A. M. (2003) ‘Fate may harm me, I have dined today: near-Eastern royal banquets and Greek symposia in Herodotus’, in Symposium: banquet et représentations en Grèce et à Rome (Pallas 61). Toulouse: 99–109.Google Scholar
Braund, D. (1998), ‘Herodotus on the problematics of reciprocity’, in Gill, C., Postlethwaite, N., and Seaford, R. (eds.), Reciprocity in Ancient Greece. Oxford: 159–80.Google Scholar
Braund, D. (2004) ‘Herodotus’ Spartan Scythians’, in Tuplin, C. (ed.), Pontus and the Outside World. Leiden and Boston: 25–41.Google Scholar
Bremmer, J. N. (1983) The Early Greek Concept of the Soul. Princeton.Google Scholar
Briant, P. (1982) Rois, tributs et paysans: études sur les formations tributaires du Moyen Orient ancien. Paris.Google Scholar
Briant, P. (1990) ‘Hérodote et la société Perse’, Fondation Hardt 35: 69–113.Google Scholar
Briant, P. (1996) Histoire de l’Empire perse de Cyrus à Alexandre. Vol. Ⅰ. Paris.Google Scholar
Briant, P. and Herrenschmidt, C. (eds.) (1989) Le Tribut dans l’Empire perse: actes de la Table Ronde de Paris 12–13 décembre 1986. Louvain and Paris.Google Scholar
Brock, R. (2003) ‘Authorial voice and narrative management in Herodotus’, in Derow and Parker (eds.) (2003): 3–16.
Brock, R. (2004) ‘Political imagery in Herodotus’, in Karageorghis and Taifacos (eds.) (2004): 169–77.
Brown, T. S. (1981) ‘Aeneas Tacticus, Herodotus and the Ionian Revolts’, Historia 30: 385–93.Google Scholar
Browning, R. (1961) ‘Herodotus v. 4 and Euripides Cresphontes fr. 449 N.’, CR ns 9: 201–2.Google Scholar
Budelmann, F. and Michelakis, P. (eds.) (2001) Homer, Tragedy and Beyond. Essays in Honour of P. E. Easterling. London.Google Scholar
Burn, A. R. (1984) Persia and the Greeks: the Defence of the West c. 546–478 bc, 2nd edn. with a postscript by D. M. Lewis. London.Google Scholar
Cagnazzi, S. (1975) ‘Tavola dei 28 logoi di Erodoto’, Hermes 103: 385–423.Google Scholar
Cambiano, G. (1988) ‘La Démonstration géométrique’, in Detienne (ed.) (1988b): 251–72.
Cameron, H. D. (1970) ‘The power of words in the Seven Against Thebes’, TAPhA 101: 95–118.Google Scholar
Carter, D. M. (2004) ‘Citizen attribute, negative right: a conceptual difference between ancient and modern ideas of freedom of speech’, in Sluiter and Rosen (eds.) (2004): 197–220.CrossRef
Cartledge, P. (1993) The Greeks. Oxford.Google Scholar
Cawkwell, G. (2005) The Greek Wars. The Failure of Persia. Oxford.Google Scholar
Ceccarelli, P. (1993) ‘Sans thalassocracie, pas de Démocratie? Le Rapport entre thalassocratie et démocratie à Athènes dans la discussion du Ⅴe et Ⅳe siècle’, Historia 42: 444–70.Google Scholar
Ceccarelli, P. (2005) ‘Messaggio scritto e messaggio orale: strategie narrative erodotee’, in Giangiulio, M. (ed.), Erodoto e il 'modello Erodoteo. Formazione e trasmissione delle tradizioni storiche in Grecia. Trento: 13–16.Google Scholar
Ceccarelli, P. (1996) ‘De la Sardaigne à Naxos: le rôle des îles dans les Histoires d’Hérodote’, in Létoublon (ed.) (1996): 42–55.
Chadwick, J. (1996) Lexicographica Graeca. Oxford.Google Scholar
Chamberlain, D. (2001) ‘“We the others”: interpretative community and plural voice in Herodotus’, ClAnt 20: 5–34.Google Scholar
Christ, M. R. (1994) ‘Herodotean kings and historical enquiry’, ClAnt 13: 167–202.Google Scholar
Clarke, K. J. (2003): ‘Polybius and the nature of late Hellenistic historiography’, in Yanguas, J. Santos and Pagola, E. Torregaray (eds.), Polibio y la Península Ibérica. Vittoria: 69–87.Google Scholar
Classen, J. (1914) Thukydides, Vol. Ⅱ. Berlin.Google Scholar
Clay, J. S. (1989) The Politics of Olympus. Form and Meaning in the Major Homeric Hymns. Princeton.Google Scholar
Cobet, J. (2002) ‘The organization of time in the Histories’, in Bakker et al. (eds.) (2002): 387–412.
Coleman, R. (1977) Vergil. Eclogues. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Colombier, A. M. (1991) ‘Organisation du territoire et pouvoirs locaux dans l’île de Chypre à l’époque perse’, Transeuhratène 4: 21–43.Google Scholar
Colombier, A. M. (2003) ‘Quelques jalons pour une histoire de l’identité chypriote à l’époque des Royaumes autonomes’, in Chehub, M., Ioannou, Y., and Métral, F. (eds.) Méditerranée ruptures et continuités. Actes du colloque tenu à Nicosie les 20–22 octobre 2001. Lyons: 139–150.Google Scholar
Connor, W. R. (1993) ‘The Ionian era of Athenian civic identity’, PAPS 137: 194–206.Google Scholar
Constantakopoulou, C. (2002) The Dance of the Islands. Perceptions of Insularity in Classical Greece. Unpublished PhD thesis. Oxford.Google Scholar
Cooper, G./Krüger, K. (2002) Greek Syntax. Vol. Ⅲ. Ann Arbor.Google Scholar
Costa, E. A (1974) ‘Evagoras I and the Persians’, Historia 23: 40–56.Google Scholar
Craddock, P. (ed.) (1972) The English Essays of Edward Gibbon. Oxford.Google Scholar
Creuzer, Fr. (1869) Herodoti Halicarnassensis Musae Ⅲ. Leipzig.Google Scholar
Croiset, A. (1886) Thucydide. Livres Ⅰ–Ⅱ. Paris.Google Scholar
Crowther, N. B. (2000) ‘Resolving an impasse: draws, dead heats and similar decisions in Greek athletics’, Nikephoros 13: 125–40.Google Scholar
Darbo-Peschanski, C. (1987), Le Discours du particulier. Essai sur l’enquête hérodotéenne. Paris.Google Scholar
Darbo-Peschanski, C. (1988) ‘La Vie des morts. Représentations et fonctions de la mort et des morts dans les Histoires d’Hérodote’, AION 10: 41–51.Google Scholar
Davies, J. K. (1971) Athenian Propertied Families, 600–300 bc. Oxford.Google Scholar
Jong, I. J. F. (1998) ‘Aspects narratologiques des Histoires d’ Hérodote’, Lalies 19: 217–75.Google Scholar
Jong, I. J. F. (2001) ‘The anachronical structure of HerodotusHistories’, in Harrison, (ed.) (2001): 93–116.Google Scholar
de Jong, I. J. F. (2002) ‘Narrative unity and units’, in Bakker et al. (eds.) (2002): 245–66.
Romilly, J. (1971) ‘La Vengeance comme explication historique dans l’ oeuvre d’ Hérodote’, REG 84: 314–37.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Romilly, J. (1986) ‘Les Manies de Prodicos et la rigueur de la langue grecque’, MH 43: 1–18.Google Scholar
Croix, Ste G. E. M. (1972) The Origins of the Peloponnesian War. London.Google Scholar
de Ste Croix, G. E. M. (2004) Athenian Democratic Origins and Other Essays, ed. Harvey, D. and Parker, R.. Oxford.Google Scholar
Deffner, A. (1933) Die Rede bei Herodot und ihre Weiterbildung bei Thukydides. Diss. Munich.Google Scholar
Demand, N. (1988) ‘Herodotus and metoikésis in the Persian Wars’, AJPh 109: 416–23.Google Scholar
Demand, N. (1990) Urban Relocation in Archaic and Classical Greece. Norman, Okl.Google Scholar
Denniston, J. D. (1954) The Greek Particles (2nd edn.). Oxford.Google Scholar
Derian, Der J. (ed.) (1998) The Virilio Reader. Oxford.Google Scholar
Derow, P., and Parker, R. (eds.) (2003) Herodotus and his World. Essays From a Conference in Memory of George Forrest. Oxford.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Derrida, J. (1996) Archive Fever. Chicago.Google Scholar
Detienne, M. (1988a) ‘L’Espace de la publicité, ses opérateurs intellectuals dans la cité’, in Detienne (1988b): 29–81.
Detienne, M. (ed.) (1988b) Les Savoirs de l’écriture en Grèce ancienne. Lille.Google Scholar
Dewald, C. (1981) ‘Women and culture in Herodotus’ Histories’, in Foley, H. (ed.), Reflections of Women in Antiquity. New York: 91–125.Google Scholar
Dewald, C. (1985) ‘Practical knowledge and the historian’s role in Herodotus and Thucydides’, in Jameson, M. H. (ed.), The Greek Historians. Literature and History. Papers Presented to A. E. Raubitschek. Saratoga: 47–63.Google Scholar
Dewald, C. (1987) ‘Narrative structure and authorial voice in Herodotus’ Histories’, Arethusa 20: 147–70.Google Scholar
Dewald, C. (1997) ‘Wanton kings, pickled heroes, and gnomic founding fathers: strategies of meaning at the end of Herodotus’s Histories’, in Roberts et al. (eds.) (1997): 62–82.
Dewald, C. (1998) ‘Introduction and notes’, in Waterfield, R., trans., Herodotus. The Histories. Oxford.
Dewald, C. (1999) ‘The figured stage: focalizing the initial narratives of Herodotus and Thucydides’, in Felson, N., Konstan, D., and Falkner, T. (eds.), Contextualizing Classics. Ideology, Performance, Dialogue. Festschrift for John Peradotto. Lanham: 229–61.Google Scholar
Dewald, C. (2002) ‘“I didn’t give my own genealogy”: Herodotus and the authorial persona’, in Bakker et al. (eds.) (2002): 267–89.
Dewald, C. (2003) ‘Form and content: the question of tyranny in Herodotus’, in Morgan (ed.) (2003): 25–58.
Dewald, C., and Marincola, J. (eds.) (2006) The Cambridge Companion to Herodotus. Cambridge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dillery, J. (1996) ‘Reconfiguring the past: Thyrea, Thermopylae, and narrative patterns in Herodotus’, AJPh 117: 217–54.Google Scholar
Dobrov, G. (1993) ‘The tragic and the comic Tereus’, AJPh 114: 189–243.Google Scholar
Dorati, M. (2000) Le Storie di Erodoto: etnografia e racconto. Pisa and Rome.Google Scholar
Dougherty, C. and Kurke, L. (eds.) (1993) Cultural Poetics in Archaic Greece. Cult, Performance, Politics. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Dougherty, C., and Kurke, L. (eds.) (2003) The Cultures within Ancient Greek Culture. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Dover, K. J. (1998) ‘Herodotean implausibilities’, in Austin et al. (eds.) (1998): 219–25.
Drexler, H. (1972) Herodot-Studien. Hildesheim and New York.Google Scholar
Dunbabin, T. (1936–7) ‘Ἐχθρ⋯ παλα⋯η’, Annual of the British School at Athens 37: 83–91.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dunbabin, T. J. (1948) The Western Greeks. The History of Sicily and South Italy from the Foundation of the Greek Colonies to 480 bc. Oxford.Google Scholar
Dunbar, N. (1995) Aristophanes. Birds, edited with introduction and commentary. Oxford.Google Scholar
Edwards, M. (1991) The Iliad. A Commentary, Vol. Ⅴ. Cambridge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Errington, R. M. (1981) ‘Alexander the philhellene and Persia’, in Dell, H. (ed.), Ancient Macedonian Studies in Honor of Charles F. Edson. Thessaloniki: 139–43.Google Scholar
Errington, R. M. (1990) A History of Macedonia (trans. C. Errington). Berkeley.Google Scholar
Evans, J. A. S. (1976) ‘Herodotus and the Ionian revolt’, Historia 25: 31–7.Google Scholar
Evans, J. A. S. (1991) Herodotus Explorer of the Past. Princeton.Google Scholar
Farnell, L. R (1921) Greek Hero Cults and Ideas of Immortality. Oxford.Google Scholar
Fearn, D. W. (forthcoming, 2007) Bacchylides. Politics, Performance, Poetic Tradition.Oxford.Google Scholar
Fehling, D. (1989) Herodotus and his ‘Sources’. Citation, Invention, and Narrative Art (tr. J. G. Howie; German original 1972). Leeds.Google Scholar
Ferrill, A. (1978) ‘Herodotus on tyranny’, Historia 27: 385–98.Google Scholar
Figueira, T. (1985) ‘Herodotus on the early hostilities between Aegina and Athens’, AJPh 106: 49–74 (reprinted in Figueira, T. (1993) Excursions in Epichoric History: Aeginetan Essays. Lanham: 35–60).Google Scholar
Fisher, N. (2002) ‘Popular morality in Herodotus’, in Bakker et al. (2002): 199–224.
Fitzpatrick, D. (2001) ‘Sophocles’ Tereus’, CQ 51: 90–101.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Flory, S. G. (1978) ‘Laughter, tears, and wisdom in Herodotus’, AJPh 99: 145–53.Google Scholar
Flory, S. G. (1980) ‘Who read Herodotus’ Histories?’, AJPh 101: 12–28.Google Scholar
Flory, S. G. (2004) ‘Rev. of Derow and Parker (eds.) (2003)’, BMCR 2004.02.03, http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/bmcr/2004/2004-02-03.html.Google Scholar
Flower, M. A. (2000) ‘From Simonides to Isocrates: the fifth-century origins of fourth-century panhellenism’, ClAnt 19: 65–101.Google Scholar
Flower, M. A., and Marincola, J. (2002) Herodotus. Histories Book Ⅸ. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Ford, A. (1992) Homer. The Poetry of the Past. Ithaca.Google Scholar
Ford, A. (1997) ‘Epic as genre’, in Morris, I. and Powell, B. (eds.), A New Companion to Homer. Leiden: 396–414.Google Scholar
Fornara, C. W. (1971a) ‘Evidence for the date of Herodotus’ publication’, JHS 91: 25–34.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fornara, C. W. (1971b) Herodotus. An Interpretative Essay. Oxford.Google Scholar
Fornara, C. W. (1981) ‘Herodotus’ knowledge of the Archidamian War’, Hermes 109: 149–56.Google Scholar
Fornara, C. W. and Samons, L. J. (1991) Athens from Cleisthenes to Pericles. Berkeley.Google Scholar
Forrest, W. G. G. (1969) ‘The tradition of Hippias’ expulsion from Athens’, GRBS 10: 277–86.Google Scholar
Forrest, W. G. G. (1979) ‘Motivation in Herodotus: the case of the Ionian Revolt’, International History Review 1: 311–22.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Forsdyke, S. (1999) ‘From aristocratic to democratic ideology and back again: the Thrasybulus anecdote in Herodotus’ Histories and Aristotle’s Politics’, CPh 94: 361–72.Google Scholar
Forsdyke, S. (2001) ‘Athenian democratic ideology and Herodotus’ Histories’, AJPh 122: 333–62.Google Scholar
Forsdyke, S. (2002) ‘Greek history, c. 525–480 bc’, in Bakker et al. (eds.) (2002): 521–49.
Fourrier, S. (2002) ‘Les Territoires des royaumes chypriotes archaïques: une esquisse de géographie historique’, in Hermary, A. (ed.), Hommage à Marguerite Yon, Actes du Colloque international ‘Le temps de royaumes de Chypre, ⅩⅢ-Ⅳe s. av. J. C.’ Lyon, 20–22 juin. Paris. 135–46.Google Scholar
Fowler, D. P., and P. G. Fowler (1996) ‘Literary theory and classical studies’, in Hornblower and Spawforth (eds.) (1996): 871–5.
Fowler R. (2003) ‘Herodotus and Athens’, in Derow and Parker (eds.) (2003): 305–18.
Fowler, R. L. (1996) ‘Herodotus and his contemporaries’, JHS 116: 62–87.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fowler, R. L. (2001) ‘Early historiē and literacy’, in Luraghi (ed.) (2001a): 95–115.
Fowler, R. L. (2003) ‘Herodotus and Athens’, in Derow and Parker (eds.) (2003): 305–18.
Fraenkel, E. (1950) Aeschylus. Agamemnon (3 vols). Oxford.Google Scholar
French, A. (1972) ‘Topical influences on Herodotos’ narrative’, Mnemosyne 25: 9–27.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Friedrich, P. (1977) ‘Sanity and the myth of honor: the problem of Achilles’, Ethos 5: 281–305.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fritz, K. (1967) Die griechische Geschichtsschreibung, vol. Ⅰ: Von den Anfängen bis Thukykides. Berlin.Google Scholar
Frontisi-Ducroux, F., and F. Lissarrague (1990) ‘From ambiguity to ambivalence: a Dionysiac excursion through the “Anakreontic” vases’, in Halperin, D., Winkler, J., and Zeitlin, F. (eds.), Before Sexuality. The Construction of Erotic Experience in the Ancient Greek World. Princeton: 211–56.Google Scholar
Gabrielsen, V. (1994) Financing the Athenian Fleet. Public Taxation and Social Relations. Baltimore and London.Google Scholar
Gallo, I. (1976) ‘Solone a Soli’, QUCC 21: 29–36.Google Scholar
Garland, R. (1987) The Piraeus. London.Google Scholar
Garland, R. (1990) ‘Priests and power in classical Athens’, in Beard, M. and North, J. (eds.), Pagan Priests. London: 73–91.Google Scholar
Garland, R. (1992) Introducing New Gods. London.Google Scholar
Georges, P. (2000) ‘Persian Ionia under Darius: the revolt reconsidered’, Historia 49: 1–39.Google Scholar
Gibson, R. K. and Kraus, C. S. (eds.) (2002) The Classical Commentary. Histories, Practices, Theory. Leiden.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Giraudeau, M. (1984) Les Notions juridiques et socials chez Hérodote. Études sur le vocabulaire. Paris.Google Scholar
Gnoli, G. and Vernant, J.-P. (eds.) (1982) La Mort, les morts dans les sociétés anciennes. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Goldhill, S. (1990) ‘The Great Dionysia and civic ideology’, in Winkler, J. and Zeitlin, F. (eds.), Nothing to Do with Dionysos? Athenian Drama in its Social Context. Princeton: 97–129.Google Scholar
Goldhill, S. (2002) The Invention of Prose (Greece and Rome New Surveys in the Classics 32). Oxford.Google Scholar
Gomme, A. W. (1956) A Historical Commentary on Thucydides. Vol. Ⅱ. Oxford.Google Scholar
Gontier, P. (ed.) (1995) Kyprios Character, Quelle identité chypriote? Sources, Travaux historiques 43/4.Google Scholar
Goodwin, W. W. (1889) Syntax of the Moods and Tenses of the Greek Verb. London.Google Scholar
Gould, J. (1989) Herodotus. London.Google Scholar
Gould, J. (2001) ‘Give and take in Herodotus’, in id., Myth, Ritual, Memory, and Exchange. Essays in Greek Literature and Culture. Oxford: 283–303.Google Scholar
Gray, V. J. (1996) ‘Herodotus and images of tyranny: the tyrants of Corinth’, AJPh 117: 361–89.Google Scholar
Gray, V. J. (1997) ‘Reading the rise of Pisistratus: Herodotus 1.56–68’, Histos 1: http://www.dur.ac.uk/Classics/histos/1997/gray.html.Google Scholar
Gray, V. J. (2002) ‘Short stories in HerodotusHistories’, Bakker, al et. (eds.) (2002): 291–317.Google Scholar
Graziosi, B., and Haubold, J. (2005) Homer. The Resonance of Epic. London.Google Scholar
Griffin, J. (1980) Homer on Life and Death. Oxford.Google Scholar
Griffiths, A. (1989) ‘Was Kleomenes mad?’ in Powell (ed.) (1989): 51–78.
Griffiths, A. (2001) ‘Kissing cousins: some curious cases of adjacent material in Herodotus’, in Luraghi (ed.) (2001): 161–78.
Hainsworth, J. B. (1993) The Iliad. A Commentary, Vol. Ⅲ. Cambridge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hall, E. (1989) Inventing the Barbarian. Greek Self-Definition through Tragedy. Oxford.Google Scholar
Hall, J. M. (1997) Ethnic Identity in Greek Antiquity. Cambridge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hall, J. M. (2001) ‘Contested ethnicities: perceptions of Macedonia within evolving definitions of Greek Identity’, in Malkin (ed.) (2001): 159–86.
Hall, J. M. (2002) Hellenicity. Between Ethnicity and Culture. Chicago.Google Scholar
Halliwell, S. (1987) The Poetics of Aristotle. Translation and Commentary. London.Google Scholar
Harder, A. (1985) Euripides’ Kresphontes and Archelaos. Leiden.Google Scholar
Harrison, S. J. (ed.) (2001) Texts, Ideas, and the Classics. Oxford.Google Scholar
Harrison, T. (1997) ‘Herodotus and the ancient Greek idea of rape’, in Deacy, S. and Pearce, K. (eds.), Rape in Antiquity. Sexual Violence in the Greek and Roman Worlds. London: 185–208.Google Scholar
Harrison, T. (1998). ‘Herodotus’ conception of foreign languages’, Histos 2: http://www.dur.ac.uk/Classics/histos/1998/harrison.html.Google Scholar
Harrison, T. (2000) Divinity and History. The Religion of Herodotus. Oxford.Google Scholar
Harrison, T. (2003) ‘“Prophecy in reverse”? Herodotus and the origins of history’, in Derow and Parker (eds.) (2003): 237–55.
Harrison, T. (2004) ‘Truth and lies in Herodotus’ Histories’, in Karageorghis and Taifacos (eds.) (2004): 255–63.
Hart, J. (1982) Herodotus and Greek History. London.Google Scholar
Hartog, F. (1988) The Mirror of Herodotus (tr. J. Lloyd; French original 1980, second French edn. 1991). Berkeley, Los Angeles and London.Google Scholar
Haubold, J. (2001) ‘Epic with an end: an interpretation of Homeric Hymns 15 and 20’, in Budelmann and Michelakis (eds.) (2001): 23–41.
Heath, M. (1989) Unity in Greek Poetics. Oxford.Google Scholar
Hellmann, F. (1934) Herodots Kroisos-Logos (Neue Philol. Untersuch. 9). Berlin.Google Scholar
Henderson, J. (1987) Aristophanes’ Lysistrata. Oxford.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Henderson, J. (1997) ‘The name of the tree: recounting Odyssey 24.340–2’, JHS 107: 87–116.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Henige, D. (1974) The Chronology of Oral tradition. Quest for a Chimera. Oxford.Google Scholar
Heygi, D. (1966) ‘The historical background of the Ionian Revolt’, AAnt.Hung. 14: 285–302.Google Scholar
Hodder, I. (ed.) (1978) The Spatial Organization of Culture. London.Google Scholar
Hodkinson, S. (2000) Property and Wealth in Classical Sparta. London.Google Scholar
Hohti, P. (1974) ‘Freedom of speech in the speech sections in the Histories of Herodotus’, Arctos 8: 19–27.Google Scholar
Hohti, P. (1975) ‘Über die Notwendigkeit bei Herodot’, Arctos 9: 31–7.Google Scholar
Hohti, P. (1977) ‘συμβ⋯λλεσθαι: a note on conjectures in Herodotus’, Arctos 11: 5–14.Google Scholar
Hornblower, S. (1987) Thucydides, London.Google Scholar
Hornblower, S. (1991) A Commentary on Thucydides, Vol. Ⅰ. Oxford.Google Scholar
Hornblower, S. (1992) ‘Thucydides’ use of Herodotus’, in Sanders, J. M. (ed.), Philolakon. Lakonian Studies on Honor of H. Catling. Athens: 141–54.Google Scholar
Hornblower, S. (1996) A Commentary on Thucydides, Vol. Ⅱ. Oxford.Google Scholar
Hornblower, S. (2003) ‘Panionios of Chios and Hermotimos of Pedasa (Hdt. 8.104–6)’, in Derow and Parker (eds.) (2003): 37–57.
Hornblower, S. (2004) Thucydides and Pindar. Historical Narrative and the World of Epinician Poetry. Oxford.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hornblower, S., and Spawforth, A. (eds.) (1996) Oxford Classical Dictionary, 3rd edn. Oxford.Google Scholar
How, W. W., and Wells, J. (1912) A Commentary on Herodotus (2 vols). Oxford.Google Scholar
Huber, L. (1963) Religiöse und politische Beweggründe des Handelns in der Geschichtsschreibung des Herodot. Diss. Tübingen.Google Scholar
Hutton, W. (2005) Describing Literature. Landscape and Literature in the Periegesis of Pausanias. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Immerwahr, H. R. (1956) ‘Aspects of historical causation in Herodotus’, TAPhA 87: 247–80.Google Scholar
Immerwahr, H. R. (1957) ‘The Samian stories of Herodotus’, CJ 52: 312–22.Google Scholar
Immerwahr, H. R. (1960) ‘Ergon: history as monument in Herodotus and Thucydides’, AJPh 81: 261–90.Google Scholar
Immerwahr, H. R. (1966) Form and Thought in Herodotus. Cleveland, Ohio (reprinted 1986).Google Scholar
Irwin, E. (1999) ‘Solicising in Solon’s Colony’, BICS 43: 187–95.Google Scholar
Irwin, E. (2005a) ‘Gods among men? The social and political dynamics of the Hesiodic Catalogue of Women’, in Hunter, R. (ed.), The Hesiodic Catalogue of Women. Constructions and Reconstructions. Cambridge: 35–84.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Irwin, E. (2005b) Solon and Early Greek Poetry. The Politics of Exhortation. Cambridge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Irwin, E. (2007) ‘The politics of precedence: first historians on first thalassocrats’, in Osborne, R. (ed.), Anatomy of a Cultural Revolution. Athens 430–380 bc.Google Scholar
Isaac, B. (1986) The Greek Settlements in Thrace until the Macedonian Conquest. Leiden.Google Scholar
Jacob, C. (1988) ‘Inscrire la terre habitée sur une tablette. Réflexions sur la fonction de la carte géographique en Grèce ancienne’, in Detienne (ed.) (1988b): 273–304.
Jacoby, F. (1913) ‘Herodotus’, REA Suppl. 2: 205–520.Google Scholar
Jebb, R. C. (1885) Sophocles, the Plays and Fragments. Part Ⅱ: Oedipus Coloneus. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Jeffery, L. H. (1976) Archaic Greece. The City-States c. 700–500 bc. London and Tonbridge.Google Scholar
Johnson, D. M. (2001) ‘Herodotus’ story-telling speeches: Socles (5.92) and Leotychidas (6.86)’, CJ 97: 1–26.Google Scholar
Johnson, W. A. (1994) ‘Oral performance and the composition of Herodotus’ Histories’, GRBS 35: 229–54.Google Scholar
Johnson, W. A (2004) Book Rolls and Scribes in Oxyrhynchus. Toronto.Google Scholar
Jones, C. P. (1987) ‘Stigma: tattooing and branding in Graeco-Roman antiquity’, JRS 77: 139–55.Google Scholar
Jones, C. P. (1999) Kinship Diplomacy in the Ancient World. Cambridge, Mass.Google Scholar
Kallet, L. (2001) Money and the Corrosion of Power in Thucydides. The Sicilian Expedition and its Aftermath. Berkeley.Google Scholar
Kallet, L. (2003) ‘Dēmos tyrannos: wealth, power, and economic patronage’, in Morgan (ed.) (2003): 117–53.
Kallet-Marx, L. (1993) Money, Expense and Naval Power in Thucydides’ History 1–5.24. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Kamerbeek, J. (1984) Plays of Sophocles. Commentaries. Part Ⅶ: Oedipus Coloneus. Leiden.Google Scholar
Karageorghis, V. (1973) ‘Contribution to the early history of Soloi in Cyprus’, AAA 6: 145–9.Google Scholar
Karageorghis, V. (ed.) (1986) Acts of the International Archaeological Symposium Cyprus between the Orient and the Occident. Nicosia.Google Scholar
Karageorghis, V. (1991) Les Anciens Chypriotes. Paris.Google Scholar
Karageorghis, V. (1994) ‘The prehistory of an ethnogenesis’, in Karageorghis and Michaelides (eds.) (1994): 1–9.
Karageorghis, V. (2002) Κ⋯προς, το σταυροδρ⋯μι της Μεσογε⋯ου 1600–500 Π.Χ. Milan.Google Scholar
Karageorghis, V. (2004) ‘Herodotus and Cyprus’, in Karageorghis and Taifacos (eds.) (2004): 1–9.
Karageorghis, V. and Michaelides, D. (eds.) (1994) Proceedings of the International Symposium Cyprus in the 11th Century bc. Nicosia.Google Scholar
Karageorghis, V. and Michaelides, D. (eds.) (1995) Proceedings of the International Symposium Cyprus and the Sea. Nicosia.Google Scholar
Karageorghis, V., and Taifacos, I. (eds.) (2004) The World of Herodotus. Proceedings of an International Conference held at the Foundation Anastasios G. Leventis, Nicosia, September 18–21, 2003. Nicosia.Google Scholar
Kerferd, G. (1981) The Sophistic Movement. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Kirk, G. S. (1985) The Iliad. A Commentary, Vol. Ⅰ. Cambridge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Knapp, B. (1993) ‘Thalassocracies in Bronze Age eastern Mediterranean trade: making and breaking a myth’, World Archaeology 24: 332–47.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Konstan, D. (1987) ‘Persians, Greeks and empire’, Arethusa 20: 59–73.Google Scholar
Kramer, L., and Maza, S. (eds.) (2002) A Companion to Western Historical Thought. Oxford.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kraus, C. S. (2002) ‘Introduction: reading commentaries/commentaries as reading’, in Gibson and Kraus (eds.) (2002): 1–27.
Kraus, C. S. (ed.) (1999) The Limits of Historiography. Genre and Narrative in Ancient Historical Texts. Leiden, Boston and Cologne.Google Scholar
Kühner, R., and Gerth, B. (1898–1904) Ausführliche Grammatik der griechischen Sprache. Zweiter Teil: Satzlehre (2 vols; 3rd edn.). Hanover and Leipzig.Google Scholar
Kurd, P. (1991) ‘Knowledge and unity in Heraclitus’, Monist 74: 531–50.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kurke, L. (1992) ‘The politics of habrosunē in archaic Greece’, ClAnt 11: 90–121.Google Scholar
Kurke, L. (1999) Coins, Bodies, Games, and Gold. The Politics of Meaning in Archaic Greece. Princeton.Google Scholar
Kurtz, D. C., and Boardman, J. (1985) ‘Booners’, in Greek Vases in the J. Paul Getty Museum (Occasional Papers on Antiquities, 2). Malibu: 35–70.Google Scholar
Lang, M. (1968) ‘Herodotus and the Ionian Revolt’, Historia 17: 24–36.Google Scholar
Lang, M. L. (1984) Herodotean Narrative and Discourse. Cambridge, Mass. and London.Google Scholar
Lateiner, D. (1977) 'No laughing matter: a literary tactic in Herodotus, TAPhA 107: 173–82.Google Scholar
Lateiner, D. (1982a) ‘The failure of the Ionian Revolt’, Historia 31: 129–60.Google Scholar
Lateiner, D. (1982b) ‘A note on the perils of prosperity in Herodotus’, RM 125: 97–101.Google Scholar
Lateiner, D. (1989) The Historical Method of Herodotus. Toronto.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lateiner, D. (1990) ‘Deceptions and delusions in Herodotus’, ClAnt 9: 230–46.Google Scholar
Lateiner, D. (2005) ‘Signifying names and other ominous accidental utterances in classical historiography’, GRBS 45: 35–57.Google Scholar
Lavelle, B. (1991) ‘The compleat angler: observations on the rise of Peisistratus in Herodotus (1.59–64),’ CQ 41: 317–24.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lavelle, B. (1993) The Sorrow and the Pity. A Prolegomenon to a History of Athens under the Peisistratids, c. 560–510 bc. Stuttgart.Google Scholar
Legrand, Ph. (1946) Hérodote, Histoires. Vol. Ⅴ; 1st edn. Paris.Google Scholar
Lemos, I. (2001) ‘The Lefkandi connection: networking in the Aegean and the Eastern Mediterranean’, in Bonfante and Karageorghis (eds.) (2001): 215–27.
, Létoublon F. (ed.) (1996) Impressions d’îles. Toulouse.Google Scholar
Lévêque, P., and Vidal-Naquet, P. (1964) Clisthène l’Athénien. Essai sur la representation de l’espace et du temps dans la pensée politique grecque de la fin du Ⅵe siècle à la mort de Plato. Besançon (tr. D. A. Curtis as Cleisthenes the Athenian. New Jersey. 1996).Google Scholar
Lewis, D. M. (1989) ‘Persian gold and Greek international relations’, REA 91: 227–35.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lewis, D. and Stroud, R. (1979) ‘Athens honors King Evagoras of Salamis’, Hesperia 48: 180–93.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lloyd, A. B. (1975–88) Herodotus Book Ⅱ (3 vols). Leiden.Google Scholar
Loraux, N. (1985) ‘La Cité, l’historien, les femmes’, Pallas 32: 7–29.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Loraux, N. (1986) The Invention of Athens. The Funeral Oration in the Classical City (tr. A. Sheridan). Cambridge, Mass.Google Scholar
Loraux, N. (2000) Born of the Earth (tr. S. Stewart). Ithaca.Google Scholar
Loraux, N. (2002) The Divided City. On Remembering and Forgetting in Ancient Athens (tr. C. Pache and J. Fort). New York (originally published in Paris, 1997).Google Scholar
Loucas-Durie, E. (1989) ‘Kinyras et la sacralisation de la fonction technique à Chypre’, Métis 4: 117–27.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Luraghi, N. (ed.) (2001a) The Historian’s Craft in the Age of Herodotus. Oxford.Google Scholar
Luraghi, N. (2001b) ‘Local knowledge in HerodotusHistories’, in Luraghi, (ed.) (2001a): 138–60.Google Scholar
Macan, R. (1895) Herodotus. The Fourth, Fifth, and Sixth Books (2 vols). London.Google Scholar
Maehler, H. (2004) Bacchylides. A Selection. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Malkin, I. (ed.) (2001) Ancient Perceptions of Greek Ethnicity. Cambridge, Mass. and London.Google Scholar
Manville, P. B. (1990) The Origins of Citizenship in Ancient Athens. Princeton.Google Scholar
Marchant, E. (1891) Thucydides. Book Ⅱ. London.Google Scholar
Marg, W. (1965) Herodot (Wege der Forschung, 26, 2nd edn.). Munich.Google Scholar
Marincola, J. (1987) ‘Herodotean narrative and the narrator’s presence’, Arethusa 20: 121–37.Google Scholar
Marincola, J. (1997) Authority and Tradition in Ancient Historiography. Cambridge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Masson, O. (1960) Inscriptions chypriotes syllabiques. Paris.Google Scholar
Mau, J., and Schmidt, E. G. (eds.) (1964) Isonomia. Studien zur Gleichheitsvorstellung im griechischen Denken. Berlin.Google Scholar
Mavrogiannis, T. (2004) ‘Herodotus and the Phoenicians’, in Karageorghis and Taifacos (eds.) (2004): 53–71.
McGlew, J. F. (1993) Tyranny and Political Culture in Ancient Greece. Ithaca.Google Scholar
McInerney, J. (2004) ‘Nereids, colonies and the origins of isēgoria’, in Sluiter and Rosen (eds.) (2004): 21–40.
McNellen, B. (1997) ‘Herodotean symbolism’, ICS 22: 11–23.Google Scholar
Meiggs, R. (1972) The Athenian Empire. Oxford.Google Scholar
Mikalson, J. D. (2002) ‘Religion in Herodotus’, in Baker, de Jong and van Wees (eds.) (2002): 187–98.
Mikalson, J. D. (2003) Herodotus and Religion in the Persian Wars. Chapel Hill.Google Scholar
Miller, M. C. (1997) Athens and Persia in the Fifth Century bc: A Study in Cultural Receptivity. New York.Google Scholar
Moles, J. L. (1993). ‘Truth and untruth in Herodotus and Thucydides’, in Gill, C. and Wiseman, T. P. (eds.), Lies and Fiction in the Ancient World. Exeter: 88–121.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Moles, J. L. (1996) ‘Herodotus warns the Athenians’, PLLS 9: 259–84.Google Scholar
Moles, J. L. (1998) ‘Cry freedom: Tacitus, Annals 4.32–35’, Histos 2. http://www.dur.ac.uk/Classics/histos/1998/moles.html.Google Scholar
Moles, J. L. (1999) ‘Anathema kai ktema: the inscriptional inheritance of ancient historiography’, Histos 3: http://www.dur.ac.uk/Classics/histos/1999/moles.html.Google Scholar
Moles, J. L. (2001) ‘A false dilemma: Thucydides’ History and historicism’, in Harrison, S. J. (ed.), Texts, Ideas, and the Classics. Oxford: 195–219.Google Scholar
Moles, J. L. (2002) ‘Herodotus and Athens’, in Bakker et al. (eds.) (2002): 33–52.
Morgan, K. (ed.) (2003) Popular Tyranny. Sovereignty and its Discontents in Ancient Greece. Austin: 95–115.Google Scholar
Most, G. W. (1994) ‘Simonides’ Ode to Scopas in Contexts’, in Jong, I. and Sullivan, J. (eds.), Modern Critical Theory and Classical Literature (Mnemosyne Supplement 130). Leiden: 127–52.Google Scholar
Muellner, L. (1996) The Anger of Achilles. Menis in Greek Epic. Ithaca.Google Scholar
Muhly, J. D. (1986) ‘The role of Cyprus in the economy of the eastern Mediterranean during the Second Millenium bc’, in Karageorghis (ed.) (1986): 45–68.
Munson, R. V. (1993) ‘Herodotus’ use of prospective sentences and the story of Rhampsinitus and the thief in the Histories’, AJPh 114: 27–44.Google Scholar
Munson, R. V. (2001a) ‘Ananke in Herodotus’, JHS 121: 30–50.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Munson, R. V. (2001b) Telling Wonders. Ethnographic and Political Discourse in the Work of Herodotus. Ann Arbor.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Munson, R. V. (2005) Black Doves Speak. Herodotus and the Language of Barbarians. Cambridge, Mass. and London.Google Scholar
Murray, O. (1972) ‘Herodotus and Hellenistic culture’, CQ 76: 200–13.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Murray, O. (1988) ‘The Ionian Revolt’, Cambridge Ancient History IV 2: 461–90.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Murray, O. (1993) Early Greece (2nd edn.). London.Google Scholar
Murray, O. (2001a) ‘Herodotus and oral history’, in Luraghi, (ed.) (2001): 16–44 (reprinted from Sancisi-Weerdenburg, H. and Kuhrt, A. (eds.) (1987), Achaemenid History Ⅱ. The Greek Sources. Leiden: 93–115).Google Scholar
Murray, O. (2001b) ‘Herodotus and oral history reconsidered’, in Luraghi (ed.) (2001): 314–25.
Myres, J. (1907) ‘The Sigynnae of Herodotus: an ethnological problem of the early Iron Age’, in Balfour, H. (ed.), Anthropological Essays Presented to Edward Burnett Tylor in Honour of his 75th Birthday. Oxford: 255–76.Google Scholar
Nagler, M. N. (1974) Spontaneity and Tradition. A Study in the Oral Art of Homer. Berkeley.Google Scholar
Nagy, G. (1996) Poetry as Performance. Homer and Beyond. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Naiden, F. S. (1999) ‘The prospective imperfect in Herodotus’, HSCPh 99: 135–49.Google Scholar
Nenci, G. (1994) Erodoto. La rivolta della Ionia. Ⅴ Libro delle Storie. Milan.Google Scholar
Nenci, G. (1998) Erodoto. La battaglia di Maratona. Ⅵ libro delle Storie. Milan.Google Scholar
Neville, J. (1979) ‘Was there an Ionian Revolt?’, CQ 29: 268–75.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nicolaou, K. (1976) The Historical Topography of Kition. Göteburg.Google Scholar
Ober, J. (1993) ‘The Athenian Revolution of 508/7 BCE: violence, authority, and the origins of democracy’, in Dougherty and Kurke (eds.) (1993): 215–32.
Ober, J. (1996) ‘The Athenian revolution of 508/7 bc’, in id., The Athenian Revolution. Princeton: 32–52.Google Scholar
Ogden, D. (1993) ‘Cleithenes of Sicyon λευστ⋯ρ’, CQ 43: 353–63.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hara, O’ J. (1996) True Names. Vergil and the Alexandrian Tradition of Etymological Wordplay. Ann Arbor.Google Scholar
Olson, S. D. (2002) Aristophanes. Acharnians. Oxford.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Oost, S. I. (1972) ‘Cypselus the Bacchiad’, CPh 67: 10–30.Google Scholar
Osborne, R. G. (1996) Greece in the Making. London.Google Scholar
Osborne, R. G. and Hornblower, S. (eds.) (1994) Ritual, Finance, Politics. Athenian Democratic Accounts Presented to David Lewis. Oxford.Google Scholar
Osborne, R. G. and Rhodes, P. J. (2003) Greek Historical Inscriptions 404–323 bc. Oxford.Google Scholar
Owen, A. S. (1939) Ion. Edition and Commentary. Oxford.Google Scholar
Parker, R. (1996) Athenian Religion. A History. Oxford.Google Scholar
Parsons, P. (1974) ‘P. Oxy 3013’, Oxyrhynchus Papyri 42. London.Google Scholar
Payen, P. (1997) Les Îles nomades. Conquérir et résister dans l’enquête d’Hérodote. Paris.Google Scholar
Pelling, C. B. R. (ed.) (1990) Characterization and Individuality in Greek Literature. Oxford.Google Scholar
Pelling, C. B. R. (1993) ‘Tacitus and Germanicus’, in Luce, T. J. (ed.), Tacitus and the Tacitean Tradition. Princeton: 59–85.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pelling, C. B. R. (1997) ‘East is east and west is west – or are they? National stereotyping in Herodotus’, Histos 1: http://www.dur.ac.uk/Classics/histos/1997/pelling.html.Google Scholar
Pelling, C. B. R. (1999) ‘Epilogue’, in Kraus (ed.) (1999): 325–60.
Pelling, C. B. R. (2000) Literary Texts and the Greek Historian. London.Google Scholar
Pelling, C. B. R. (2002) ‘Speech and narrative: Herodotus’ debate on the constitutions’, PCPS 48: 123–58.Google Scholar
Pelling, C. B. R. (2006) ‘Educating Croesus: talking and learning in HerodotusLydian logos’, ClAnt 25.1:Google Scholar
Pelling, C. B. R. (2006b) ‘Homer and Herodotus’, in Clarke, M. J.et al. (eds.), Epic Interactions. Perspectives on Homer, Virgil, and the Epic Tradition Presented to Jasper Griffin by Former Pupils. Oxford: 75–104.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Peltenburg, E. (ed.) (1989) Early Society in Cyprus. Edinburgh.Google Scholar
Peradotto, J. J. (1969) ‘Cledonomancy in the Oresteia’, AJPh 90: 1–21.Google Scholar
Perlman, S. (1976) ‘Panhellenism, the polis and imperialism’, Historia 25: 1–30.Google Scholar
Petit, Th. (1995) ‘Amathous (Autochthones eisin) de l’identité Amathousienne à l’époque des Royaumes (Ⅷe–Ⅳe siècles av. J-C)’, in Gontier (ed.) (1995): 51–64.
Petit, , Th. (1996) ‘Religion et royauté à Amathonte de Chrypre’, Transeuphratène 12: 97–120.Google Scholar
Petit, Th. (1998) ‘Amathousiens, Ethiopiens et Perses’, Cahiers du Centre d’études chypriotes, 28: 73–86.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Petit, Th. (2004) ‘Herodotus and Amathus’, in Karageorghis and Taifacos (eds.) (2004): 9–26.
Petropoulou, A. (1986–7) ‘The Thracian funerary rites (Hdt. 5.8) and similar Greek practices’, Talanta 18–19: 29–47.Google Scholar
Pirenne-Delforge, V. and Suàrez de la Torre, E. (eds.) (2000) Héros et héroines dans les mythes et les cultes grecs. Liège.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pouilloux, J. (1975) ‘Athènes et Salamine de Chypre’, RDAC 1975: 111–22.Google Scholar
Pouilloux, J. (1976) ‘L’Hellénisme à Salamine de Chypre’, BCH 100: 449–59.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pouilloux, J. (1995) ‘Chypre entre l’Orient et l’Occident’, in Κ⋯προς απο την Προιστορ⋯α στους Ν⋯οτερους (Cultural Foundation of the Bank of Cyprus). Nicosia: 11–36.Google Scholar
Powell, A. (ed.) (1989) Classical Sparta. The Techniques behind her Success. Norman and London.Google Scholar
Powell, J. E. (1937) ‘Puns in Herodotus’, CR 51: 103–5.Google Scholar
Powell, J. E. (1939a) Herodotus Book Ⅷ. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Powell, J. E. (1939b) The History of Herodotus. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Powell, J. E. (1966 2) A Lexicon to Herodotus. Hildesheim.Google Scholar
Pritchett, W. K. (1993) The Liar School of Herodotos. Amsterdam.Google Scholar
Raaflaub, K. A. (1979) ‘Polis Tyrannos: zur Entstehung einer politischen Metapher’, in Bowersock, G. W., Burkert, W. and Putnam, M. C. J. (eds.), Arktouros. Hellenic Studies Presented to Bernard Knox. Berlin: 237–52.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Raaflaub, K. A. (1987) ‘Herodotus, political thought, and the meaning of history’, Arethusa 20: 221–48.Google Scholar
Raaflaub, K. A. (2002) ‘Philosophy, science, politics: Herodotus and the intellectual trends of his time’, in Bakker et al. (eds.) (2002): 149–86.
Raaflaub, K. A. (2004) ‘Aristocracy and freedom of speech in the Greco-Roman world’, in Sluiter and Rosen (eds.) (2004): 41–62.
Raptou, E. (1999) Athènes et Chypre à l’époque Perse. Lyons.Google Scholar
Redfield, J. M. (1985) ‘Herodotus the tourist’, CPh 80: 97–118.Google Scholar
Rehm, A. (1914) Milet Ⅲ. Das Delphinion. Berlin.Google Scholar
Rennie, W. (1909) The Acharnians of Aristophanes. London.Google Scholar
Rhode, E. (1952) Psyché. Le Culte de l’âme chez les Grecs et leur croyance à l’immortalité. Paris.Google Scholar
Rhodes, P. J. (1981) Commentary on the Aristotelian Athenaion Politeia. Oxford.Google Scholar
Robb, K. (1991) ‘The witness in Heraclitus and in early Greek law’, Monist 74: 638–76.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Roberts, D. H., Dunn, F. M. and Fowler, D. P. (eds.) (1997) Classical Closure. Reading the End in Greek and Latin Literature. Princeton.Google Scholar
Rolling, R. (2004) ‘Herodotus, human violence and the Ancient Near East’, in Karageorghis and Taifacos (eds.): 121–51.
Romm, J. S. (1992) The Edges of the Earth in Ancient Thought. Princeton.Google Scholar
Romm, J. S. (1998) Herodotus. New Haven.Google Scholar
Rood, T. C. B. (1998) Thucydides. Narrative and Explanation. Oxford.Google Scholar
Rosselini, M., and Said, S. (1978) ‘Usages des femmes et autres nomoi chez les “sauvages” d’Hérodote: essai de lecture structurale’, ASNP (ser. 3) 8: 949–1005.Google Scholar
Roux, G. (1963), Κυψελ⋯: où avait-on caché le petit Kypselos?’, Revue des études anciennes 65: 279–89.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rusten, J. (1989) Thucydides. The Peloponnesian War. Book Ⅱ. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Rutherford, R. B. (1994) ‘Learning from history: categories and case-histories’, in Osborne and Hornblower (eds.) (1994): 53–68.
Sahlins, M. (2004) Apologies to Thucydides. Understanding History as Culture and Vice Versa. Chicago.Google Scholar
Said, S. (2002a) ‘Greeks and barbarians in Euripides’ tragedies: the end of difference?’ in Harrison, T. (ed.), Greeks and Barbarians. Edinburgh: 62–100.Google Scholar
Said, S. (2002b) ‘Herodotus and tragedy’, in Bakker et al. (eds.) (2002): 117–48.
Sakellariou, M. B. (1990) Between Memory and Oblivion. The Transmission of Early Greek Historical Traditions. Athens.Google Scholar
Salmon, J. B. (1984) Wealthy Corinth. A History of the City to 338 bc. Oxford.Google Scholar
Sancisi-Weerdenburg, H. (1989) ‘Gifts in the Persian Empire’, in Briant and Herrenschmidt (eds.) (1989): 129–46.
Sancisi-Weerdenburg, H. and Kuhrt, A. (eds.) (1990) Centre and Periphery. Proceedings of the Groningen 1986 Achaemenid History Workshop, Achaemenid History Ⅳ. Leiden.Google Scholar
Sansone, D. (1985) ‘The date of Herodotus’ publication’, ICS 10: 1–10.Google Scholar
Scaife, R. (1989) ‘Alexander I in the Histories of Herodotus’, Hermes 117: 129–37.Google Scholar
Schirripa, P. (2004) ‘Il confine mobile della Tracia e la fantasia tragica: miti traci a teatro’, in id., I Traci tra l’Egeo e il Mar Nero. Milan: 65–84.Google Scholar
Seaford, R. (2003) ‘Tragic tyranny’, in Morgan (ed.) (2003): 95–115.
Scott, L. (2005). A Historical Commentary on Herodotus 6 (Mnemosyne Supplement 268). Leiden.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sélincourt, De A. (1996) Herodotus. The Histories. New edn., translated by A. De Sélincourt, revised with introduction and notes by J. Marincola. London.Google Scholar
Serghidou, A. (1995) ‘L’Altérité du Chypriote dans le discours grec antique’, in Gontier (ed.) (1995): 25–39.
Serghidou, A. (2004) ‘Herodotus and the rhetoric of slavery’, in Karageorghis and Taifacos (eds.) (2004): 179–97.
Serghidou, A. (2006) ‘Discours ethnographique et quêtes identitaires en Chypre ancienne’, in Fourrier, S. and Grivaud, G. (eds.), Identités croisées en un milieu méditerranéen. Le Cas de Chypre. Rouen: 165–87.Google Scholar
Shear, J. L. (2003) ‘Prizes from Athens: the list of Panathenaic prizes and the sacred oil’, ZPE 142: 87–108.Google Scholar
Shilleto, R. (1880) Thucydidis Ⅱ. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Silk, M. (2001) ‘Pindar meets Plato: theory, language, value, and the Classics’, in Harrison (ed.) (2001): 26–45.
Simms, R. (1988) ‘The cult of the Thracian goddess Bendis in Athens and Attica’, AncW 18: 59–76.Google Scholar
Sluiter, I. and Rosen, R. M. (eds.) (2004) Free Speech in Classical Antiquity. Leiden.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Smyth, H. W. (1956) Greek Grammar (rev. edn.). Cambridge, Mass.Google Scholar
Snodgrass, A. (1995) ‘Cyprus and early Greek history’, in Κ⋯προς απο την Προιστορ⋯α στους Νεοτερους (Cultural Foundation of the Bank of Cyprus). Nicosia: 99–123.Google Scholar
Solmsen, L. (1943) ‘Speeches in Herodotus’ account of the Ionian Revolt’, AJPh 64: 194–207.Google Scholar
Sommerstein, A. (1981) Aristophanes. Knights. Warminster.Google Scholar
Sommerstein, A. (1989) Aeschylus. Eumenides. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Sourvinou-Inwood, C. (1991) ‘Reading’ Greek Culture. Texts and Images, Rituals and Myths. Oxford.Google Scholar
Sourvinou-Inwood, C. (2002) ‘Greek perceptions of ethnicity and the ethnicity of the Macedonians’, in Castelnuovo, L. Moscati (ed.), Identità e prassi storica nel Mediterraneo greco. Milan: 173–203.Google Scholar
Sourvinou-Inwood, C. (2003) ‘Herodotus (and others) on Pelasgians: some perceptions of ethnicity’, in Derow and Parker (eds.) (2003): 103–44.
Stadter, P. A. (1992) ‘Herodotus and the Athenian arche’, ASNP (ser. 3) 22: 781–809.Google Scholar
Stadter, P. A. (2002) ‘Historical thought in ancient Greece’, in Kramer and Maza (eds.) (2002): 35–59.
Stahl, H.-P. (1975) ‘Learning through suffering? Croesus’ conversations in the history of Herodotus’, YCS 24: 1–36.Google Scholar
Stahl, J. M. (1907) Kritisch-historische Syntax des griechischen Verbums der klassischen Zeit. Heidelberg.Google Scholar
Stahl, M. (1983) ‘Tyrannis und das Problem der Macht. Die Geschichten Herodots über Kypselos und Periander von Korinth’, Hermes 111: 202–20.Google Scholar
Stanford, W. B. (1972) Ambiguity in Greek Literature. Studies in Theory and in Practice. New York and London.Google Scholar
Starkie, W. (1909) The Acharnians of Aristophanes. Amsterdam.Google Scholar
Stein, H. (1874) Herodotos. Dritter Band: Buch Ⅴ und Ⅵ. 3rd edn. Berlin.Google Scholar
Steiner, D. T. (1994) The Tyrant’s Writ. Myths and Images of Writing in Ancient Greece. Princeton.Google Scholar
Strasburger, H. (1955) ‘Herodot und das perikleische Athen’, Historia 4: 1–25 (reprinted in Marg (1965): 574–608).Google Scholar
Surikov, I. (2001) ‘Historico-geographical questions connected with Pericles’ Pontic expedition’, Ancient Civilizations from Scythia to Siberia 7: 341–66.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tancock, C. C. (1897) The Story of the Ionic Revolt and Persian War as Told by Herodotus. Selections from the Translation of Canon Rawlinson, Revised and Adapted to the Purposes of the Present Work. London.Google Scholar
Taylor, M. (1981) The Tyrant Slayers. New York.Google Scholar
Thomas, R. (1989) Oral Tradition and Written Record in Classical Athens. Cambridge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Thomas, R. (1993) ‘Performance and written publication in Herodotus and the Sophistic generation’, in Kullmann, W. and Althoff, J., Vermittlung und Tradierung von Wissen in der griechischen Kultur. Tübingen: 225–44.Google Scholar
Thomas, R. (2000) Herodotus in Context. Ethnography, Science and the Art of Persuasion. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Thomas, R. (2001a) ‘Ethnicity, genealogy, and Hellenism in Herodotus’, in Malkin (ed.) (2001): 213–86.
Thomas, R. (2001b) ‘Herodotus’ Histories and the floating gap’, in Luraghi (ed.) (2001a): 198–210.
Thomas, R. (2003) ‘Prose performance texts. Epideixis and written publication in the late fifth and early fourth centuries’, in Yunis, H. (ed.), Written Texts and the Rise of Literate Culture in Ancient Greece. Cambridge: 162–88.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Thomas, R. (2004) ‘Herodotus, Ionia and the Athenian Empire’, in Karageorghis and Taifacos (eds.) (2004): 27–42.
Thompson, S. (1958) Motif-Index of Folk-Literature, Vol. Ⅵ, Index. Copenhagen.Google Scholar
Töpffer, J. (1889) Attische Genealogie. Berlin.Google Scholar
Tozzi, P. (1978). La rivolta ionica. Pisa.Google Scholar
Veen, J. E. (1996). The Significant and the Insignificant. Five Studies in Herodotus’ View of History. Amsterdam.Google Scholar
Vandiver, E. (1991) Heroes in Herodotus. The Interaction of Myth and History. Frankfurt-am-Main.Google Scholar
Vernant, J.-P. (1982a). ‘From Oedipus to Periander: lameness, tyranny, incest, in legend and history’, Arethusa 15: 19–38.Google Scholar
Vernant, J.-P. (1982b) ‘La Belle Mort et le cadavre outragé’, in Gnoli and Vernant (eds.): 45–76.
Vernant, J.-P. (1983) Myth and Thought among the Greeks. London (French original 1965, 2nd edn. 1985).Google Scholar
Virilio, P. (1986) Speed and Politics. An Essay on Dromology. New York.Google Scholar
Vlastos, G. (1953) ‘Isonomia’, AJPh 64: 337–66.Google Scholar
Vlastos, G. (1964) ‘Ἰσονομ⋯α πολιτικ⋯’, in Mau and Schmidt (eds.) (1964): 1–35 (reprinted in Vlastos (1973): 164–73).
Vlastos, G. (1973) Platonic Studies. Princeton.Google Scholar
Wohl, V. (2002) Love Among the Ruins. The Erotics of Democracy in Classical Athens. Princeton.Google Scholar
Reden, Von S. (1995) Exchange in Ancient Greece. London.Google Scholar
Voutiras, E. (2000) ‘Le Cadavre et le serpent, ou l’héroïsation manquée de Cléomène de Sparte’, in Pirenne-Delforge and Suàrez de la Torre (eds.) (2000): 377–94.
Walbank, M. B (1987) ‘Athens honours Evagoras’, EMC 31: 229–33.Google Scholar
Walker, H. J. (1998) Theseus and Athens. Oxford.Google Scholar
Wallinga, H. T. (1984) ‘The Ionian Revolt’, Mnemosyne 37: 401–37.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Waters, K. H. (1971) Herodotus on Tyrants and Despots. A Study in Objectivity. Wiesbaden.Google Scholar
Waters, K. H. (1985) Herodotos the Historian. His Problems, Methods and Originality. London and Sydney.Google Scholar
Watkin, H. J. (1987) ‘The Cypriote surrender to Persia’, JHS 107: 154–63.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Weçowski, M. (1996) ‘Ironie et histoire’, AncSoc 27: 205–58.Google Scholar
West, M. (1966) Hesiod. Theogony, Oxford.Google Scholar
West, S. R. (1991) ‘Herodotus’ portrait of Hecataeus’, JHS 111: 144–60.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
West, S. R. (1999) ‘Sophocles’ Antigone and Herodotus Book Three’, in Griffin, J. (ed.), Sophocles Revisited. Oxford: 109–36.Google Scholar
West, S. R. (2004) ‘Herodotus and Scythia’, in Karageorghis and Taifacos (eds.) (2004): 73–89.
Westlake, H. D. (1969) ‘Irrelevant notes and minor excursuses in Thucydides’, in id., Essays on the Greek Historians and Greek History. New York: 1–39.Google Scholar
Wiesehofer, J. (1990) ‘Zypern unter persicher Herrschaft’, in Sancisi-Weerdenburg and Kuhrt (eds.) (1990): 239–52.
Wilamowitz-Moellendorf, U. (1931) Der Glaube der Hellenen, Vol. Ⅰ. Berlin.Google Scholar
Winton, R. (2000). ‘Herodotus, Thucydides and the sophists’, in Rowe, C. and Schofield, M. (eds.), The Cambridge History of Greek and Roman Political Thought. Cambridge: 89–121.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wood, H. (1972) The Histories of Herodotus. An Analysis of the Formal Structure. The Hague and Paris.Google Scholar
Woodhead, W. (1928) Etymologizing in Greek Literature from Homer to Philo Judaeus. Toronto.Google Scholar
Woodman, A. J. (1995) ‘Praecipuum munus annalium: the construction, convention and context of Tacitus, Annals 3.65.1’, MH 52: 111–26.Google Scholar
Yon, M. (1981) ‘Chypre entre Grèce et les Perses. La Conscience grecque de Chypre entre 530 et 330 a.c.’, Ktèma 6: 49–57.Google Scholar
Yon, M. (1995) ‘Kition et la mer à l’époque classique et hellénistique’, in Karageorghis and Michaelides (eds.) (1995): 119–30.
Yoshio, N. (1988) ‘Isegoria in Herodotus’, Historia 37: 257–75.Google Scholar
Zacharia, K. (2001) ‘“The rock of the nightingale”, kinship diplomacy and Sophocles’ Tereus’, in Budelmann and Michelakis (eds.) (2001): 91–112.
Zacharia, K. (2003) Converging Truths. Euripides’ Ion and the Athenian Quest for Self-Definition. Leiden.Google Scholar
Zörner, G. (1971) Kypselos und Pheidon von Argos. Untersuchungen zur frühen griechischen Tyrannis. Marburg.Google Scholar

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure coreplatform@cambridge.org is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

  • Bibliography
  • Edited by Elizabeth Irwin, Columbia University, New York, Emily Greenwood, University of St Andrews, Scotland
  • Book: Reading Herodotus
  • Online publication: 22 September 2009
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511482205.014
Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

  • Bibliography
  • Edited by Elizabeth Irwin, Columbia University, New York, Emily Greenwood, University of St Andrews, Scotland
  • Book: Reading Herodotus
  • Online publication: 22 September 2009
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511482205.014
Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

  • Bibliography
  • Edited by Elizabeth Irwin, Columbia University, New York, Emily Greenwood, University of St Andrews, Scotland
  • Book: Reading Herodotus
  • Online publication: 22 September 2009
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511482205.014
Available formats
×