A Companion to the Ancient Greek Language
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The Use of Gamma in Place of Digamma in Ancient Greek
Mnemosyne (2020) 1-22 brill.com/mnem The Use of Gamma in Place of Digamma in Ancient Greek Francesco Camagni University of Manchester, UK [email protected] Received August 2019 | Accepted March 2020 Abstract Originally, Ancient Greek employed the letter digamma ( ϝ) to represent the /w/ sound. Over time, this sound disappeared, alongside the digamma that denoted it. However, to transcribe those archaic, dialectal, or foreign words that still retained this sound, lexicographers employed other letters, whose sound was close enough to /w/. Among these, there is the letter gamma (γ), attested mostly but not only in the Lexicon of Hesychius. Given what we know about the sound of gamma, it is difficult to explain this use. The most straightforward hypothesis suggests that the scribes who copied these words misread the capital digamma (Ϝ) as gamma (Γ). Presenting new and old evidence of gamma used to denote digamma in Ancient Greek literary and documen- tary papyri, lexicography, and medieval manuscripts, this paper refutes this hypoth- esis, and demonstrates that a peculiar evolution in the pronunciation of gamma in Post-Classical Greek triggered a systematic use of this letter to denote the sound once represented by the digamma. Keywords Ancient Greek language – gamma – digamma – Greek phonetics – Hesychius – lexicography © Francesco Camagni, 2020 | doi:10.1163/1568525X-bja10018 This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the CC BY 4.0Downloaded license. from Brill.com09/30/2021 01:54:17PM via free access 2 Camagni 1 Introduction It is well known that many ancient Greek dialects preserved the /w/ sound into the historical period, contrary to Attic-Ionic and Koine Greek. -
Atticism in Achilles Tatius: an Examination of Linguistic Purism in Achilles Tatius’ Leucippe and Clitophon
ATTICISM IN ACHILLES TATIUS: AN EXAMINATION OF LINGUISTIC PURISM IN ACHILLES TATIUS’ LEUCIPPE AND CLITOPHON By Sonja Mary Gammage Submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the Classics Programme at the University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban (Howard College) Supervisor: Prof. John Hilton 2018 COLLEGE OF HUMANITIES DECLARATION - PLAGIARISM I, Sonja Mary Gammage, declare that 1. The research reported in this thesis, except where otherwise indicated, is my original research. 2. This thesis has not been submitted for any degree or examination at any other university. 3. This thesis does not contain other persons’ data, pictures, graphs or other information, unless specifically acknowledged as being sourced from other persons. 4. This thesis does not contain other persons’ writing, unless specifically acknowledged as being sourced from other researchers. Where other written sources have been quoted, then: a. Their words have been re-written but the general information attributed to them has been referenced b. Where their exact words have been used, then their writing has been placed in italics and inside quotation marks, and referenced. 5. This thesis does not contain text, graphics or tables copied and pasted from the Internet, unless specifically acknowledged, and the source being detailed in the thesis and in the References sections. Signed ………………………………… Date ………………… i ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS I am enormously grateful to those that provided monetary support for this PhD. The financial assistance of the National Research Foundation (NRF) towards this research is hereby acknowledged. (Opinions expressed and conclusions arrived at, are those of the author and are not necessarily to be attributed to the NRF). -
Mods Handbook 2022 Version 1.2 Issued 14 December 2020
UNIVERSITY OF OXFORD Board of the Faculty of Classics Board of the Faculty of Philosophy Mods Handbook for candidates taking Honour Moderations in Classics in 2022 Faculty of Classics Ioannou Centre for Classical & Byzantine Studies 66 St Giles’ Oxford OX1 3LU www.classics.ox.ac.uk Contents Dates of Full Terms . 4 Disclaimer . 4 Course Details . 5 Useful Links . 5 Statement regarding the impact of Covid-19. 6 1. Introduction . 7 2. Aims and Objectives of Classics. 8 3. Classics Mods. 9 4. Your Tutor. 10 5. Studying Classics: reading the texts. 10 6. Lectures. 11 7. Teaching Expectations, Tutorials, Classes and Collections. 12 8. Language Classes. 13 9. Essays . 14 10. Commentaries . 15 11. Plagiarism. 23 12. Bibliographies. 25 13. Examination Conventions. 26 14. Afterwards. 26 15. Options in Classics Mods. 27 15.1. Honour Moderations in Classics IA. 28 15.2. Honour Moderations in Classics IB. 33 15.3. Honour Moderations in Classics IC. 38 15.4. Honour Moderations in Classics IIA. 41 15.5. Honour Moderations in Classics IIB. 45 2 16. Paper Descriptions for all Mods Courses. 48 17. Teaching Provision for Mods Papers . 57 18. Prescribed Editions . 58 19. List of Faculty and Sub-Faculty Officers. 60 3 Dates of Full Terms Michaelmas 2020: Sunday 11 October – Saturday 5 December 2020 Hilary 2021: Sunday 17 January – Saturday 13 March 2021 Trinity 2021: Sunday 25 April – Saturday 19 June 2021 Michaelmas 2021*: Sunday 10 October – Saturday 4 December 2021 Hilary 2022*: Sunday 16 January – Saturday 12 March 2022 Trinity 2022*: Sunday 24 April – Saturday 18 June 2022 * provisional Disclaimer This handbook applies to students starting Honour Moderations in Classics in Michaelmas Term 2020 and sitting the examination in Hilary Term 2022. -
Cambridge University Reporter No 6607, Wednesday 17 February 2021, Vol 151, No 19
CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY REPORTER No 6607 Wednesday 17 February 2021 Vol cli No 19 CONTENTS Notices Obituaries Calendar 357 Obituary Notices 372 Report of the Council on the establishment of an Graces Endowment Fund Supervisory Body: Notice Grace submitted to the Regent House in response to Discussion remarks 357 on 17 February 2021 372 Changes to postgraduate governance: Corrections 358 Acta Accounts of the Colleges 358 Approval of Grace submitted to the Vacancies, appointments, etc. Regent House on 3 February 2021 372 Election 359 Vacancies in the University 359 End of the Official Part of the ‘Reporter’ Events, Courses, etc. Report of Discussion: 9 February 2021 Announcement of lectures, seminars, etc. 359 Remarks on the Supplementary Report of the Regulations for examinations Board of Scrutiny on Allocations from the Archaeology Tripos 360 Chest for 2020–21 373 Economics Tripos 361 College Notices Human, Social and Political Sciences Tripos 361 Elections 375 Latin-American Studies for the M.Phil. Degree by thesis 363 Development Studies for the M.Phil. Degree by advanced study 363 Economics for the M.Phil. Degree by advanced study 363 Social Anthropological Research for the M.Phil. Degree by advanced study 364 Entrepreneurship for the M.St. Degree: Correction 364 Notices by Faculty Boards, etc. Archaeology Tripos, 2020–21 364 Historical Tripos, 2020–21 369 History and Politics Tripos, 2020–21: Variable papers 369 Human, Social and Political Sciences Tripos, Part II, 2020–21 371 PUBLISHED BY AUTHORITY 357 CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY REPORTER 17 February 2021 NOTICES Calendar 27 February, Saturday. Congregation of the Regent House via videoconference at 11 a.m. -
SCHOLIA, COMMENTARIES, and LEXICA on SPECIFIC LITERARY WORKS 2 Scholia, Commentaries, and Lexica on Specific Literary Works
18 SCHOLIA, COMMENTARIES, AND LEXICA ON SPECIFIC LITERARY WORKS 2 Scholia, Commentaries, and Lexica on Specific Literary Works 2.1 ARCHAIC AND CLASSICAL POETRY This category includes the most famous and most often cited scholia. By far the most important are the Homer scholia, but those on Pindar and the Attic drama- tists are also significant. 2.1.1 Homer Ancient scholarship on Homer was extensive and of high quality, for the best scholars of antiquity devoted much of their time and energy to the Homeric poems. Work on Homer that could be described as scholarship goes back at least to the classical period and probably to the sixth century bc, and editing the text of Homer was one of the main tasks of the first Alexandrian scholars. Zenodotus, Aristophanes of Byzantium, and Aristarchus probably all produced editions of the Iliad and Odyssey, and Aristarchus wrote extensive commentaries, while Zenodotus and Aristophanes compiled glossaries of primarily Homeric words. In addition, the early and persistent use of Homer as a school text meant that there was a tradi- tion of school exegesis that reached back as far as the classical period. Though none of the very early work on Homer survives in its original form, a surprising amount is preserved in various later compilations, so we often know, for example, the read- ings of several different Alexandrian scholars for a particular passage, and even some of the arguments behind these readings (although the arguments preserved in later sources cannot always be assumed to be those of the editor himself). Two principal sources for the ancient scholarship on Homer survive: the scholia and Eustathius’ commentaries, both of which are gigantic works filling many vol- umes in modern editions. -
Francesca Schironi from Alexandria to Babylon
Francesca Schironi From Alexandria to Babylon ≥ Sozomena Studies in the Recovery of Ancient Texts Edited on behalf of the Herculaneum Society by Alessandro Barchiesi, Robert Fowler, Dirk Obbink and Nigel Wilson Vol. 4 Walter de Gruyter · Berlin · New York Francesca Schironi From Alexandria to Babylon Near Eastern Languages and Hellenistic Erudition in the Oxyrhynchus Glossary (P.Oxy. 1802 ϩ 4812) Walter de Gruyter · Berlin · New York Țȍ Printed on acid-free paper which falls within the guidelines of the ANSI to ensure permanence and durability. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Schironi, Francesca. From Alexandria to Babylon : Near Eastern languages and Hellenistic erudition in the Oxyrhynchus glossary (P.Oxy. 1802 ϩ 4812) / Francesca Schironi. p. cm. Ϫ (Sozomena. Studies in the recovery of ancient texts ; vol. 4) “The Oxyrhynchus Glossary that is the object of the present study was previously published by Arthur S. Hunt as P.Oxy. 15.1802” Ϫ Introduction. Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 978-3-11-020693-7 (hardcover : alk. paper) 1. Semitic languagesϪLexicographyϪManuscripts. 2. Ma- nuscripts, Greek (Papyri) Ϫ Egypt Ϫ Bahnasa. 3. Bahnasa (Egypt) Ϫ Antiquties. 4. Oxyrhynchus papyri. I. Hunt, Ar- thur S. (Arthur Surridge), 1871Ϫ1934. II. Title. PJ3075.S45 2009 4831.028Ϫdc22 2009005184 ISBN 978-3-11-020693-7 Bibliographic information published by the Deutsche Nationalbibliothek The Deutsche Nationalbibliothek lists this publication in the Deutsche Nationalbibliografie; detailed bibliographic data are available in the Internet at http://dnb.d-nb.de. Ą Copyright 2009 by Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG, D-10785 Berlin. All rights reserved, including those of translation into foreign languages. -
Bulletin 43 (2014)
Chair’s Report 2013-2014 Basket weaving Frigidus agricolam si quando continet imber, multa, forent quae mox caelo properanda sereno, maturare datur: durum procudit arator uomeris obtunsi dentem, cauat arbore lintres, aut pecori signum aut numeros impressit aceruis. exacuunt alii uallos furcasque bicornis atque Amerina parant lentae retinacula uiti. Virgil Georgics I.259-265 Whenever a cold shower keeps the farmer indoors, he can prepare at leisure much that ere long in clear weather must needs be hurried. The ploughman hammers out the hard tooth of the blunted share, scoops troughs from trees, or sets a brand upon his flocks and labels upon his corn heaps. Others sharpen stakes and two-pronged forks, or make bands of Amerian willows for the limber vine. Now let the pliant basket be woven of briar twigs, now roast corn by the fire, now grind it on the stone. (trans Fairclough) It is that time again. Once again we have reached the point in the five-year cycle when all that can be done is done, and we must just wait to see what the gods of REF will bring. A nervous time, since we know it will not bring much more money. An exercise devised as a means of distributing bounty and promoting research will certainly be used by some senior management teams to decide how to distribute pain, or at least cuts. Our panel will produce measured and careful assessments, but these will be boiled down into crude rankings. How each of us is rated against each other may matter less than how we are rated against other departments in our own universities. -
Anna Morpurgo Davies (Née Anna Morpurgo) Was Born on 21 June
Anna Morpurgo Davies, 1937-2014 Anna Morpurgo Davies, Diebold Professor Emeritus of Comparative Philology at the University of Oxford (FBA, honorary DBE) and one of the foremost and best-loved comparative philologists of the twentieth century, died on 27 September 2014. (Left to right:) Henry Hoenigswald, Stanley Insler, Anna Morpurgo Davies, George Dunkel, Jay Jasanoff, and Stephanie Jamison at the first East Coast Indo-European Conference (Yale, 1982). Many thanks to Ives Goddard for the photograph. She was born Anna Elbina Morpurgo on 21 June 1937 in Milan, to a secular Jewish family. Her father, a successful engineer, lost his job in 1939 in the wake of anti- Jewish legislation. After searching desperately for alternative employment he accepted a post in Brazil, but died before taking it up. Anna’s mother, Maria Morpurgo (née Castelnuovo), moved to Rome with Anna and her three older brothers. On 16 October 1943 Maria had gone out early with the eldest child to buy food, and met a woman who had seen soldiers carry a woman and baby out of a house and throw them into a lorry. She ran home in terror and left immediately with the children. They survived thanks to several families who risked their lives, and a hospital that offered shelter to Jews by disguising them as patients. Anna seldom mentioned these years to colleagues and students, but they left a deep impression. In 2005 she gave an address for Holocaust Memorial Day in Oxford at Somerville College, combining searing personal memories with clear-headed and remarkably generous historical analysis. -
Report of the Oxford Centre for Hebrew and Jewish Studies 2015–2016
Report of the Oxford Centre for Hebrew and Jewish Studies 2015–2016 Report of the Oxford Centre for Hebrew and Jewish Studies 2017–2018 Report of the Oxford Centre for Hebrew and Jewish Studies Report of the Oxford Centre for Hebrew and Jewish Studies 2017–2018 oxford centre for hebrew and jewish studies oxford centre for hebrew and jewish studies The Clarendon Institute Walton Street Oxford ox1 2hg Tel: 01865 610422 Email: [email protected] Website: www.ochjs.ac.uk The Oxford Centre for Hebrew and Jewish Studies is a company, limited by guarantee, incorporated in England, Registered No. 1109384 (Registered Charity No. 309720). The Oxford Centre for Hebrew and Jewish Studies is a tax-deductible organization within the United States under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code (Employer Identification number 13–2943469). Copyright © Oxford Centre for Hebrew and Jewish Studies, 2018 All rights reserved issn 1368 9096 Front cover illustration: Clarendon Institute Edited by Dr Jeremy Schonfield Designed by Tony Kitzinger Printed and bound at the Dorset Press, Dorchester Contents President’s Message 8 Highlights of the 2017–2018 Academic Year 10 People 19 Academic Staff 20 Board of Governors 23 Academic Activities of the Centre for Hebrew and Jewish Studies Oxford Seminar in Advanced Jewish Studies: Greek Expanded, Greek Transformed: The Vocabulary of the Septuagint and the Cultural World of the Translators The Vocabulary of the Septuagint and the Cultural World of the Translators Professor Jan Joosten and Professor Teresa Morgan -
SYNTACTICAL PECULIARITIES of RELATIVE CLAUSES in the ARMENIAN NEW TESTAMENT* By
SYNTACTICAL PECULIARITIES OF RELATIVE CLAUSES IN THE ARMENIAN NEW TESTAMENT* by ROBIN MEYEr Wolfson College, Oxford This paper endeavours to show that, at least as far as the syntax of relative clauses is concerned, the form of the Armenian language employed in the Bible translation does not fully correspond to that found in non-translated Armenian literature. It will be shown that, as argued by LAFONTAINE AND COUlIE (1983), next to Classical and Hellenising Armenian, we must construe a pre-Hellenising layer of the language. This layer, it is argued, is not to be separated from the Yunaban Dproc‘; instead, both form part of a continuum of Greek influence on Armenian. This is evident in the applicability of different case matching restrictions in Bib- lical texts compared to the works of Agat‘angełos, Eznik, and Ełišē, specifically in free and light-headed relative clauses. The case of the relative pronoun in Greek relative clauses can be determined by the matrix clause in Biblical Arme- nian, whereas in non-translated literature such structures do generally not occur. It will further be argued that cases of Armenian ‘relative attraction’ present almost exclusively in free relative clauses; taking as its basis patterns put forward by GrOSU (1994) and KEENAN AND COmrIE (1977), these cases of attraction, together with evidence from Greek, will be taken as indication for the existence of what may be called Discourse Accessibility Hierarchy. Keywords: relative clauses, syntax, Hellenising School, historical linguistics, Classical Armenian 0 Classical Armenian is traditionally taken as the literary language into which the Armenian Bible was translated in the beginning of the 5th cen- tury CE. -
Lexical Accent in Cupeño, Hittite, and Indo-European
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA Los Angeles Lexical Accent in Cupeño, Hittite, and Indo-European A dissertation submitted in partial satisfaction of the requirements for the degree Doctor of Philosophy in Indo-European Studies by Anthony David Yates 2017 © Copyright by Anthony David Yates 2017 ABSTRACT OF THE DISSERTATION Lexical Accent in Cupeño, Hittite, and Indo-European by Anthony David Yates Doctor of Philosophy in Indo-European Studies University of California, Los Angeles, 2017 Professor H. Craig Melchert, Chair This dissertation develops optimality-theoretic analyses of word-level stress assignment in two languages with lexical accent, Cupeño (Takic, Uto-Aztecan) and Hittite (Anatolian, Indo- European); it also assesses the implications of word stress in Hittite and the other Anatolian languages for the reconstruction of stress assignment in Proto-Indo-European. I argue that stress assignment in Cupeño is governed by the BASIC ACCENTUATION PRINCI- PLE (BAP; Kiparsky and Halle 1977): stress is assigned to the leftmost lexically accented mor- pheme, else to the word’s left edge. This analysis is compared to that of Alderete (2001c), who argues that Cupeño shows accentual root faithfulness — i.e., that the accentual properties of roots are privileged over non-root morphemes. I show that the BAP analysis is both simpler and attains greater empirical coverage than the root faithfulness analysis, which fails to account for certain attested stress patterns that are captured under the BAP analysis. Thus reanalyzed, Cupeño has two important typological implications. First, without support from Cupeño, root faithfulness may be unattested as a feature of lexical accent systems. Second, Cupeño provides a clear typological parallel for the ancient IE languages on the basis of which the BAP was posited — in particular, Vedic Sanskrit — as well as for Hittite, where I argue that it is also operative. -
Defining the Art of Grammar: Ancient Perceptions of Γραμματική and Grammatica
TURUN YLIOPISTON JULKAISUJA ANNALES UNIVERSITATIS TURKUENSIS ____________________________________________________________________ SARJA – SER. B OSA – TOM. 379 HUMANIORA Defining the art of grammar: Ancient perceptions of γραμματική and grammatica Minna Seppänen Academic dissertation to be publicly discussed, with the permission of the Faculty of Humanities of the University of Turku, in the Auditorium of Quantum, on 7 March 2014, at 12 noon. Department of Classics TURUN YLIOPISTO UNIVERSITY OF TURKU Turku 2014 TURUN YLIOPISTON JULKAISUJA ANNALES UNIVERSITATIS TURKUENSIS ____________________________________________________________________ SARJA – SER. B OSA – TOM. 379 HUMANIORA Defining the art of grammar: Ancient perceptions of γραμματική and grammatica Minna Seppänen TURUN YLIOPISTO UNIVERSITY OF TURKU Turku 2014 Minna Seppänen Department of Classics University of Turku (School of Languages and Translation studies), Finland Custos: Professor Jyri Vaahtera, University of Turku Opponent: Dr. Martti Leiwo, University of Helsinki External examiners: Dr. Casper De Jonge, University of Leiden Prof. Emeritus Toivo Viljamaa, University of Turku Supervisors: Dr. Anneli Luhtala, University of Helsinki Dr. Jaana Vaahtera, University of Turku The originality of this thesis has been checked in accordance with the University of Turku quality assurance system using the Turnitin OriginalityCheck service. ISBN 978-951-29-5671-5 (PRINT) ISBN 978-951-29-5672-2 (PDF) ISSN 0082-6987 Painosalama Oy – Turku, Finland 2014. Tiivistelmä TURUN YLIOPISTO Humanistinen