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Summaries of Periodicals

The Classical Review / Volume 9 / Issue 03 / April 1895, pp 188 - 189 DOI: 10.1017/S0009840X00201662, Published online: 27 October 2009

Link to this article: http://journals.cambridge.org/abstract_S0009840X00201662

How to cite this article: (1895). Summaries of Periodicals. The Classical Review, 9, pp 188-189 doi:10.1017/ S0009840X00201662

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Downloaded from http://journals.cambridge.org/CAR, IP address: 130.133.8.114 on 08 May 2015 188 THE CLASSICAL REVIEW. neighbourhood the two ancient harbours of Knossos, the other sites which have been identified, or of Mation and Heraklion, were identified, Mation on which the old identifications have been confirmed, the site of the present Candia, Heraklion at are the following: and Cedreae, as in Kiepert's Amnissos. Lykastos is at Kanli Kastelli, and map. The Kirau-Dagh behind is wrongly Arkadia, where Spratt placed it, on the heights of called Lida. The basin of Pisi represents Pisye, Ascekephala, its ruins extending as far as the hill and Moughla, . is not at Vasilika, of Tshifoot Kastelli. At Anavlochos there are traces but perhaps on Orak Island, further west. The- of another important Mycenaean settlement. At angela is at Etrim on the Kaplau-Dagh. At the harbour of Haghios Nikolaos, the site of Latos Alezeitin in the Mangli-Chiflik valley, is a remark- pros Kaniara, some important inscriptions were able Carian town, with a number of houses, and one found, one being a dedication of a shrine of Aphro- building with fluted piers. Pcdasa is at Karaji- dite, and another giving the name of a new tribe, hissar ; Cindya at Sirtmesh Kale, near Utch-bonnar, the Anaischeis. The most important results have and the temple of Artemis Cindyas on the opposite been obtained in the extreme eastern corner of the of the stream. It may be that there were two island, the region of the Eteocretans. The existence places called , one at Karaji-hissar, the other of a city named Sitaia in ancient times (the modern perhaps at Ghiuk Chalar, where there was an Athena Sitia) is proved by an inscription of Macedonian cult. is at Assarlik, not at Chifoot Kale. times recording a treaty between Praisos on the one Azajik and Borghaz near Gerehsi, on the coast hand and Sitaia and Stelai on the other. Between N". W. of , may be the Pelea and Madnasa of Praisos and the eastern coast is an almost continuous the tribute lists. Termile is a small fortress above series of ancient remains. At Aspra Kharakia, near the bay west of Fareliab, near the village Tremili. Zakro, there are remains which may be those of the The Carian Telmessus, with its Apollo-temple, has temple of Zeus Diktaios. The objects of Eteocretan been proved by an inscription to be represented by art collected on this campaign were chiefly very rude the ruins at the cliffs of Karadagh, above Ghibl. terracotta figures, of a style connected on the one Between Ghiol and Ghidl-Liman Bay is side with Mycenaean, on the other with Hittite (not at Tarandus Island, which is Taiamptns).3 art.' G. F. HILL. ASIA MIKOU. C'aria.—Messrs. W. E. Paton and J. L. Myres have explored the part of bounded by the Chron. 1890, p. 246) with the head of Artemis on Gulf of on the north, and that of Ceramus on the obv. and X A with a lance-head on the rev. the south, and extending from the peninsula of They are attributed by Six to Chalcia near , Myndns to near Moughla (Mobolla) and Giova but with great hesitation. The fabric of the coins (Idyma). There is evidence of an extensive olive- is not unsuited to the Carian mainland. The other culture on the range, which confirms the coins described by Six (I.e.) with a laureate head of record of the Milesian oil-trade. The site of Zeus on the obv., 2 T with a lance-head, all in a Chalcetor has been found at Kara-Koyoun, a few wreath, on the rev., may, as Imhoof-Blumer (Monn. miles south of (Hyromos) ; there is a Or. p. 324) suggests, belong to . These temple of Zeus Stratius, with spear and shield on coins, if the above suggestions are correct, must be the antae, at Baghajik, north of Mandeleah.* Among connected with the Zeus Stratius cult, of the existence of which an instance is found at Baghajik. 1 Academy, March 2. G. F. H.] 2 [To Chalcetor may perhaps be attributed the 3 Athenaeum, February 23, 1895. small fourth-century copper coins (J. P. Six in Num.

SUMMARIES OF PERIODICALS.

Journal of Philology. Vol. xxiii. No. 46. life of Lucr. contained in Borgia's preface to his 1895. edition, and taken from Pontanus, are derived from The later Platonism, R. G. Bury. On the Par- Suetonius De Viris Ilhistribus through the medium menides and Sophist, with special reference to the of some grammarian. On the date of the 'Airo- views of Messrs. Jackson, Apelt, and Tocco, whom rfKecrnarixd of Manetho, R. Garnett. Fixes the lie finds ' useful rather as pointing out each other's birth of Manetho to A.D. 80 from the nativity given deficiencies, and so leading to a more true and com- by the poet himself, and the date of the poem to prehensive view of Platonism, than as severally pro- the reign of Hadrian. On the Codex Pamphili and pounding acceptable explanations.' A supplement Date of Euthalivs, F. C. Conybeare. The Brit. Mus. to the Apparatus Criticus of Claudian, J. P. Post- Armenian cod. of Apocalypse, Acts and Epistles is gate. A collation of a MS., in the Gale collection, the best representative of the cod. Pamphili. The of Claudian's xxv. (epithalamium Palladii) and xxx. common of the Armenian version and cod. {Laus Serenae). Duals in Homer, A. Platt. The H of the is probably due to Euthalius, the dual of the historic tenses is not as a rule augmented, date of whose activity is A.D. 396 not A.D. 458. and if wo assume that the augment in these tenses Various Conjectures III., AV. Headlam. Passages is rarest in the earliest parts, the facts support emended from Philostratus, Heliodorus, Achilles Dr. Leaf's scheme of disintegration. Homerica, Tatius, Longus, Diog. Laert., Oppian, Trag. Graec. A. Platt. Various notes and conjectures. New Fragm., Com. Attic. Fragm., Euripides, Anthol. details from Suetonius' Life of Lucretius, J. Masson. Graec, Choricius, Aeschylus, and the Scholia to It is maintained that some extracts relating to the Aeschylus and to Aristophanes. THE CLASSICAL REVIEW. 189

American Journal of Philology. Whole No. passagss from Seneca's letters and ad Polyb. 8, 2 ; 60. Dec. 1894. Gell. xv. 12; Glossal'. Amplon. Sccundum; and Agglutination and Adaptation /., E. W. Fay. Servius on Aen. vii. 691. An attempt to trace some of the agglutinative pro- cesses of the Aryan language out of which the Rheinisches Museum. Vol. 1. Part I. 1895. inflections of the derived languages were developed. Paralipomena, E. Rohde. A beginning is here Critical Notes on Plato's Laws IV.-VI., W. R. Paton. made of the publication of some excursuses which Notes prompted by Mr. Conybeare's study of the were not appended to the author's Psyche. (1) The Armenian version [see A.J.P. xiv. 335 and xv. 31], Harpies are explained as standing in close connexion and tending to strengthen, from internal evidence, with the realm of souls and even having their abode his confidence in the value of that version. The there. (2) The Erinys is in essence the soul of an versification of the old English poem , injured dead person seeking for itself revenge and M. R. Bradshaw. New suggestions on the Ciris, satisfaction. (3) A defence of Psyche against the Robinson Ellis. These are notes jnstifying Prof. criticism of E. Meyer in his ' Geschichte des Alter- Ellis' new text of the Ciris for Postgate's Corpus thums.' Die vaticanische Ariadne und die dritte Poetarum Latinornm, and are a sequel to the Elegie des Propers, Th. Birt. The Ariadne of Pro- writer's two previous arti es in vol. viii. of this pertius was not a statue, like the Vatican Ariadne, Review. Next come some Corrections and Additions but rather a representation in relief, or more probably to Schmalz's Latcinische Syntax, by W. P. Mustard, a painting. Lessing und Reiskes zu Aesop, E. Foerster. and a Note on the etymology of even (evening), which An account of a copy made in 1772 by Madame J. A. Harrison considers to mean the time of the Reiske of a MS. of Aesop at Augsburg, which was ebbing, waning, light. There is a review, by sent by her to Lessing and is now in the Univ. H. Oertel, of Smyth's Sounds and Inflections of the Library at Breslau with marginal notes and cor- Greek Dialects. • Ionic. ' To those whose work is in rections by Lessing. Die Tarquinischen Sibyllen- the text-criticism of the various Ionic writers the Bucher, E. Hoffmann. Describes the form which author has here given a firm basis on which to the cultus of the Cumaean Sibyl took^and how the stand.' Prof. Gildersleeve gives one of his interesting circle of the gods worshipped by the Romans was and characteristic dissertations on Pindar in a thereby increased. Die Abfassungszeit des Octavius favourable review of Fraccaroli's Ze Odi di Pindaro, des Minucius Felix, M. Schanz. Against the general and Jurenka's Ueber die Wichtigkeit, die gegenwdr- opinion that Min. Felix borrowed from Tertullian tigen Ruhtungen und die Aufgaben der Pindar- and composed his dialogue about the middle of the Studien, and the same writer's Novae lectiones 3rd cent. A.D., it is here maintained that the time Pindaricae. There are Brief Mentions of Prof. of composition was in the reign of Antoninus. Robinson Ellis' Inaugural Lecture on the Fables of Phaedrus, the use of rp6vtp and rpfaov, Tozer's MISCELLANEOUS. Varia, L. Radermacher. On Selections from Strabo, and vol. 2 of the Studi Diodor. xvii. 11, 5, Dio Chrys. vii. 117, Lesbon. italiani difllologia classica (1894). protrep. p. 172 St., Plut. praec. ger. rei publ. 814 C and morr. 777 B. Bruchstuck eines Hexameters, Th. Kock. From the Scholia of the Geneva Iliad MS. Mnemoysne, N.S. Vol. xxiii. Part I. 1895. Ein Vorbild des Herodas, 0. Hense. On the ixureis Ad Anthologiam Graecam, H. v. Herwerden. A of Eubulos. Zu Menander von Effiesos und Laetos, series of conjectures based on Stadtmueller's edition. F. Biihl. The terminus ante quern for Laetos is the De templis Romanis, I. M. J. Valeton. A long time of Alexander Polyhistor. Uebersehenes, H. article, continued from vol. 21, p. 440 and to be ITsener. (1) On the Life of the Abbot Hypatios by further continued. The first part is on Limitatio his pupil Kallinikos. (2) A contribution to the and confutes the commonly-received opinion that religious history of Asia Minor from the life of this was an art of the augurs and originated with Theodoros of Sykeon. (3) Further evidence of the them. Next are discussed the various uses of old rock- and stone-worship in Asia Minor. Nachtrag temples among the Romans, including under that Zum Lexicon ilessanense de iota ascripto, H. Rabe. term not only buildings, but every locus inauguratus. Ein Fragment des Ennius, E. Wb'lfflin. gladiis Lastly a section deals with the pomerium and geritur res in Liv. ix. 41, 18 is probably from Enn. the ceremonies therewith connected. Ad in- Zu Lateinischen Dichtern, M. Manitius. (1) On the scriptiones quasdam Rhodias observations, H. van poem De laude Pisonis. (2) A fragment of Cic.'s Gelder. A more complete account of two inscrip- Translation of Homer in S. Aug.'s Civitas Dei. tions lately found in the island and edited by Roehl (3) On the Mimograph Marullus. Zur Anthologia in 1877. Ad Lucilium, C. M. Francken. Emends Latina epigraphica, C. Weyman. On a poem of the a line of L. found in Charisius by reading Servandum Spanish bishop Ascaricus. Zu dem Turiner Cicero- Numeri, numcrum ut servemu' modumque.' Varia Palimpsest, F. SchblL Zu Titus, tilus, titio, titulus, ad varios, J. van der Vliet. Notes on Cic. Balb. A. Zimmermann. Derives titulus from titus ( = TITIJ) §§ 17, 36, Sest. § 34 ; Tac. Ann. iv. 62 ; various with change of meaning [see Cl. Rev. i. 78, 79].

OBITUARY. AUGUSTUS CHAPMAN MERRIAM.

ON Jan. 19,1895, there suddenly died, at graphy at Columbia College, New York. Athens, Dr. AUGUSTUS CHAPMAN MERRIAM, He had left the United States, apparently in professor of Greek archaeology and epi- the best of health, on a year's leave of