9780521069113 - the tragedies of ennius: the fragments (6 résultats)

Langue : anglais
Edité par Cambridge at the University Press, 1969
Série : Cambridge Classical Texts and Commentaries, Livre 4 sur 44. Livre 4 sur 44 - Cambridge Classical Texts and Commentaries
- Couverture rigide
Vendeur : Cape Cod Booksellers, Yarmouth, MA, Etats-UnisCape Cod Booksellers
Contacter le vendeurVendeur avec une évaluation de 5 étoilesEtat: Occasion - Assez bon
EUR 45,00
EUR 3,45 expéditionExpédition nationale : Etats-UnisQuantité disponible : 1 disponible(s)
Hard Cover. Etat : Very Good. No Jacket. Second Edition. Cambridge at the University Press, 1969, 2nd Edition, 8vo., 473 pages. Text in English and Latin. Jacket price clipped, previous owner's name on front endpage. Number 10 in the series. Book and jacket in very good condition. Size: 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall.

Langue : anglais
Edité par Cambridge University Press, 1967
Série : Cambridge Classical Texts and Commentaries, Livre 4 sur 44. Livre 4 sur 44 - Cambridge Classical Texts and Commentaries
- Couverture rigide
- Édition originale
Vendeur : Powell's Bookstores Chicago, ABAA, Chicago, IL, Etats-UnisPowell's Bookstores Chicago, ABAA
Contacter le vendeurVendeur avec une évaluation de 5 étoilesEtat: Occasion
EUR 115,32
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Hardcover. Etat : Used-Very Good. dj. First Edition. Cloth, dj. Slight sunning and creasing to jacket spine. Else clean copy.

Langue : anglais
Edité par Cambridge University Press, 1967
Série : Cambridge Classical Texts and Commentaries, Livre 4 sur 44. Livre 4 sur 44 - Cambridge Classical Texts and Commentaries
- Couverture rigide
Vendeur : Ancient World Books, Toronto, ON, CanadaAncient World Books
Contacter le vendeurVendeur avec une évaluation de 5 étoilesEtat: Occasion - Satisfaisant
EUR 126,13
EUR 6,56 expéditionExpédition depuis Canada vers Etats-UnisQuantité disponible : 1 disponible(s)
Hardcover. Etat : Good+. Etat de la jaquette : Good+. Ex-library copy with usual stamps, call numbers and pocket. DJ laminated and taped down to boards.; Cambridge Classical Texts and Commentaries; 482 pages; The Tragedies of Ennius were theatrical adaptations of Attic originals. None has survived; but fragments of twenty-two of… them can be found in the work of other writers. Dr Jocelyn prints all the identifiable fragments, substantial extracts from the works which quote them and, where necessary, a critical apparatus. The long introduction discusses the early history of Roman public spectacles; the physical conditions of the theatre in the third and second centuries; the effect these had on the poets who had to adapt the scripts of Attic tragedies; the general character of the Latin plays thus produced; and the fate of these scripts (particularly those of Ennius) in later antiquity. The commentary is both detailed and discursive. Besides glossing and interpreting in the usual way, it considers the problems of restoring individual fragments and of using these fragments to reconstruct both the plays from which they came and the Attic originals. It also elucidates the methods used by Ennius to reproduce the effects of language and style of the classical Athenian dramatists.

Langue : anglais
Edité par Cambridge University Press, 1967
Série : Cambridge Classical Texts and Commentaries, Livre 4 sur 44. Livre 4 sur 44 - Cambridge Classical Texts and Commentaries
- Couverture rigide
Vendeur : Ancient World Books, Toronto, ON, CanadaAncient World Books
Contacter le vendeurVendeur avec une évaluation de 5 étoilesEtat: Occasion - Satisfaisant
EUR 126,13
EUR 6,56 expéditionExpédition depuis Canada vers Etats-UnisQuantité disponible : 1 disponible(s)
Hardcover. Etat : Good+. No Dust Jacket. Ex-library copy with usual stamps, call numbers and pocket.; Cambridge Classical Texts and Commentaries; 482 pages; The Tragedies of Ennius were theatrical adaptations of Attic originals. None has survived; but fragments of twenty-two of them can be found in the work of other writers. Dr…Jocelyn prints all the identifiable fragments, substantial extracts from the works which quote them and, where necessary, a critical apparatus. The long introduction discusses the early history of Roman public spectacles; the physical conditions of the theatre in the third and second centuries; the effect these had on the poets who had to adapt the scripts of Attic tragedies; the general character of the Latin plays thus produced; and the fate of these scripts (particularly those of Ennius) in later antiquity. The commentary is both detailed and discursive. Besides glossing and interpreting in the usual way, it considers the problems of restoring individual fragments and of using these fragments to reconstruct both the plays from which they came and the Attic originals. It also elucidates the methods used by Ennius to reproduce the effects of language and style of the classical Athenian dramatists.

Langue : anglais
Edité par Cambridge University Press, 1967
Série : Cambridge Classical Texts and Commentaries, Livre 4 sur 44. Livre 4 sur 44 - Cambridge Classical Texts and Commentaries
- Couverture rigide
Vendeur : Ancient World Books, Toronto, ON, CanadaAncient World Books
Contacter le vendeurVendeur avec une évaluation de 5 étoilesEtat: Occasion - Satisfaisant
EUR 126,13
EUR 6,56 expéditionExpédition depuis Canada vers Etats-UnisQuantité disponible : 1 disponible(s)
Hardcover. Etat : Good+. No Dust Jacket. Notes in ink and pencil by G. P. Goold (? ) to some pages. Light bumping to a couple of corners.; Cambridge Classical Texts and Commentaries; 482 pages; The Tragedies of Ennius were theatrical adaptations of Attic originals. None has survived; but fragments of twenty-two of them can be fo…und in the work of other writers. Dr Jocelyn prints all the identifiable fragments, substantial extracts from the works which quote them and, where necessary, a critical apparatus. The long introduction discusses the early history of Roman public spectacles; the physical conditions of the theatre in the third and second centuries; the effect these had on the poets who had to adapt the scripts of Attic tragedies; the general character of the Latin plays thus produced; and the fate of these scripts (particularly those of Ennius) in later antiquity. The commentary is both detailed and discursive. Besides glossing and interpreting in the usual way, it considers the problems of restoring individual fragments and of using these fragments to reconstruct both the plays from which they came and the Attic originals. It also elucidates the methods used by Ennius to reproduce the effects of language and style of the classical Athenian dramatists.

Langue : anglais
Edité par Cambridge University Press, 1967
Série : Cambridge Classical Texts and Commentaries, Livre 4 sur 44. Livre 4 sur 44 - Cambridge Classical Texts and Commentaries
- Couverture rigide
Vendeur : Ancient World Books, Toronto, ON, CanadaAncient World Books
Contacter le vendeurVendeur avec une évaluation de 5 étoilesEtat: Occasion - Bon
EUR 135,14
EUR 6,56 expéditionExpédition depuis Canada vers Etats-UnisQuantité disponible : 1 disponible(s)
Hardcover. Etat : Near Fine. Etat de la jaquette : Very Good. Scholar's name to ffep (Robert Palmer). DJ is price-clipped. Minor chipping to DJ.; Cambridge Classical Texts and Commentaries; 482 pages; The Tragedies of Ennius were theatrical adaptations of Attic originals. None has survived; but fragments of twenty-two of them ca…n be found in the work of other writers. Dr Jocelyn prints all the identifiable fragments, substantial extracts from the works which quote them and, where necessary, a critical apparatus. The long introduction discusses the early history of Roman public spectacles; the physical conditions of the theatre in the third and second centuries; the effect these had on the poets who had to adapt the scripts of Attic tragedies; the general character of the Latin plays thus produced; and the fate of these scripts (particularly those of Ennius) in later antiquity. The commentary is both detailed and discursive. Besides glossing and interpreting in the usual way, it considers the problems of restoring individual fragments and of using these fragments to reconstruct both the plays from which they came and the Attic originals. It also elucidates the methods used by Ennius to reproduce the effects of language and style of the classical Athenian dramatists.