The Center for Hellenic Studies

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Recommendation FAQ

Recommendation FAQ If you are submitting a letter of reference for a fellowship applicant, we recommend that you read this page explaining the recommendation process before trying to submit your letter of reference. In the online fellowship application, an applicant has the opportunity to register up to three recommenders. The applicant who has asked you […]

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Application FAQ

Online Application FAQ Before you start your online Fellowship application, we recommend that you review this page, which will be updated frequently. Last update October 19, 2009.   Application Do I have to complete my application online? Can I mail you a paper copy? All those interested in applying for a Fellowship must do so […]

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Jorgen Meyer – Remembrance by Judy Hallett

I would like to thank Henriette for sharing my words with you today: for allowing me to express, in my not always comprehensible idiomatic American English, deep sorrow at Jørgen’s untimely death, and profound thanks for his remarkable life. As soon as Henriette phoned me at mid-day on Monday, which was Labor Day in the […]

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Derveni Papyrus, Introduction

The Derveni Papyrus: An Interdisciplinary Research Project Editors : Leonard Muellner, G. Nagy, Ioanna Papadopoulou Information Architects: Saïd Esteban Belmehdi, Julien Razanajao, François Recher. Over the last 45 years the text of the Derveni Papyrus has undergone extensive reconstruction and study. Theokritos Kouremenos, George M. Parássoglou, and Kyriakos Tsantsanoglou have been among the leaders of […]

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Discussion Series: Athenian Law Lectures

An Introduction to the Athenian Legal System Victor Bers and Adriaan Lanni Yale University and Harvard University Suggested Reading: Demosthenes 54, Against Conon “In the criminal justice system, the People are represented by two separate yet equally important groups: the police, who investigate crime, and the district attorneys, who prosecute offenders.” In the classical period, […]

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Catherine P. Roth: “Mixed Aorists” in Homeric Greek: Chapter 2

2. Ωἵσετε One class of “mixed aorists” consists of the imperatives ἄξετε and ἄξεσθε, οἶσε οἴσετε and οἰσέτω, ὄψεσθε (the singular imperative ὄψεο· ἰδέ often cited as from Hesychius is actually a conjecture of Cobet’s, which Latte does not accept in his edition [1] ); the secondary tense form ἄξοντο; and the infinitives ἀξέμεν and […]

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Catherine P. Roth, “Mixed Aorists” in Homeric Greek – Chapter 1: The History of the “Mixed Aorist” Problem

1. The History of the “Mixed Aorist” Problem The “mixed aorist” forms have been a subject for scholarly dispute as long as Homeric scholarship has existed. Aristarchus considered the problem of determining the correct spelling. At K 513, the scholia of Venetus A tell us that Aristarchus read ἐπεβήσετο but others ἐπεβήσατο. At Γ 262, […]