Archives: Chapters

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List of Print and Online Images

List of Print and Online Images Figures (Print and Online) Figure 1. Reconstruction of a terracotta plaque from the Athenian Acropolis, c. 500 BC. After Le Lasseur 1919:104, fig. 48.For discussion, see note 3.32. Figure 2. Reconstruction of a terracotta plaque from the Athenian Acropolis, c. 500 BC. After Le […]

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Bibliography

Bibliography Ager, S. L. 1996. Interstate Arbitrations in the Greek World, 337–90 B.C. Berkeley. Alden, M. 2000. Homer Beside Himself: Para-Narratives in the Iliad. Oxford. Allen, T. W., ed. 1912. Homeri Opera V. Oxford. ———. 1924. Homer: The Origins and the Transmission. Reprint 1969. Oxford. ———. 1928. “Miscellanea.” […]

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Conclusion

Conclusion {780|781} Starting from an Indo-European comparison the foregoing study has followed out the consequences of that comparison for the Homeric poems, including a reconstruction of the circumstances in which the poems were first composed on a monumental scale. To reach this point in the argument the role of the Homeric Phaeacians […]

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Endnotes, Part V

Endnotes, Part 5 EN5.1 (Endnote to n5.1) {746|747} In Nestor’s story in Iliad 11, when he routs the Epeians and the Pylians turn for home, the language imitates the language used of the turning point in a chariot race, as exemplified in the chariot race of Iliad 23. But there is […]

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Endnotes, Part IV

Endnotes, Part 4 EN4.1 (Endnote to n4.22) {620|621} I agree with the viewpoint expressed by Cook 1975:784–785 that Athens cannot be removed from the Ionian migration, but I think that he claims too much for Athens’ role, as in the case of Colophon: “Many modern scholars have contended that this claim […]

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Part IV: IoniaCh. 10. The Panionic League

Part 4. Ionia Chapter 10. The Panionic League {511|515} §4.1 Nestor, as discussed in Part 2 above, plays an extensive role beneath the surface of the Homeric poems; this role is based on Nestor’s twin myth, which is itself kept hidden from view in the poems. Nestor’s brother Periklymenos, who is […]