Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-94fs2 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-13T03:36:29.996Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Bibliography

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 May 2019

Kathryn Stevens
Affiliation:
University of Durham
Get access

Summary

Image of the first page of this content. For PDF version, please use the ‘Save PDF’ preceeding this image.'
Type
Chapter
Information
Between Greece and Babylonia
Hellenistic Intellectual History in Cross-Cultural Perspective
, pp. 383 - 431
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2019

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Aaboe, A. H. (1955) ‘On the Babylonian origin of some Hipparchian parameters’, Centaurus 4.2: 122–5.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Aaboe, A. H. (1964) ‘A Seleucid table of daily solar (?) positions’, JCS 18.2: 31–4.Google Scholar
Aaboe, A. H. (1968) Some Lunar Auxiliary Tables and Related Texts from the Late Babylonian Period (Kongelige Danske Videnskabernes Selskab, Matematisk-fysiske Meddelelser 36,12). Copenhagen: Munksgaard.Google Scholar
Aaboe, A. H. (1969) A Computed List of New Moons for 319 B.C. to 316 B.C. from Babylon: BM 40094 (Kongelige Danske Videnskabernes Selskab, Matematisk-fysiske Meddelelser 37,3). Copenhagen: Munksgaard.Google Scholar
Aaboe, A. H. (1971) Lunar and Solar Velocities and the Length of Lunation Intervals in Babylonian Astronomy (Kongelige Danske Videnskabernes Selskab, historisk-filosofiske Meddelelser 38,6). Copenhagen: Munksgaard.Google Scholar
Aaboe, A. H. (1977) ‘A computed cuneiform text for Mercury from Babylon: BM 48147’, in Maeyama, Y. and Saltzer, W. G. (eds.), ΠΡΙΣΜΑΤΑ. Naturwissenschaftliche Studien. Festschrift für Willy Hartner. Wiesbaden: Franz Steiner, 18.Google Scholar
Aaboe, A. H. (1980) ‘Observation and theory in Babylonian astronomy’, Centaurus 24.1: 1435.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Aaboe, A. H. (1987) ‘A Late-Babylonian procedure text for Mars, and some remarks on retrograde arcs’, in King, D. A. and Saliba, G. (eds.), From Deferent to Equant: A Volume of Studies in the History of Science in the Ancient and Medieval Near East in Honor of E. S. Kennedy (Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences 500). New York: New York Academy of Sciences, 114.Google Scholar
Aaboe, A. H. and Henderson, J. A. (1975) ‘The Babylonian theory of lunar latitude and eclipses according to System A’, AIHS 25: 181222.Google Scholar
Aaboe, A. H. and Huber, P. J. (1977) ‘A text concerning subdivision of the synodic motion of Venus from Babylon: BM 37151’, in M. de Ellis, J. (ed.), Essays on the Ancient Near East in Memory of Jacob Joel Finkelstein (Memoirs of the Connecticut Academy of Arts and Sciences 19). Hamden, CT: Archon Books for the Connecticut Academy of Arts and Sciences, 14.Google Scholar
el-Abbadi, M. (1990) The Life and Fate of the Ancient Library of Alexandria. Paris: Unesco/UNDP.Google Scholar
el-Abbadi, M. (2004) ‘The Alexandrian Library in history’, in Hirst, A. and Silk, M. (eds.), Alexandria, Real and Imagined. Aldershot: Ashgate, 167–83.Google Scholar
Ager, S. L. (1991) ‘Rhodes: the rise and fall of a neutral diplomat’, Historia 40: 1041.Google Scholar
Algra, K. (1999) ‘The beginnings of cosmology’, in Long, A. A. (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to Early Greek Philosophy. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 4565.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Allchin, F. R. and Norman, K. R. (1985) ‘Guide to the Asokan inscriptions’, SAS 1.1: 4350.Google Scholar
Allen, M., Ambrisco, W., Anastatsiou, M. et al. (2016) The Inscriptions of the Antikythera Mechanism (Almagest: International Journal for the History of Scientific Ideas 7.1). Turnhout: Brepols Publishers.Google Scholar
Almagor, E. and Skinner, J. (2013) Ancient Ethnography: New Approaches. London: Bloomsbury.Google Scholar
Amigues, S. (1988–2006) Théophraste. Recherches sur les plantes (5 vols), (Collection des Universités de France, Budé). Paris: Les Belles Lettres.Google Scholar
Andersen, P. K. (1990) Studies in the Minor Rock Edicts of Aśoka I: Critical Edition. Freiburg: Hedwig Falk.Google Scholar
Ando, C. (2010) ‘Imperial identities’, in Whitmarsh, T. (ed.), Local Knowledge and Microidentities in the Imperial Greek World. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1745.Google Scholar
Anonymous (1987) ‘Excavations in Iraq 1985-86’, Iraq 49: 231–51.Google Scholar
Austin, M. M. (2006) The Hellenistic World from Alexander to the Roman Conquest: A Selection of Ancient Sources in Translation, 3rd edition. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Azize, J. and Craigie, I. (2002) ‘Putative Akkadian Origins for the Greek Words Κίναιδος and Πυγή’, Antichthon 36: 5464.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Baccani, D. (1992) Oroscopi greci: documentazione papirologica. Messina: Sicania.Google Scholar
Bachvarova, M. R. (2016) From Hittite to Homer: The Anatolian Background of Ancient Greek Epic. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bagnall, R. S. (1997) ‘Decolonizing Ptolemaic Egypt’, in Cartledge, P., Garnsey, P., and Gruen, E. S. (eds.), Hellenistic Constructs: Essays in Culture, History, and Historiography. Berkeley: University of California Press, 225–41.Google Scholar
Bagnall, R. S. (2002) ‘Alexandria: library of dreams’, PAPhS 146.4: 348–62.Google Scholar
Bailly, J. S. (1775) Histoire de l’astronomie ancienne, depuis son origine jusqu’à l’établissement de l’école d’Alexandrie. Paris: Debure.Google Scholar
Baker, H. (2013) ‘The image of the city in Hellenistic Babylonia’, in Stavrianopoulou, E. (ed.), Shifting Social Imaginaries in the Hellenistic Period: Narrations, Practices, and Images. Leiden: Brill, 5165.Google Scholar
Barnes, R. (2000) ‘Cloistered bookworms in the chicken-coop of the Muses: the ancient library of Alexandria’, in MacLeod, R. (ed.), The Library of Alexandria: Centre of Learning in the Ancient World. London: I.B. Tauris, 6177.Google Scholar
Barton, T. (1994) Ancient Astrology. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Barua, B. M. (1969) Asoka and His Inscriptions. Kolkata: New Age Publishers.Google Scholar
Beaulieu, P.-A. (1992) ‘Antiquarian theology in Seleucid Uruk’, Acta Sumerologica 14: 4775.Google Scholar
Beaulieu, P. -A. (1993) ‘The historical background of the Uruk Prophecy’, in Cohen, M. E., Snell, D. C., and Weisberg, D. B. (eds.), The Tablet and the Scroll: Near Eastern Studies in Honor of William W. Hallo. Bethesda, MD: CDL Press, 4152.Google Scholar
Beaulieu, P. -A. (1997) ‘The cult of AN. ŠÁR/Aššur in Babylonia after the fall of the Assyrian Empire’, SAAB 11: 5573.Google Scholar
Beaulieu, P. -A. (2000) ‘The descendants of Sîn-lēqi-unninni’, in Marzahn, J. and Neumann, H. (eds.), Assyriologia et Semitica. Festschrift für Joachim Oelsner anläßlich seines 65. Geburtstages am 18. Februar 1997 (AOAT 252). Münster: Ugarit-Verlag, 116.Google Scholar
Beaulieu, P. -A. (2006a) ‘The astronomers of the Esagil temple in the fourth century BC’, in Guinan, A. K., Ellis, M. de J., Ferrera, A. J. et al. (eds.), If a Man Builds a Joyful House: Assyriological Studies in Honor of Erle Verdun Leichty (Cuneiform Monographs 31). Leiden: Brill, 522.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Beaulieu, P. -A. (2006b) ‘De l’Esagil au Mouseion: l’organisation de la recherche scientifique au IVe siècle av. J.-C.’, in Briant, P. and Joannès, F. (eds.), La transition entre l’empire achéménide et les royaumes hellénistiques (vers 350–300 av. J-C.): Actes du colloque organisé au Collège de France par la «Chaire d’histoire et civilisation du monde achéménide et de l’empire d’Alexandre» et le «Réseau international d’études et de recherches achéménides» (GDR 2538 CNRS) 22–23 novembre 2004. Paris: De Boccard, 1736.Google Scholar
Beaulieu, P. -A. (2007) ‘Berossus on Late Babylonian history’, in Gong, Y. and Chen, Y. (eds.), Special Issue of Oriental Studies. A Collection of Papers on Ancient Civilizations of Western Asia, Asia Minor and North Africa. Beijing, 116–49.Google Scholar
Beaulieu, P. -A. (2010) ‘The afterlife of Assyrian scholarship in Hellenistic Babylonia’, in Stackert, J., Porter, B.N., and Wright, D. P. (eds.), Gazing on the Deep: Ancient Near Eastern and Other Studies in Honor of Tzvi Abusch. Bethesda, MD: CDL Press, 118.Google Scholar
Beaulieu, P. -A. (2011) ‘Yahwistic names in light of Late Babylonian onomastics’, in Lipschits, O., Knoppers, G. N., and Oeming, M. (eds.), Judah and the Judeans in the Achaemenid Period: Negotiating Identity in an International Context. Winona Lake, IN: Eisenbrauns, 245–66.Google Scholar
Beaulieu, P. -A. (2014) ‘Nabû and Apollo: the two faces of Seleucid religious policy’, in Hoffmann, F. and Schmidt, K. S. (eds.), Orient und Okzident in hellenistischer Zeit. Vaterstetten: Brose, 1330.Google Scholar
Beaulieu, P. -A., Frahm, E., Horowitz, W., and Steele, J. M. (2018) The Cuneiform Uranology Texts: Drawing the Constellations (Transactions of the American Philosophical Society 107). Philadelphia: American Philosophical Society.Google Scholar
Belmonte, J. A. and González García, A. C. (2010) ‘Antiochos’s hierothesion at Nemrud Dag revisited: adjusting the date in the light of astronomical evidence’, JHA 41.4: 469–81.Google Scholar
Benveniste, É. (1964) ‘Édits d’Asoka en traduction grecque’, JA 152: 137–57.Google Scholar
Bernard, P. (2002) ‘Langue et épigraphie grecques dans l’Asie centrale à l’époque hellénistique’, in Todd, I. A., Komine-Dialeti, D., and Hatzivassiliou, D. (eds.), Greek Archaeology Without Frontiers. Athens: National Hellenic Research Foundation, 75108.Google Scholar
Bertelli, L. (2009) ‘Semos (396)’, in Worthington, I. (ed.), Brill’s New Jacoby. Brill Online, DOI:10.1163/1873-5363_bnj_a396.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bevan, E. R. (1902) The House of Seleucus (2 vols). London: E. Arnold.Google Scholar
Bevir, M. (1992) ‘The errors of linguistic contextualism’, H&T 31.3: 276–98.Google Scholar
Bezold, C. and Boll, F. J. (1911) ‘Reflexe astrologischer Keilinschriften bei griechischen Schriftstellern’, Sitzungsberichte der Heidelberger Akademie der Wissenschaften, philosophisch-historische Klasse 1911: nr. 7.Google Scholar
Bezza, G. (1995) Arcana Mundi: Antologia del pensiero astrologico antico (2 vols). Milan: Rizzoli.Google Scholar
Bibby, G. (1970) Looking for Dilmun. London: Collins.Google Scholar
Bigwood, J. M. (1993) ‘Aristotle and the elephant again’, AJPh 114.4: 537–55.Google Scholar
Bikerman, E. (1938) Institutions des Séleucides. Paris: P. Geuthner.Google Scholar
Bing, P. (2005) ‘The politics and poetics of geography in the Milan Posidippus, section one: On stones (AB 1–20)’, in Gutzwiller, K. (ed.), The New Posidippus: A Hellenistic Poetry Book. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 119–40.Google Scholar
Bingen, J. (1981) ‘L’Égypte gréco-romaine et la problématique des interactions culturelles’, in Bagnall, R. S., Browne, G. M., Hanson, A. E., and Koenen, L. (eds.), Proceedings of the XVI International Congress of Papyrology (American Studies in Papyrology 23). Chico, CA: Scholars Press, 318.Google Scholar
Bingen, J. (2007) ‘Graeco-Roman Egypt and the question of cultural interactions’, in Bingen, J., Hellenistic Egypt: Monarchy, Society, Economy, Culture. Edited and with an Introduction by Roger S. Bagnall. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 240–55.Google Scholar
Black, J. A. and Sherwin-White, S. M. (1984) ‘A clay tablet with Greek letters in the Ashmolean Museum, and the “Graeco-Babyloniaca” texts’, Iraq 46.2: 131–40.Google Scholar
Blinkenberg, C. (1912) La chronique du temple lindien. Copenhagen: Bianco Luno.Google Scholar
Blinkenberg, C. (1915) Die lindische Tempelchronik (Kleine Texte für Vorlesungen und Übungen 131). Bonn: A. Marcus and E. Weber.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Blinkenberg, C. (1938) Deux documents chronologiques rhodiens. Copenhagen: Munksgaard.Google Scholar
Blinkenberg, C. (1941) Lindos: Fouilles et recherches 1902–1914. Fouilles de l’acropole II. Inscriptions (2 vols). Berlin: De Gruyter.Google Scholar
Blum, R. (1991) Kallimachos: The Alexandrian Library and the Origins of Bibliography. Madison, WI: University of Wisconsin Press.Google Scholar
Bobrova, L. and Militarev, A. Y. (1993) ‘From Mesopotamia to Greece: to the origin of Semitic and Greek star names’, in Galter, H. D. (ed.), Die Rolle der Astronomie in den Kulturen Mesopotamiens: Beiträge zum 3. Grazer Morgenländischen Symposion (23.–27. September 1991) (Grazer Morgenländische Studien 3). Graz: GrazKult, 307–29.Google Scholar
Boffo, L. (1988) ‘Epigrafi di città greche: un’espressione di storiografia locale’, in Boffo, L. (ed.), Studi di storia e storiografia antiche per Emilio Gabba. Pavia: New Press, 948.Google Scholar
Boiy, T. (2004) Late Achaemenid and Hellenistic Babylon (Orientalia Lovaniensia Analecta 136). Leuven: Peeters.Google Scholar
Boiy, T. (2010) ‘TU 38, its scribe and his family’, RA 104: 169–78.Google Scholar
Boiy, T. (2013) ‘The diadochi history in cuneiform documentation’, in Troncoso, V. A. and Anson, E. M. (eds.), After Alexander: The Time of the Diadochi (323–281 BC). Oxford: Oxbow Books, 716.Google Scholar
Bolchert, P. (1908) Aristoteles Erdkunde von Asien und Libyen. Berlin: Weidmannsche Buchandlung.Google Scholar
Bollansée, J. (1999) Hermippos of Smyrna and His Biographical Writings: A Reappraisal. (Studia Hellenistica 35). Leuven: Peeters.Google Scholar
Borger, R. (1964) ‘Geheimwissen’, RlA 3: 188–91.Google Scholar
Boshnakov, K. (2004) Pseudo-Skymnos (Semos von Delos?): ta aristera tou Pontou. Zeugnisse griechischer Schriftsteller über den westlichen Pontosraum. Stuttgart: Franz Steiner.Google Scholar
Bosworth, A. B. (1983) ‘Review of Hieronymus of Cardia by J. Hornblower’, JHS 103: 209–10.Google Scholar
Boucharlat, R. and Salles, J.-F. (1981) ‘The history and archaeology of the Gulf from the fifth century B.C. to the seventh century A.D.: a review of the evidence’, Proceedings of the Seminar for Arabian Studies 11: 6594.Google Scholar
Bouché-Leclercq, A. (1899) L’Astrologie grecque. Paris: E. Leroux.Google Scholar
Bowden, H. (2013) ‘On kissing and making up: court protocol and historiography in Alexander the Great’s “experiment with proskynesis”’, BICS 56.2: 5577.Google Scholar
Bowen, A. C. (2013) Simplicius on the Planets and Their Motions: In Defense of a Heresy. Leiden: Brill.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bowen, A. C. and Goldstein, B. R. (1988) ‘Meton of Athens and astronomy in the late fifth century BC’, in Leichty, E., Ellis, M. de J., and Gerardi, P. (eds.), A Scientific Humanist: Studies in Memory of Abraham Sachs (Occasional Publications of the Samuel Noah Kramer Fund 9). Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Museum, 3981.Google Scholar
Bowersock, G. (1986) ‘Tylos and Tyre: Bahrain in the Greco-Roman World’, in Al Khalifa, S. H. A. and Rice, M. (eds.), Bahrain Through the Ages: The Archaeology. London: Kegan Paul International, 399406.Google Scholar
Brack-Bernsen, L. (2005) ‘The “days in excess” from MUL.APIN: on the “first intercalation” and “water clock” schemes from MUL.APIN’, Centaurus 47.1: 129.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brack-Bernsen, L. and Hunger, H. (1999) ‘The Babylonian zodiac: speculations on its invention and significance’, Centaurus 41.4: 280–92.Google Scholar
Brack-Bernsen, L. and Steele, J. M. (2004) ‘Babylonian mathemagics: two mathematical astronomical-astrological texts’, in Burnett, C., Hogendijk, J. P., Plofker, K., and Yano, M. (eds.), Studies in the History of the Exact Sciences in Honour of David Pingree, 1st edition (Islamic Philosophy, Theology and Science. Texts and Studies 54). Leiden: Brill, 95125.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Braun, T. F. R. G. (1982) ‘The Greeks in the Near East’, in Boardman, J. and Hammond, N. G. L. (eds.), The Cambridge Ancient History III Part 3: The Expansion of the Greek World, Eighth to Sixth Centuries B.C. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 131.Google Scholar
Bresson, A. (2006) ‘Relire la chronique du temple lindien’, Topoi 14.2: 527–51.Google Scholar
De Breucker, G. (2003) ‘Berossos and the Mesopotamian temple as centre of knowledge during the Hellenistic Period’, in MacDonald, A. A., Twomey, M. W., and Reinink, G. J. (eds.), Learned Antiquity: Scholarship and Society in the Near-East, the Greco-Roman World and the Early Medieval West (Groningen Studies in Cultural Change 5). Leuven: Peeters, 1324.Google Scholar
De Breucker, G. (2010) ‘Berossos of Babylon (680)’, in Worthington, I. (ed.), Brill’s New Jacoby. Brill Online, DOI:10.1163/1873-5363_bnj_a680.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
De Breucker, G. (2011) ‘Berossos between tradition and innovation’, in Radner, K. and Robson, E. (eds.), The Oxford Handbook of Cuneiform Culture. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 637–57.Google Scholar
De Breucker, G. (2012a) ‘Alexander Polyhistor and the Babyloniaca of Berossus’, BICS 55.2: 5768.Google Scholar
De Breucker, G. (2012b) De Babyloniaca van Berossos van Babylon: inleiding, editie en commentaar, PhD thesis, Groningen University.Google Scholar
De Breucker, G. (2013) ‘Berossos: his life and his work’, in Haubold, J., Lanfranchi, G. B., Rollinger, R., and Steele, J. M. (eds.), The World of Berossos: Proceedings of the 4th International Colloquium on ‘The Ancient Near East Between Classical and Ancient Oriental Traditions’, Hatfield College, Durham 7th–9th July 2010 (Classica et Orientalia 5). Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz Verlag, 1528.Google Scholar
De Breucker, G. (2015) ‘Heroes and sinners: Babylonian kings in cuneiform historiography of the Persian and Hellenistic periods’, in Silverman, J. and Waerzeggers, C. (eds.), Political Memory in and After the Persian Empire (Ancient Near East Monographs 13). Atlanta: SBL Press, 7594.Google Scholar
Bringmann, K. and von Steuben, H. (eds.) (1995) Schenkungen hellenistischer Herrscher an griechische Städte und Heiligtümer (3 vols). Berlin: Akademie Verlag.Google Scholar
Brink, K. O. (1946) ‘Callimachus and Aristotle: an inquiry into Callimachus’ ПΡΟΣ ПΡΑΞΙΦΑΝΗΝ’, CQ 40.1–2: 1126.Google Scholar
Brinkman, J. A. (1989) ‘The Akkadian words for “Ionia” and “Ionian”’, in Sutton Junior, R. F. (ed.), Daidalikon: Studies in Memory of Raymond V. Schoder. Wauconda, IL: Bolchazy-Carducci, 5371.Google Scholar
Brinkman, J. A. (1990) ‘The Babylonian Chronicle revisited’, in Abusch, T., Huehnergard, J., and Steinkeller, P. (eds.), Lingering Over Words: Studies in Ancient Near Eastern Literature in Honor of William L. Moran. Atlanta: Scholars Press, 73104.Google Scholar
Britton, J. P. (1993) ‘Scientific astronomy in pre-Seleucid Babylon’, in Galter, H. D. (ed.), Die Rolle der Astronomie in den Kulturen Mesopotamiens: Beiträge zum 3. Grazer Morgenländischen Symposion (23.–27. September 1991) (Grazer Morgenländische Studien 3). Graz: GrazKult, 6176.Google Scholar
Britton, J. P. (2002) ‘Treatments of annual phenomena in cuneiform sources’, in Steele, J. M. and Imhausen, A. (eds.), Under One Sky: Astronomy and Mathematics in the Ancient Near East (AOAT 297). Münster: Ugarit-Verlag, 2178.Google Scholar
Britton, J. P. (2010) ‘Studies in Babylonian lunar theory: part III. The introduction of the uniform zodiac’, AHES 64.6: 617–63.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brodersen, K. (2012) ‘Cartography’, in Dueck, D. (ed.), Geography in Classical Antiquity (Mnemosyne Supplements 300). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 99110.Google Scholar
Brosius, M. (ed.) (2003) Ancient Archives and Archival Traditions: Concepts of Record-Keeping in the Ancient World. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Brown, D. (2000) Mesopotamian Planetary Astronomy-Astrology. Groningen: Styx.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brown, D. (2008) ‘Increasingly redundant: the growing obsolescence of the cuneiform script in Babylonia from 539 BC’, in Baines, J., Bennet, J., and Houston, S. (eds.), The Disappearance of Writing Systems: Perspectives on Literacy and Communication. London: Equinox, 73101.Google Scholar
Brown, T. S. (1947) ‘Hieronymus of Cardia’, AHR 52.4: 684–96.Google Scholar
Brunt, P. A. (1980) ‘On historical fragments and epitomes’, CQ 30.2: 477–94.Google Scholar
Bugh, G. R. (2006) The Cambridge Companion to the Hellenistic World. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Bunbury, E. H. (1883) A History of Ancient Geography Among the Greeks and Romans from the Earliest Ages till the Fall of the Roman Empire, 2nd edition. London: John Murray.Google Scholar
Burkert, W. (1992) The Orientalizing Revolution: Near Eastern Influence on Greek Culture in the Early Archaic Age. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Burkert, W. (2004) Babylon, Memphis, Persepolis: Eastern Contexts of Greek Culture. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Burkitt, F. C. (1902) ‘Notes on “Greek transcriptions of Babylonian tablets”’, PSBA 24: 143–5.Google Scholar
Burstein, S. M. (1978) The Babyloniaca of Berossus (Sources from the Ancient Near East 1). Malibu: Undena.Google Scholar
Burstein, S. M. (2008) ‘Elephants for Ptolemy II: Ptolemaic policy in Nubia in the third century BC’, in McKechnie, P. and Guillaume, P. (eds.), Ptolemy Philadelphus and His World. Leiden: Brill, 135–48.Google Scholar
Bushnell, G. H. (1928) ‘The Alexandrian Library’, Antiquity 2.6: 196204.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cameron, A. (1995) Callimachus and His Critics. Princeton: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Campbell Thompson, R. (1927) A Catalogue of the Late Babylonian Tablets in the Bodleian Library, Oxford. London: Luzac.Google Scholar
Canevaro, M. (2013) The Documents in the Attic Orators: Laws and Decrees in the Public Speeches of the Demosthenic Corpus. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Canfora, L. (1990) The Vanished Library: A Wonder of the Ancient World. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Canfora, L. (2000) ‘The world in a scroll’, in Jacob, C. and de Polignac, F. (eds.), Alexandria, Third Century BC: The Knowledge of the World in a Single City. Alexandria, Egypt: Harpocrates Publishing, 4355.Google Scholar
Capdetrey, L. (2007) Le pouvoir séleucide: territoire, administration, finances d’un royaume hellénistique (312–129 avant J.-C.) (Collection Histoire). Rennes: Presses Universitaires de Rennes.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Carman, C. C. and Evans, J. (2014) ‘On the epoch of the Antikythera mechanism and its eclipse predictor’, AHES 68.6: 693774.Google Scholar
Carman, C. C. and Evans, J. (2015) ‘The two earths of Eratosthenes’, Isis 106.1: 116.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Cartledge, P. (1997) ‘Introduction’, in Cartledge, P., Garnsey, P., and Gruen, E. S. (eds.), Hellenistic Constructs: Essays in Culture, History, and Historiography. Berkeley: University of California Press: 119.Google Scholar
Casson, L. (2001) Libraries in the Ancient World. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press.Google Scholar
Cavigneaux, A. (1981a) ‘Le Temple de Nabû ša harê: rapport préliminaire sur les textes cunéiformes’, Sumer 37: 118–26.Google Scholar
Cavigneaux, A. (1981b) Textes scolaires du Temple de Nabû ša Harê (Texts from Babylon 1). Baghdad: Republic of Iraq, Ministry of Culture & Information, State Organization of Antiquities & Heritage.Google Scholar
Cavigneaux, A. (1996) ‘Un colophon du type Nabû ša harê’, Acta Sumerologica 18: 23–9.Google Scholar
Cavigneaux, A. (2005) ‘Shulgi, Nabonide, et les Grecs’, in Sefati, Y., Artzi, P., Cohen, C., Eichler, B., and Horowitz, V. A. (eds.), An Experienced Scribe Who Neglects Nothing: Ancient Near Eastern Studies in Honor of Jacob Klein. Bethesda, MD: CDL Press, 6372.Google Scholar
Ceccarelli, P. (1989) ‘Nesiotika’, ASNP 19.3: 903–35.Google Scholar
Chaniotis, A. (1988) Historie und Historiker in den griechischen Inschriften: Epigraphische Beiträge zur griechischen Historiographie. Stuttgart: Franz Steiner.Google Scholar
Chaniotis, A. (2018) Age of Conquests: The Greek World from Alexander to Hadrian (336 BC–AD 138). London: Profile Books.Google Scholar
Charlesworth, J. H. (2010) The Old Testament Pseudepigrapha (2 vols). Peabody, MA: Hendrickson Publishers.Google Scholar
Civil, M. (1976) ‘Lexicography’, in Lieberman, S. J. (ed.), Sumerological Studies in Honor of Thorkild Jacobsen on His Seventieth Birthday, June 7 1974. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 123–57.Google Scholar
Clancier, P. (2007) ‘La Babylonie hellénistique: aperçu d’histoire politique et culturelle’, Topoi 15: 2174.Google Scholar
Clancier, P. (2009a) ‘Le Manuel de l’exorciste d’Uruk’, in Faivre, X., Lion, B., and Michel, C. (eds.), Et il y eut un esprit dans l’Homme. Jean Bottéro et la Mésopotamie (Travaux de la Maison René-Ginouvès 6). Paris: De Boccard, 105–17.Google Scholar
Clancier, P. (2009b) Les bibliothèques en Babylonie dans la deuxième moitié du 1er millénaire av. J.-C. (AOAT 363). Münster: Ugarit-Verlag.Google Scholar
Clancier, P. (2010) ‘Formation and administration of the collections of literary and scholarly tablets in first millennium Babylonia’, in Bretelle-Establet, F. (ed.), Looking at it from Asia: The Processes that Shaped the Sources of History of Science (Boston Studies in the Philosophy of Science 265). Dordrecht: Springer, 335.Google Scholar
Clancier, P. (2011) ‘Cuneiform culture’s last guardians: the old urban notability of Hellenistic Uruk’, in Radner, K. and Robson, E. (eds.), The Oxford Handbook of Cuneiform Culture. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 752–73.Google Scholar
Clancier, P. (2012) ‘Les compétences judiciaires des temples babyloniens à l’époque hellénistique et parthe’, in Legras, B. (ed.), Transferts culturels et droits dans le monde grec et hellénistique: actes du colloque international (Reims, 14–17 mai 2008) (Publications de la Sorbonne, Histoire ancienne et médiévale 110). Paris: Publications de la Sorbonne, 255–68.Google Scholar
Clancier, P. (2014a) ‘Teaching and learning medicine and exorcism at Uruk during the Hellenistic period’, in Bernard, A. and Proust, C. (eds.), Scientific Sources and Teaching Contexts Throughout History: Problems and Perspectives (Boston Studies in the Philosophy and History of Science 301). Berlin: Springer, 4166.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Clancier, P. (2014b) ‘Antiochos IV dans les sources babyloniennes’, in Feyel, C. and Graslin-Thomé, L. (eds.), Le projet politique d’Antiochos IV (journées d’études franco-allemandes, Nancy 17–19 juin 2013). Nancy: A.D.R.A., 415–38.Google Scholar
Clancier, P. (2017) ‘The polis of Babylon: an historiographical approach’, in Chrubasik, B. and King, D. (eds.), Hellenism and the Local Communities of the Eastern Mediterranean, 400 BCE–250 CE. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 5381.Google Scholar
Clancier, P. and Monerie, J. (2015) ‘Les sanctuaires babyloniens à l’époque hellénistique: évolution d’un relais de pouvoir’, Topoi 19.1: 181237.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Clarke, K. (1999) Between Geography and History: Hellenistic Constructions of the Roman World. Oxford: Clarendon Press.Google Scholar
Clarke, K. (2005) ‘Parochial tales in a global empire: creating and recreating the world of the itinerant historian’, in Troiani, L. and Zecchini, G. (eds.), La cultura storica nei primi due secoli dell’impero romano: Milano, 3–5 giugno 2004. Rome: L’Erma di Bretschneider, 111–28.Google Scholar
Clarke, K. (2008) Making Time for the Past: Local History and the Polis. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Clarysse, W. and Thompson, D. J. (2006) Counting the People in Hellenistic Egypt. Volume 2: Historical Studies. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Clarysse, W. and Thompson, D. J. (2007) ‘Two texts on skin from Hellenistic Bactria’, ZPE 159: 273–9.Google Scholar
Clayman, D. L. (2011) ‘Berenice and her lock’, TAPA 141.2: 229–46.Google Scholar
Cogan, M. and Tadmor, H. (1977) ‘Gyges and Ashurbanipal: a study in literary transmission’, Orientalia 46.1: 6585.Google Scholar
Collini, S. (2006) Absent Minds: Intellectuals in Britain. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Collini, S., Biddiss, M., Skinner, Q. et al. (1985) ‘What is intellectual history?’, History Today 35.10: 4654.Google Scholar
Collins, D. (2008) ‘Mapping the entrails: the practice of Greek hepatoscopy’, AJPh 129.3: 319–45.Google Scholar
Collins, N. L. (2000) The Library in Alexandria and the Bible in Greek (Supplements to Vetus Testamentum 82). Leiden: Brill.Google Scholar
Coqueugniot, G. (2013) ‘Where was the royal library of Pergamum? An institution found and lost again’, in König, J., Oikonomopoulou, C. and Woolf, G. (eds.), Ancient Libraries. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 109–23.Google Scholar
Cordano, F. (1992) La geografia degli antichi. Rome: Laterza.Google Scholar
Corò, P. (2005) Prebende templari in età Seleucide (History of the Ancient Near East Monographs 8). Padova: Sargon.Google Scholar
Cribiore, R. (1996) Writing, Teachers, and Students in Graeco-Roman Egypt. Atlanta: Scholars Press.Google Scholar
Crijns, M. (2002) ‘The lion horoscope: proposal for a new dating’, BaBesch 77: 97–9.Google Scholar
Cumont, F. V. M. (1912) Astrology and Religion Among the Greeks and Romans. New York: G.P. Putnam’s Sons.Google Scholar
Cumont, F. V. M. (1937) L’Égypte des astrologues. Brussels: Fondation égyptologique reine Élisabeth.Google Scholar
Cuomo, S. (2001) Ancient Mathematics. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Curd, P. (2010) Anaxagoras of Clazomenae: Fragments and Testimonia. A Text and Translation with Notes and Essays. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.Google Scholar
Curtis, J. (1994) ‘Mesopotamian bronzes from Greek sites: the workshops of origin’, Iraq 56: 125.Google Scholar
Curtis, J., MacGregor, N., and Finkel, I. L. (2013) The Cyrus Cylinder and Ancient Persia: A New Beginning for the Middle East. London: British Museum.Google Scholar
Dalley, S. (1998) ‘Occasions and opportunities 2. Persian, Greek, and Parthian overlords’, in Dalley, S. (ed.), The Legacy of Mesopotamia. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 3555.Google Scholar
Dalley, S. (2000) Myths from Mesopotamia: Creation, the Flood, Gilgamesh, and Others. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Dalley, S. (2013) ‘First millennium BC variation in Gilgamesh, Atrahasis, the Flood Story and the Epic of Creation: What was available to Berossos?’, in Haubold, J., Lanfranchi, G. B., Rollinger, R., and Steele, J. M. (eds.), The World of Berossos: Proceedings of the 4th International Colloquium on ‘The Ancient Near East Between Classical and Ancient Oriental Traditions’, Hatfield College, Durham 7th–9th July 2010 (Classica et Orientalia 5). Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz Verlag, 165–76.Google Scholar
Dalley, S. and Reyes, A. T. (1998) ‘Influence in the Greek world: 1. To the Persian conquest’, in Dalley, S. (ed.), The Legacy of Mesopotamia. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 85106.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Delia, D. (1992) ‘From romance to rhetoric: the Alexandrian Library in Classical and Islamic traditions’, AHR 97.5: 1449–67.Google Scholar
Delnero, P. (2010) ‘Sumerian literary catalogues and the scribal curriculum’, ZA 100.1: 3255.Google Scholar
Demont, P. (2009) ‘L’ancienneté de la médecine hippocratique: un essai de bilan’, in Attia, A. and Buisson, G. (eds.), Advances in Mesopotamian Medicine from Hammurabi to Hippocrates: Proceedings of the International Conference ‘Oeil malade et mauvais oeil’, Collège de France, Paris, 23rd June 2006 (Cuneiform Monographs 37). Leiden: Brill, 129–49.Google Scholar
Denis, A.-M. (1970) Fragmenta pseudepigraphorum quae supersunt graeca. Leiden: Brill.Google Scholar
Dicks, D. R. (1970) Early Greek Astronomy to Aristotle. London: Thames and Hudson.Google Scholar
Dignas, B. (2002) ‘“Inventories” or “offering lists”? Assessing the wealth of Apollo Didymaeus’, ZPE 138: 235–44.Google Scholar
Van Dijk, J. J. (1962) ‘Die Inschriftenfunde’, Vorläufiger Bericht über die von dem Deutschen Archäologischen Institut und der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft aus Mitteln der Deutschen Forschungsgemeinschaft unternommenen Ausgrabungen in Uruk-Warka 18: 3962.Google Scholar
Van Dijk, J. J. (1972) ‘Une variante du thème de «l’Esclave de la Lune»’, Orientalia 41.3: 339–48.Google Scholar
Van Dijk, J. J. and Mayer, W. R. (1980) Texte aus dem Rēš-Heiligtum in Uruk-Warka. Berlin: Mann.Google Scholar
Dilke, O. A. W. (1998) Greek and Roman Maps. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press.Google Scholar
Dillery, J. (1999) ‘The first Egyptian narrative history: Manetho and Greek historiography’, ZPE 127: 93116.Google Scholar
Dillery, J. (2005) ‘Greek sacred history’, AJPh 126.4: 505–26.Google Scholar
Dillery, J. (2013) ‘Berossos’ narrative of Nabopolassar and Nebuchadnezzar II from Josephus’, in Haubold, J., Lanfranchi, G. B., Rollinger, R., and Steele, J. M. (eds.), The World of Berossos: Proceedings of the 4th International Colloquium on ‘The Ancient Near East Between Classical and Ancient Oriental Traditions’, Hatfield College, Durham 7th–9th July 2010 (Classica et Orientalia 5). Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz Verlag, 7596.Google Scholar
Dillery, J. (2015) Clio’s Other Sons: Berossus and Manetho. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dines, J. M. (2004) The Septuagint. London: Bloomsbury.Google Scholar
Donohue, A. A. (2012) ‘Polemon (2)’, in Cancik, H. and Schneider, H. (eds.) Brill’s New Pauly (Antiquity Volumes). Brill Online, DOI:10.1163/1574-9347_bnp_e1000190.Google Scholar
Dorandi, T. (1999) Antigone de Caryste. Fragments. Paris: Les Belles Lettres.Google Scholar
Doty, L. T. (1978–9) ‘A cuneiform tablet from Tell ’Umar’, Mesopotamia 1314:91–8.Google Scholar
Doty, L. T. (1988) ‘Nikarchos and Kephalon’, in Leichty, E., de J. Ellis, M., and Gerardi, P. (eds.), A Scientific Humanist: Studies in Memory of Abraham Sachs (Occasional Publications of the Samuel Noah Kramer Fund 9). Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Museum, 95118.Google Scholar
Dowden, K. (2008) ‘Kreophylos (417)’, in Worthington, I. (ed.), Brill’s New Jacoby. Brill Online, DOI:10.1163/1873-5363_bnj_a417.Google Scholar
Drews, R. (1975) ‘The Babylonian Chronicles and Berossus’, Iraq 37.1: 3955.Google Scholar
Dueck, D. (2012) Geography in Classical Antiquity. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Ebeling, B. (1938) ‘Enki (Ea)’, RlA 2: 374–9.Google Scholar
van der Eijk, P. J. (2004) ‘Divination, prognosis and prophylaxis: the Hippocratic work “On Dreams” (De Victu 4) and its Near Eastern background’, in Horstmanshoff, H. F. J. and Stol, M. (eds.), Magic and Rationality in Ancient Near Eastern and Graeco-Roman Medicine (Studies in Ancient Medicine 27). Leiden: Brill, 187218.Google Scholar
Ellis, M. de Jong (1989) ‘Observations on Mesopotamian oracles and prophetic texts: literary and historiographic considerations’, JCS 41.2: 127–86.Google Scholar
Endsjø, D. Ø. (1997) ‘Placing the unplaceable: the making of Apollonius’ Argonautic geography’, GRBS 38.4: 373–85.Google Scholar
Erickson, K. (2011) ‘Apollo-Nabû: the Babylonian policy of Antiochus I’, in Erickson, K. and Ramsay, G. (eds.), Seleucid Dissolution. The Sinking of the Anchor. Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz Verlag, 5165.Google Scholar
Errington, R. M. (2008) A History of the Hellenistic World: 323–30 BC (Blackwell History of the Ancient World). Oxford: Blackwell.Google Scholar
Erskine, A. (1995) ‘Culture and power in Ptolemaic Egypt: the Museum and Library of Alexandria’, G&R 42.1: 3848.Google Scholar
Erskine, A. (2003a) ‘Approaching the Hellenistic world’, in Erskine, A. (ed.), A Companion to the Hellenistic World. Oxford: Blackwell, 115.Google Scholar
Erskine, A. (ed.) (2003b) A Companion to the Hellenistic World. Oxford: Blackwell.Google Scholar
Erskine, A. (2011) ‘Between philosophy and the court: the life of Persaios of Kition’, in Erskine, A. and Llewellyn-Jones, L. (eds.), Creating a Hellenistic World. Swansea: Classical Press of Wales, 177–94.Google Scholar
Erskine, A. and Llewellyn-Jones, L. (2011) ‘Introduction’, in Erskine, A. and Llewellyn-Jones, L. (eds.), Creating a Hellenistic World. Swansea: Classical Press of Wales, xvxx.Google Scholar
Evans, J. (2004) ‘The astrologer’s apparatus: a picture of professional practice in Greco-Roman Egypt’, JHA 35.1: 144.Google Scholar
Evans, J. and Berggren, J. L. (2006) Geminos’s Introduction to the Phenomena: A Translation and Study of a Hellenistic Survey of Astronomy. Princeton: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Fadhil, A. and Hilgert, M. (2008) ‘The cultic lament “a gal-gal buru14 su-su” in a manuscript from the “Sippar Library”’, ZOA 1: 154–93.Google Scholar
de Falco, V., Krause, M., and Neugebauer, O. E. (1966) Hypsikles: Die Aufgangszeiten der Gestirne (Abhandlungen der Akademie der Wissenschaften in Göttingen, philologisch-historische Klasse, Dritte Folge, Band 62). Göttingen: Vandenhoeck and Ruprecht.Google Scholar
Falk, H. (2006) Asokan Sites and Artefacts: A Source Book with Bibliography. Mainz: von Zabern.Google Scholar
Falkenstein, A. (1941) Topographie von Uruk, Teil I: Uruk zur Seleukidenzeit. Leipzig: Harrassowitz Verlag.Google Scholar
Falkenstein, A. and von Soden, W. (1953) Sumerische und akkadische Hymnen und Gebete. Zurich: Artemis-Verlag.Google Scholar
Fantalkin, A. and Lytle, E. (2016) ‘Alcaeus and Antimenidas: reassessing the evidence for Greek mercenaries in the Neo-Babylonian army’, Klio 98.1: 90117.Google Scholar
Fantuzzi, M. and Hunter, R. L. (2004) Tradition and Innovation in Hellenistic Poetry. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Fauconnier, B. (2015) ‘« Ex occidente imperium » : Alexander the Great and the rise of the Maurya Empire’, Histos 9: 120–73.Google Scholar
Fincke, J. C. (2003) ‘The Babylonian texts of Nineveh: report on the British Museum’s “Ashurbanipal Library Project”’, AfO 50: 111–49.Google Scholar
Fincke, J. C. (2004) ‘The British Museum’s Ashurbanipal Library Project’, Iraq 66: 5560.Google Scholar
Finkel, I. L. (1980) ‘Bilingual chronicle fragments’, JCS 32.2: 6580.Google Scholar
Forenbaher, S. and Jones, A. (2011) ‘The Nakovana zodiac: fragments of an astrologer’s board from an Illyrian-Hellenistic cave sanctuary’, JHA 42.4: 425–38.Google Scholar
Fortenbaugh, W. W. and Schütrumpf, E. (eds.) (2000) Demetrius of Phalerum: Text, Translation, and Discussion. New Brunswick: Transaction Publishers.Google Scholar
Foster, B. R. (ed.) (2005) Before the Muses: An Anthology of Akkadian Literature, 3rd edition. Bethesda, MD: CDL Press.Google Scholar
Foster, B. R. (2012) ‘Guti’, in Bagnall, R. S., Brodersen, K., Champion, C. B., Erskine, A., and Huebner, S. R. (eds.), The Encyclopedia of Ancient History. Wiley-Blackwell Online, DOI:10.1002/9781444338386.wbeah01080.Google Scholar
Foxvog, D. A. (1993) ‘Astral Dumuzi’, in Cohen, M. E., Snell, D., and Weisberg, D. B. (eds.), The Tablet and the Scroll: Near Eastern Studies in Honor of William W. Hallo. Bethesda, MD: CDL Press, 103–8.Google Scholar
Frahm, E. (2004) ‘Royal hermeneutics: observations on the commentaries from Ashurbanipal’s libraries at Nineveh’, Iraq 66: 4550.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Frahm, E. (2005) ‘On some recently published Late Babylonian copies of royal letters’, NABU 2: 43–6.Google Scholar
Frahm, E. (2010) ‘Counter-texts, commentaries and adaptations: politically motivated responses to the Babylonian Epic of Creation in Mesopotamia, the Biblical world, and elsewhere’, Orient 45: 333.Google Scholar
Frahm, E. (2011a) ‘Keeping company with men of learning: the king as scholar’, in Radner, K. and Robson, E. (eds.), The Oxford Handbook of Cuneiform Culture. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 508–32.Google Scholar
Frahm, E. (2011b) Babylonian and Assyrian Text Commentaries: Origins of Interpretation. Münster: Ugarit-Verlag.Google Scholar
Frame, G. (1999) ‘The inscription of Sargon II at Tang-i Var’, Orientalia 68.1: 3157.Google Scholar
Frame, G. and George, A. (2005) ‘The royal libraries of Nineveh: new evidence for King Ashurbanipal’s tablet collecting’, Iraq 67.1: 265–84.Google Scholar
Fraser, P. M. (1953) ‘The tribal-cycles of eponymous priests at Lindos and Kamiros’, Eranos 51: 2347.Google Scholar
Fraser, P. M. (1972) Ptolemaic Alexandria (3 vols). Oxford: Clarendon Press.Google Scholar
Fraser, P. M. (1994) ‘The world of Theophrastus’, in Hornblower, S. (ed.), Greek Historiography. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 167–91.Google Scholar
Freeland, C. A. (2006) ‘The role of cosmology in Plato’s philosophy’, in H. Benson (ed.), A Companion to Plato. Oxford: Blackwell, 199213.Google Scholar
Freeth, T. (2014) ‘Eclipse prediction on the ancient Greek astronomical calculating machine known as the Antikythera Mechanism’, PLoS One 9.7: 115.Google Scholar
Freeth, T., Bitsakis, Y., Moussas, X., et al. (2006) ‘Decoding the ancient Greek astronomical calculator known as the Antikythera Mechanism’, Nature 444: 587–91.Google Scholar
Freeth, T. and Jones, A. (2012) ‘The cosmos in the Antikythera Mechanism’, ISAW Papers 4. DOI:2333.1/xgxd26r7.Google Scholar
Freeth, T., Jones, A., Steele, J., and Bitsakis, Y. (2008) ‘Calendars with Olympiad display and eclipse prediction on the Antikythera Mechanism’, Nature 454: 614–17.Google Scholar
Friberg, J. (2007) Amazing Traces of a Babylonian Origin in Greek Mathematics. Singapore: World Scientific.Google Scholar
Fuchs, A. (1994) Die Inschriften Sargons II aus Khorsabad. Göttingen: Cuvillier.Google Scholar
Funke, P. (1994) ‘Chronikai syntaxeis kai historiai. Die rhodische Historiographie in hellenistischer Zeit’, Klio 76: 255–62.Google Scholar
Furley, D. J. (1987) The Greek Cosmologists. Volume I: The Formation of the Atomic Theory and Its Earliest Critics. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Furley, W. D. and Gysembergh, V. (2015) Reading the Liver: Papyrological Texts on Ancient Greek Extispicy (Studien und Texte zu Antike und Christentum 94). Tübingen: Mohr Siebeck.Google Scholar
Gabbay, U. (2014a) ‘The kalû priest and kalûtu literature in Assyria’, Orient 49: 115–44.Google Scholar
Gabbay, U. (2014b) Pacifying the Hearts of the Gods. Sumerian Emesal Prayers of the First Millennium BC (Heidelberger Emesal-Studien 1). Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz Verlag.Google Scholar
Gabbay, U. (2015) The Eršema Prayers of the First Millennium BC (Heidelberger Emesal-Studien 2). Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz Verlag.Google Scholar
Gabbay, U. and Jiménez, E. (2019) ‘Cultural imports and local products in the commentaries from Uruk. The case of the Gimil-Sîn family’, in Steele, J. M. and Proust, C. (eds.), Scholars and Scholarship in Late Babylonian Uruk. Berlin: Springer, 4689.Google Scholar
Gabbert, J. J. (2004) Antigonus II Gonatas: A Political Biography. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Gabrielsen, V. (2005) ‘The Chronicle of Lindos. C. Higbie: The Lindian Chronicle and the Greek Creation of their Past’, CR 55: 319–22.Google Scholar
Galter, H. D. (2015) ‘The Mesopotamian god Enki/Ea’, Religion Compass 9.3: 6676.Google Scholar
Gardiner-Garden, J. R. (1987) Greek Conceptions on Inner Asian Geography and Ethnography from Ephoros to Eratosthenes. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University, Research Institute for Inner Asian Studies.Google Scholar
Garelli, P. (1999) ‘Territoires et frontières dans les inscriptions royales médio-assyriennes’, in Milano, L., de Martino, S., Fales, F. M., and Lanfranchi, G. B. (eds.), Landscapes: Territories, Frontiers and Horizons in the Ancient Near East. Papers Presented to the 44th Rencontre Assyriologique Internationale, Venezia, 7–11 July 1997. Part II: Geography and Cultural Landscapes. Padua: Sargon, 45–8.Google Scholar
Gehrke, H.-J. (2008) Geschichte des Hellenismus, 4th edition (Oldenbourg Grundriss der Geschichte 1b). Munich: Oldenbourg.Google Scholar
Gelb, I. J. (1970) ‘Makkan and Meluḫḫa in early Mesopotamian sources’, RA 64.1: 18.Google Scholar
Geller, M. J. (1983) ‘More Graeco-Babyloniaca’, ZA 73.1: 114120.Google Scholar
Geller, M. J. (1997) ‘The last wedge’, ZA 87.1: 4395.Google Scholar
Geller, M. J. (1999) ‘Graeco-Babyloniaca in Babylon’, in Renger, J. (ed.) Babylon: Focus mesopotamischer Geschichte, Wiege früher Gelehrsamkeit, Mythos in der Moderne. Saarbrücken: SDV, 377–83.Google Scholar
Geller, M. J. (2001) ‘West meets east: early Greek and Babylonian diagnosis’, AfO 4849: 5075.Google Scholar
Geller, M. J. (2008) ‘Graeco-Babylonian Utukkū Lemnūtu’, NABU 2008.2: 43–4.Google Scholar
Geller, M. J. (2009) ‘Introduction: “oeil malade et mauvais oeil”’, in Attia, A. and Buisson, G. (eds.), Advances in Mesopotamian Medicine from Hammurabi to Hippocrates: Proceedings of the International Conference ‘Oeil malade et mauvais oeil’, Collège de France, Paris, 23rd June 2006 (Cuneiform Monographs 37). Leiden: Brill 112.Google Scholar
Geller, M. J. (2010) Ancient Babylonian Medicine: Theory and Practice. Chichester, UK: Wiley-Blackwell.Google Scholar
Geller, M. J. (2012) ‘Graeco-Babyloniaca’, in Bagnall, R. S., Brodersen, K., Champion, C. B., Erskine, A., and Huebner, S. R. (eds.), The Encyclopedia of Ancient History. Wiley-Blackwell Online, DOI:10.1002/9781444338386.wbeah01077.Google Scholar
Geller, M. J. (2014a) ‘Berossos on Kos from the view of common sense geography’, in Geus, K. and Thiering, M. (eds.), Features of Common Sense Geography: Implicit Knowledge Structures in Ancient Geographical Texts. Berlin: LIT Verlag, 219–28.Google Scholar
Geller, M. J. (2014b) Melothesia in Babylonia: Medicine, Magic, and Astrology in the Ancient Near East (Science, Technology and Medicine in Ancient Cultures 2). Berlin: De Gruyter.Google Scholar
George, A. R. (1992) Babylonian Topographical Texts. Leuven: Peeters.Google Scholar
George, A. R. (1997) ‘The quarters of Babylon in the Astronomical Diaries’, NABU 1997.1: 19.Google Scholar
George, A. R. (1991) ‘Babylonian texts from the folios of Sidney Smith. Part two: prognostic and diagnostic omens, Tablet I’, RA 85: 137–67.Google Scholar
Gera, D. and Horowitz, W. (1997) ‘Antiochus IV in life and death: evidence from the Babylonian Astronomical Diaries’, JAOS 117.2: 240–52.Google Scholar
Gesche, P. (2001) Schulunterricht in Babylonien im ersten Jahrtausend v. Chr. (AOAT 275). Münster: Ugarit-Verlag.Google Scholar
Geus, K. (2003) ‘Space and geography’, in Erskine, A. (ed.), A Companion to the Hellenistic World. Oxford: Blackwell, 232–45.Google Scholar
Glassner, J.-J. (1984) ‘La division quinaire du terre’, Akkadica 40: 1734.Google Scholar
Glassner, J. -J. (2005) Mesopotamian Chronicles. Leiden: Brill.Google Scholar
Gmirkin, R. (2006) Berossus and Genesis, Manetho and Exodus: Hellenistic Histories and the Date of the Pentateuch. New York: T&T Clark.Google Scholar
Goldstein, B. R. and Bowen, A. C. (1983) ‘A new view of early Greek astronomy’, Isis 74.3: 330–40.Google Scholar
Goldstein, B. R. and Bowen, A. C. (1989) ‘On early Hellenistic astronomy: Timocharis and the first Callippic calendar’, Centaurus 32.3: 272–93.Google Scholar
Goldstein, B. R. and Bowen, A. C. (1991) ‘The introduction of dated observations and precise measurement in Greek astronomy’, AHES 43.2: 93132.Google Scholar
Goldstein, J. A. (1988) ‘The historical setting of the Uruk Prophecy’, JNES 47.1: 43–6.Google Scholar
Goldstein, R. (2010) ‘Late Babylonian letters on collecting tablets and their Hellenistic background – a suggestion’, JNES 69.2: 199207.Google Scholar
Gordon, P. (2012) ‘What is Intellectual History? A frankly partisan introduction to a misunderstood field’, The Harvard Colloquium.Google Scholar
Gotthelf, A. (1988) ‘Historiae I: Plantarum et Animalium’, in Fortenbaugh, W. W. and Sharples, R. (eds.), Theophrastean Studies On Natural Science, Physics and Metaphysics, Ethics, Religion and Rhetoric (Rutgers University Studies in Classical Humanities 3). New Brunswick: Transaction Publishers, 100–35.Google Scholar
Gottschalk, H. B. (1972) ‘Notes on the wills of the Peripatetic scholarchs’, Hermes 100.3: 314–42.Google Scholar
Gottschalk, H. B. (2000) ‘Demetrius of Phalerum: a politician among philosophers and a philosopher among politicians’, in Fortenbaugh, W. W. and Schütrumpf, E. (eds.), Demetrius of Phalerum: Text, Translation, and Discussion. New Brunswick: Transaction Publishers, 367–80.Google Scholar
Grafton, A., Shelford, A., and Siraisi, N. G. (1995) New Worlds, Ancient Texts: The Power of Tradition and the Shock of Discovery. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Grainger, J. D. (1997) A Seleukid Prosopography and Gazetteer. Leiden: Brill.Google Scholar
Granger, H. (1996) Aristotle’s Idea of the Soul (Philosophical Studies Series 68). Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic.Google Scholar
Gray, J. M. K. and Steele, J. M. (2008) ‘Studies on Babylonian goal-year astronomy I: a comparison between planetary data in Goal-Year Texts, Almanacs and Normal Star Almanacs’, AHES 62.5: 553600.Google Scholar
Grayson, A. K. (1975a) Assyrian and Babylonian Chronicles. Locust Valley, NY: J.J. Augustin.Google Scholar
Grayson, A. K. (1975b) Babylonian Historical-Literary Texts. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.Google Scholar
Grayson, A. K. (1980) ‘Königslisten und Chroniken’, RlA 6.1: 86135.Google Scholar
Green, P. (1990) Alexander to Actium: The Historical Evolution of the Hellenistic Age. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Green, P. (2007) The Hellenistic Age: A Short History. New York: The Modern Library.Google Scholar
Greenbaum, D. G. (2013) ‘Chaldaeans, astrologers’, in Bagnall, R. S., Brodersen, K., Champion, C. B., Erskine, A., and Huebner, S. R. (eds.), The Encyclopedia of Ancient History. Wiley-Blackwell Online, DOI:10.1002/9781444338386.wbeah21081.Google Scholar
Greenbaum, D. G. and Ross, M. (2012) ‘Nechepso and Petosiris’, in Bagnall, R. S., Brodersen, K., Champion, C. B., Erskine, A., and Huebner, S. R. (eds.), The Encyclopedia of Ancient History. Wiley-Blackwell Online, DOI:10.1002/9781444338386.wbeah21224.Google Scholar
Greenblatt, S. (1992) Marvelous Possessions: The Wonder of the New World. Oxford: Clarendon Press.Google Scholar
Gregory, A. D. (2016) ‘The creation and destruction of the world’, in Irby-Massie, G. L. (ed.), A Companion to Science, Technology, and Medicine in Ancient Greece and Rome. Chichester, UK: Wiley-Blackwell, 1328.Google Scholar
Griffin, J. (1996) ‘The library of our dreams’, The American Scholar 65.1: 5970.Google Scholar
Griffith, R. D. and Marks, R. B. (2011) ‘A fool by any other name: Greek ’AΛAZΩN and Akkadian ALUZINNU, Phoenix 65.1/2: 2338.Google Scholar
Gruen, E. S. (1975) ‘Rome and Rhodes in the second century B.C.: a historiographical inquiry’, CQ 25.1: 5881.Google Scholar
Gruen, E. S. (1998) Heritage and Hellenism: The Reinvention of Jewish Tradition. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Gruen, E. S. (2000) ‘Culture as policy: the Attalids of Pergamon’, in De Grummond, N. T. and Ridgway, B. S. (eds.), From Pergamon to Sperlonga: Sculpture and Context. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1731.Google Scholar
Gruen, E. S. (2017) ‘Hellenistic patronage and the non-Greek world’, in Erskine, A., Llewellyn-Jones, L. and Wallace, S. (eds.), The Hellenistic Court: Monarchic Power and Elite Society from Alexander to Cleopatra. Swansea: Classical Press of Wales, 295318.Google Scholar
Gufler, B. and Madreiter, I. (2013) ‘Berossos – a bibliography’, in Haubold, J., Lanfranchi, G. B., Rollinger, R., and Steele, J. M. (eds.), The World of Berossos: Proceedings of the 4th International Colloquium on ‘The Ancient Near East Between Classical and Ancient Oriental Traditions’, Hatfield College, Durham 7th–9th July 2010 (Classica et Orientalia 5). Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz Verlag, 309–23.Google Scholar
Gutzwiller, K. (1992) ‘Callimachus’ Lock of Berenice: fantasy, romance, and propaganda’, AJPh 113.3: 359–85.Google Scholar
Gutzwiller, K. (ed.) (2005) The New Posidippus: A Hellenistic Poetry Book. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Gutzwiller, K. (2008) A Guide to Hellenistic Literature. Chichester, UK: Wiley-Blackwell.Google Scholar
Habicht, C. (1990) ‘Athens and the Attalids in the second century B.C.’, Hesperia 59.3: 561–77.Google Scholar
Hadas, M. (1951) Aristeas to Philocrates: Letter of Aristeas. New York: Harper & Brothers.Google Scholar
Hallo, W. (1971) ‘Gutium’, RlA 3: 708–20.Google Scholar
Hallo, W. (2004) ‘New light on the Gutians’, in Van Soldt, W., Kalvelagen, R., and Katz, D. (eds.), Ethnicity in Ancient Mesopotamia: Papers Read at the 48th Rencontre Assyriologique Internationale, Leiden, 1–4 July 2002 (PIHANS 102). Leiden: Netherlands Institute for the Near East, 147–61.Google Scholar
Hamilton, N. T., Swerdlow, N. M., and Toomer, G. J. (1987) ‘The Canobic Inscription: Ptolemy’s earliest work’, in Berggren, J. L. and Goldstein, B. R. (eds.), From Ancient Omens to Statistical Mechanics: Essays on the Exact Sciences Presented to Asger Aaboe. Copenhagen: Copenhagen University Library, 5573.Google Scholar
Hansen, E. V. (1971) The Attalids of Pergamon, 2nd edition. Ithaca: Cornell University Press.Google Scholar
Hardie, A. (1983) Statius and the Silvae: Poets, Patrons and Epideixis in the Graeco-Roman World. Liverpool: Francis Cairns.Google Scholar
Harrauer, H. (2010) Handbuch der griechischen Paläographie (2 vols). Stuttgart: Hiersemann.Google Scholar
Hartog, F. (1980) Le miroir d’Hérodote: essai sur la représentation de l’autre. Paris: Gallimard.Google Scholar
Haubold, J. (unpublished) ‘The Chaldaean philosopher at work: Sudines of Pergamon and his book On Gemstones’.Google Scholar
Haubold, J. (2013a) ‘The world of Berossos: introduction’, in Haubold, J., Lanfranchi, G. B., Rollinger, R., and Steele, J. M. (eds.), The World of Berossos: Proceedings of the 4th International Colloquium on ‘The Ancient Near East Between Classical and Ancient Oriental Traditions’, Hatfield College, Durham 7th–9th July 2010 (Classica et Orientalia 5). Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz Verlag, 314.Google Scholar
Haubold, J. (2013b) ‘“The wisdom of the Chaldaeans”: reading Berossos, Babyloniaca Book 1’, in Haubold, J., Lanfranchi, G. B., Rollinger, R., and Steele, J. M. (eds.), The World of Berossos: Proceedings of the 4th International Colloquium on ‘The Ancient Near East Between Classical and Ancient Oriental Traditions’, Hatfield College, Durham 7th–9th July 2010 (Classica et Orientalia 5). Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz Verlag, 3145.Google Scholar
Haubold, J. (2013c) ‘Berossus’, in Whitmarsh, T. and Thomson, S. (eds.), The Romance Between Greece and the East. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 105–16.Google Scholar
Haubold, J. (2013d) Greece and Mesopotamia: Dialogues in Literature. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Haubold, J. (2016) ‘Hellenism, cosmopolitanism, and the role of Babylonian elites in the Seleucid empire’, in Lavan, M., Payne, R. E., and Weisweiler, J. (eds.), Cosmopolitanism and Empire: Universal Rulers, Local Elites, and Cultural Integration in the Ancient Near East and Mediterranean. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 89102.Google Scholar
Haubold, J., Lanfranchi, G. B., Rollinger, R., and Steele, J. M. (eds.) (2013) The World of Berossos: Proceedings of the 4th International Colloquium on ‘The Ancient Near East Between Classical and Ancient Oriental Traditions’, Hatfield College, Durham 7th–9th July 2010 (Classica et Orientalia 5). Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz Verlag.Google Scholar
Haubold, J., Steele, J. M., and Stevens, K. (eds.) (2019) Keeping Watch in Babylon: The Astronomical Diaries in Context. Leiden: Brill.Google Scholar
Heeßel, N. P. (2000) Babylonisch-assyrische Diagnostik (AOAT 43). Münster: Ugarit-Verlag.Google Scholar
Heeßel, N. P. (2008) ‘Astrological medicine in Babylonia’, in Akasoy, A., Burnett, C., and Yoeli-Tlalim, R. (eds.), Astro–Medicine: Astrology and Medicine, East and West (Micrologus’ Library 25). Florence: SISMEL-Edizioni del galluzzo, 116.Google Scholar
Heidl, A. (1951) The Babylonian Genesis: The Story of the Creation, 2nd edition. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Heilen, S. (2010) ‘Ptolemy’s doctrine of the Terms and its reception’, in Jones, A. (ed.), Ptolemy in Perspective: Use and Criticism of His Work from Antiquity to the Nineteenth Century (Archimedes 23). Dordrecht: Springer, 4593.Google Scholar
Heilen, S. (2015) Hadriani genitura: Die astrologischen Fragmente des Antigonos von Nikaia: Edition, Übersetzung und Kommentar (2 vols). Berlin: De Gruyter.Google Scholar
Heltzer, M. (1989) ‘The Persepolis documents, the Lindos Chronicle, and the Book of Judith’, PP 44: 81101.Google Scholar
Heltzer, M. (1992) ‘Some considerations about the Book of Chronicles and the Lindos Chronicle’, OLP 23: 127–42.Google Scholar
Herman, G. (1980) ‘The “friends” of the early Hellenistic rulers: servants or officials?’, Talanta 1213: 103–49.Google Scholar
Higbie, C. (2001) ‘Homeric Athena in the Chronicle of Lindos’, in Deacy, S. and Villing, A. (eds.), Athena in the Classical World. Leiden: Brill, 105–25.Google Scholar
Higbie, C. (2003) The Lindian Chronicle and the Greek Creation of Their Past. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
von Hinüber, O. (2010) ‘Did Hellenistic kings send letters to Aśoka?’, JAOS 130.2: 261–6.Google Scholar
Holden, J. H. (2006) A History of Horoscopic Astrology: From the Babylonian Period to the Modern Age, 2nd edition. Tempe, AZ: American Federation of Astrologers.Google Scholar
Honigman, S. (2003) The Septuagint and Homeric Scholarship in Alexandria: A Study in the Narrative of the Letter of Aristeas. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Horden, P. and Purcell, N. (2000) The Corrupting Sea: A Study of Mediterranean History. Oxford: Blackwell.Google Scholar
Hornblower, J. (1981) Hieronymus of Cardia. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Horowitz, W. (1988) ‘The Babylonian Map of the World’, Iraq 50: 147–65.Google Scholar
Horowitz, W. (1998) Mesopotamian Cosmic Geography. Winona Lake, IN: Eisenbrauns.Google Scholar
Hübner, W. (1988) ‘Zum Planetenfragment des Sudines (Pap. Gen. Inv. 203)’, ZPE 73: 3342.Google Scholar
Hübner, W. (1989) Die Begriffe ‘Astrologie’ und ‘Astronomie’ in der Antike: Wortgeschichte und Wissenschaftssystematik, mit einer Hypothese zum Terminus ‘Quadrivium’ (Abhandlungen der Akademie der Wissenschaften und der Literatur Mainz, geistes- und sozialwissenschaftlichen Klasse 7). Mainz: Akademie der Wissenschaften und der Literatur Mainz.Google Scholar
Hübner, W. (2005) ‘Dodekatemorion’, in Harwardt, S. and Schwind, J. (eds.), Corona Coronaria: Festschrift für Hans-Otto Kröner zum 75. Geburtstag. Hildesheim: G. Olms, 189217.Google Scholar
Hübner, W. (2006) ‘Epigenes (5)’, in Cancik, H. and Schneider, H. (eds.) Brill’s New Pauly (Antiquity Volumes). Brill Online, DOI:10.1163/1574-9347_bnp_e332040.Google Scholar
Hultzsch, E. (1925) Inscriptions of Asoka. New Edition (Corpus Inscriptionum Indicarum 1). Oxford: Clarendon Press.Google Scholar
Hunger, H. (1968) Babylonische und assyrische Kolophone (AOAT 2). Kevelaer: Butzon & Bercker.Google Scholar
Hunger, H. (1976) Spätbabylonische Texte aus Uruk. Teil 1. Berlin: Mann.Google Scholar
Hunger, H. (1992) Astrological Reports to Assyrian Kings (SAA 8). Helsinki: Helsinki University Press.Google Scholar
Hunger, H. (1999) ‘Non-mathematical astronomical texts and their relationships’, in Swerdlow, N. M. (ed.), Ancient Astronomy and Celestial Divination (Studies in the History of Science and Technology). Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 7796.Google Scholar
Hunger, H. (2001) Astronomical Diaries and Related Texts from Babylonia. Volume V: Lunar and Planetary Texts (Denkschriften der österreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften, philosophisch-historischen Klasse 299). Vienna: Verlag der österreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften.Google Scholar
Hunger, H. (2004) ‘Stars, cities, and predictions’, in Burnett, C., Hogendijk, J. P., Plofker, K., and Yano, M. (eds.), Studies in the History of the Exact Sciences in Honour of David Pingree (Islamic Philosophy, Theology and Science: Texts and Studies 54). Leiden: Brill, 1632.Google Scholar
Hunger, H. (2006) Astronomical Diaries and Related Texts from Babylonia. Volume VI: Goal Year Texts (Denkschriften der österreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften, philosophisch-historischen Klasse 346). Vienna: Verlag der österreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften.Google Scholar
Hunger, H. (2014) Astronomical Diaries and Related Texts from Babylonia. Volume VII: Almanacs and Normal Star Almanacs (Denkschriften der österreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften, philosophisch-historischen Klasse 466). Vienna: Verlag der österreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften.Google Scholar
Hunger, H. (2019) ‘Astrological texts from Late Babylonian Uruk’, in Steele, J. M. and Proust, C. (eds.), Scholars and Scholarship in Late Babylonian Uruk. Berlin: Springer, 167–76.Google Scholar
Hunger, H. and de Jong, T. (2014) ‘Almanac W22340a from Uruk: the latest datable cuneiform tablet’, ZA 104.2: 182–94.Google Scholar
Hunger, H. and Kaufman, S. A.(1975) ‘A new Akkadian prophecy text’, JAOS 95.3: 371–5.Google Scholar
Hunger, H. and Pingree, D. (1999) Astral Sciences in Mesopotamia. Leiden: Brill.Google Scholar
Hunger, H. and Steele, J. M. (2018) The Babylonian Astronomical Compendium MUL.APIN. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Hunter, R. L. (2003a) ‘Literature and its contexts’, in Erskine, A. (ed.), A Companion to the Hellenistic World (Blackwell Companions to the Ancient World). Oxford: Blackwell, 477–93.Google Scholar
Hunter, R. L. (2003b) Theocritus: Encomium of Ptolemy Philadelphus. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Hunter, R. L. (2008) On Coming After: Studies in Post-Classical Greek Literature and Its Reception (2 vols). Berlin: De Gruyter.Google Scholar
Hunter, R. L. (2011) ‘The letter of Aristeas’, in Erskine, A. and Llewellyn-Jones, L. (eds.), Creating a Hellenistic World. Swansea: Classical Press of Wales, 4760.Google Scholar
Hunter, R. L. and Rutherford, I. (eds.) (2009) Wandering Poets in Ancient Greek Culture: Travel, Locality and Panhellenism. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Isager, S. (1998) ‘The Pride of Halikarnassos: editio princeps of an inscription from Salmakis’, ZPE 123: 123.Google Scholar
Izre’el, S. (2001) Adapa and the South Wind: Language Has the Power of Life and Death. Winona Lake, IN: Eisenbrauns.Google Scholar
Jacob, C. (1991) Géographie et ethnographie en Grèce ancienne. Paris: A. Colin.Google Scholar
Jacoby, F. (1913) ‘Hieronymos (10)’, RE 8.2: 1540–60.Google Scholar
Jacoby, F. (1923) ‘Semos von Delos’, RE 2A 2: 1357–9.Google Scholar
Jastrow, M. (1906) ‘Did the Babylonian temples have libraries?’, JAOS 27: 147–82.Google Scholar
Jean, C. (2006) La magie néo-assyrienne en contexte. Recherches sur le metier d’exorciste et le concept d’ āšipūtu (SAAS 17). Helsinki: Neo-Assyrian Text Corpus Project, University of Helsinki.Google Scholar
Jensen, M. S. (2009) ‘Homeric scholarship in Alexandria’, in Hinge, G. and Krasilnikoff, J. A. (eds.), Alexandria: A Cultural and Religious Melting Pot (Aarhus Studies in Mediterranean Antiquity 9). Aarhus: Aarhus University Press, 80–93.Google Scholar
Joannès, F. (1988) ‘Le titre de ša rêš âli (lú-sag uru-a)’, NABU 1988.1: 67.Google Scholar
Joannès, F. (1997) ‘Le monde occidental vu de Mésopotamie, de l’époque néo-babylonienne à l’époque hellénistique’, Transeuphratène 13: 141–53.Google Scholar
Johansen, T. K. (2004) Plato’s Natural Philosophy: A Study of the Timaeus-Critias. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Jones, A. (1983) ‘The development and transmission of 248-day schemes for lunar motion in ancient astronomy’, AHES 29.1: 136.Google Scholar
Jones, A. (1990) ‘Babylonian and Greek astronomy in a papyrus concerning Mars’, Centaurus 33.2: 97114.Google Scholar
Jones, A. (1991a) ‘Hipparchus’s computations of solar longitudes’, JHA 22.2: 101–25.Google Scholar
Jones, A. (1991b) ‘The adaptation of Babylonian methods in Greek numerical astronomy’, Isis 82.3: 440–53.Google Scholar
Jones, A. (1993) ‘Evidence for Babylonian arithmetical schemes in Greek astronomy’, in Galter, H. D. (ed.), Die Rolle der Astronomie in den Kulturen Mesopotamiens: Beiträge zum 3. Grazer Morgenländischen Symposion (23–27. September 1991) (Grazer Morgenländische Studien 3). Graz: GrazKult, 7794.Google Scholar
Jones, A. (1994) ‘The place of astronomy in Roman Egypt’, Apeiron 27.4: 2552.Google Scholar
Jones, A. (1996) ‘Babylonian astronomy and its Greek metamorphoses’, in Ragep, F. J., Ragep, S. P., and Livesey, S. J. (eds.), Tradition, Transmission, Transformation: Proceedings of Two Conferences on Pre-Modern Science Held at the University of Oklahoma (Collection de travaux de l’académie internationale d’histoire des sciences 37). Leiden: Brill, 139–55.Google Scholar
Jones, A. (1999a) ‘Geminus and the Isia’, HSCP 99: 255–67.Google Scholar
Jones, A. (1999b) ‘A classification of astronomical tables on papyrus’, in Swerdlow, N. M. (ed.), Ancient Astronomy and Celestial Divination (Studies in the History of Science and Technology). Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 299340.Google Scholar
Jones, A. (1999c) Astronomical Papyri from Oxyrhynchus (P. Oxy. 4133–4300a) (2 vols). Philadelphia: American Philosophical Society.Google Scholar
Jones, A. (2005) ‘Ptolemy’s Canobic Inscription and Heliodorus’ observation reports’, SCIAMVS 6: 5397.Google Scholar
Jones, A. (2006a) ‘The Keskintos astronomical inscription: text and interpretations’, SCIAMVS 1: 342.Google Scholar
Jones, A. (2006b) ‘IG XII.1 913: an astronomical inscription from Hellenistic Rhodes’, ZPE 158: 104–10.Google Scholar
Jones, A. (2006c) ‘The astronomical inscription from Keskintos, Rhodes’, MAA 6.3: 215–22.Google Scholar
Jones, A. (2006d) ‘Ptolemy’s ancient planetary observations’, Ann. Sci. 63.3: 255–90.Google Scholar
Jones, A. (2007) ‘On Greek stellar and zodiacal date-reckoning’, in Steele, J. M. (ed.), Calendars and Years: Astronomy and Time in the Ancient Near East. Oxford: Oxbow Books, 149–68.Google Scholar
Jones, A. (2015a) ‘The astronomical resources for ancient astral prognostications’, in The Star of Bethlehem and the Magi (Themes in Biblical Narrative: Jewish and Christian Traditions 19). Leiden: Brill, 171–98.Google Scholar
Jones, A. (2015b) ‘Transmission of Babylonian astronomy to other cultures’, in Ruggles, C. L. N. (ed.), Handbook of Archaeoastronomy and Ethnoastronomy. New York: Springer, 1877–81.Google Scholar
Jones, A. (2017) A Portable Cosmos: Revealing the Antikythera Mechanism, Scientific Wonder of the Ancient World. New York: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Jones, A. (2019) ‘Uruk and the Greco-Roman world’, in Steele, J. M. and Proust, C. (eds.), Scholars and Scholarship in Late Babylonian Uruk. Berlin: Springer, 241–55.Google Scholar
Jones, A. and Steele, J. (2011) ‘A new discovery of a component of Greek astrology in Babylonian tablets: the “Terms”’, ISAW Papers 1. DOI:2333.1/k98sf96r.Google Scholar
de Jong, T. (2016) ‘Babylonian astronomy 1880–1950: the players and the field’, in Jones, A., Proust, C., and Steele, J. M. (eds.), A Mathematician’s Journeys: Otto Neugebauer and Modern Transformations of Ancient Science (Archimedes 45). London: Springer, 265302.Google Scholar
de Jong, T. and Worp, K. A. (1995) ‘A Greek horoscope from 373 A.D.’, ZPE 106: 235–40.Google Scholar
de Jong, T. and Worp, K. A. (2001) ‘More Greek horoscopes from Kellis (Dakhleh Oasis)’, ZPE 137: 203–14.Google Scholar
Jouanna, J. (2012) ‘Egyptian medicine and Greek medicine’, in Jouanna, J., Greek Medicine from Hippocrates to Galen: Selected Papers (Studies in Ancient Medicine 40). Leiden: Brill, 320.Google Scholar
Jursa, M. (2015) ‘Late Babylonian epigraphy: a case study’, in Devecchi, E., Müller, G. G. W., and Mynářová, J. (eds.), Current Research in Cuneiform Palaeography: Proceedings of the Workshop Organised at the 60th Rencontre Assyriologique Internationale, Warsaw 2014. Gladbeck: PeWe-Verlag, 187–98.Google Scholar
Kahn, C. H. (1960) Anaximander and the Origin of Greek Cosmology. New York: Columbia University Press.Google Scholar
Kahn, D. (2004) ‘Taharqa, king of Kush and the Assyrians’, JSSEA 31: 109–28.Google Scholar
Kahn, D. (2006) ‘The Assyrian invasions of Egypt (673–663 B.C.) and the final expulsion of the Kushites’, Studien zur Altägyptischen Kultur 34: 251–67.Google Scholar
Karttunen, K. (1997) India and the Hellenistic World (Studia Orientalia 83). Helsinki: Finnish Oriental Society.Google Scholar
Kenyon, F. G. (1899) The Palaeography of Greek Papyri. Oxford: Clarendon Press.Google Scholar
Kim, L. (2010) Homer Between History and Fiction in Imperial Greek Literature. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Kirk, G. S., Raven, J. E., and Schofield, M. (1983) The Presocratic Philosophers: A Critical History with a Selection of Texts, 2nd edition. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Knudsen, E. E. (1990) ‘On Akkadian texts in Greek orthography’, in Keck, E., Sondegaard, S., and Wulff, E. (eds.), Living Waters: Scandinavian Orientalistic Studies Presented to Professor Dr. Frede Løkkegaard on His Seventy-Fifth Birthday, January 27th 1990. Copenhagen: Museum Tusculanum Press, 147–61.Google Scholar
Knudsen, E. E. (1995) ‘The Ashmolean Museum incantation in Greek orthography’, in Loretz, O. and M. Dietrich, (eds.), Vom Alten Orient zum Alten Testament: Festschrift für Wolfram Freiherrn von Soden zum 85. Geburtstag am 19. Juni 1993 (AOAT 240). Kevelaer: Butzon & Bercker, 135–40.Google Scholar
Koch-Westenholz, U. (1993) ‘Mesopotamian astrology at Hattusas’, in Galter, H. D. (ed.), Die Rolle der Astronomie in den Kulturen Mesopotamiens: Beiträge zum 3. Grazer Morgenländischen Symposion (23.–27. September 1991) (Grazer Morgenländische Studien). Graz: GrazKult, 231–46.Google Scholar
Koch-Westenholz, U. (1995) Mesopotamian Astrology: An Introduction to Babylonian and Assyrian Celestial Divination. Copenhagen: Museum Tusculanum Press.Google Scholar
Koch-Westenholz, U. (2000) Babylonian Liver Omens: The Chapters Manzāzu, Padānu and Pān Tākalti of the Babylonian Extispicy Series Mainly from Aššurbanipal’s Library. Copenhagen: Museum Tusculanum Press.Google Scholar
Komoróczy, G. (1973) ‘Berosos and the Mesopotamian literature’, AAntHung 21: 125–52.Google Scholar
König, J., Oikonomopoulou, K., and Woolf, G. (eds.) (2013) Ancient Libraries. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Kosmin, P.J. (2013a) ‘Rethinking the Hellenistic Gulf: the new Greek inscription from Bahrain’, JHS 133: 6179.Google Scholar
Kosmin, P.J. (2013b) ‘Seleucid ethnography and indigenous kingship: the Babylonian education of Antiochus I’, in Haubold, J., Lanfranchi, G. B., Rollinger, R., and Steele, J. M. (eds.), The World of Berossos: Proceedings of the 4th International Colloquium on ‘The Ancient Near East Between Classical and Ancient Oriental Traditions’, Hatfield College, Durham 7th–9th July 2010 (Classica et Orientalia 5). Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz Verlag, 199212.Google Scholar
Kosmin, P.J. (2014a) ‘Seeing double in Seleucid Babylonia: rereading the Borsippa Cylinder of Antiochus I’, in Moreno, A. and Thomas, R. (eds.), Patterns of the Past: Epitēdeumata in the Greek Tradition. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 173–98.Google Scholar
Kosmin, P.J. (2014b) The Land of the Elephant Kings: Space, Territory and Ideology in the Seleucid Empire. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Koster, W. J. W. (1975) Prolegomena de comoedia; scholia in Archarnenses, Equites, Nubes. Pars 1: Fasc, 1 A: Prolegomena de comoedia. Groningen: Bouma’s Boekhuis B.V.Google Scholar
Kramer, S. N. (1963) ‘Dilmun: quest for paradise’, Antiquity 37: 111–15.Google Scholar
Krebernik, M. (2002) ‘Ein aramäischer Text in griechischer Schrift?’, in Arnold, W. and Bobzin, H. (eds.), ‘Sprich doch mit deinen Knechten aramäisch, wir verstehen es!’ Festschrift für Otto Jastrow zum 60. Geburtstag. Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz Verlag, 425–8.Google Scholar
Krevans, N. (1983) ‘Geography and the literary tradition in Theocritus 7’, TAPA 113: 201–20.Google Scholar
Kroonen, G. J. (2012) ‘On the etymology of Greek ἄγλις and γέλγις « garlic »: an Akkadian loanword in pre-Greek’, The Journal of Indo-European Studies 40.3–4: 289–99.Google Scholar
Kugler, F. X. and Strassmaier, J.N. (1900) Die babylonische Mondrechnung: Zwei Systeme der Chaldäer über den Lauf des Mondes und der Sonne. Freiburg im Breisgau: Herder’sche Verlagshandlung.Google Scholar
Kuhrt, A. (1987) ‘Berossus’ Babyloniaka and Seleucid rule in Babylonia’, in Kuhrt, A. and Sherwin-White, S. M. (eds.), Hellenism in the East: The Interaction of Greek and Non-Greek Civilizations from Syria to Central Asia After Alexander. Berkeley: University of California Press, 3256.Google Scholar
Kuhrt, A. (2002a) ‘Greek contact with the Levant and Mesopotamia in the first half of the first millennium BC: a view from the East’, in Tsetskhladze, G. R. and Snodgrass, A. M. (eds.), Greek Settlement in the Eastern Mediterranean and Black Sea (BAR International Series 1062). Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1726.Google Scholar
Kuhrt, A. (2002b) Greeks and Greece in Mesopotamian and Persian Perspectives: A Lecture Delivered at New College, Oxford, on 7th May 2001 (21st J. L. Myres Memorial Lecture). Oxford: Leopard’s Head Press.Google Scholar
Kuhrt, A. (2007) The Persian Empire: A Corpus of Sources from the Achaemenid Period (2 vols). London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Kuhrt, A. and Sherwin-White, S. M. (1991) ‘Aspects of Seleucid royal ideology: the cylinder of Antiochus I from Borsippa’, JHS 111: 7186.Google Scholar
Kuhrt, A. and Sherwin-White, S. M. (1993) From Samarkhand to Sardis: A New Approach to the Seleucid Empire. London: Duckworth.Google Scholar
Kümmel, H. M. (1979) Familie, Beruf und Amt im spätbabylonischen Uruk: prosopograph. Unters. zu Berufsgruppen d. 6. Jh. v. Chr. in Uruk. Berlin: Mann.Google Scholar
Kurtik, G. Y. and Militarev, A. Y. (2005) ‘Once more on the origin of Semetic [sic] and Greek star names: an astronomic-etymological approach updated’, Culture and Cosmos 9: nr. 1.Google Scholar
Kuttner, A. (2005) ‘Cabinet fit for a queen: the “Lithika” as Posidippus’ gem museum’, in Gutzwiller, K. (ed.), The New Posidippus: A Hellenistic Poetry Book. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 141–63.Google Scholar
De Kuyper, J. (1993) ‘Mesopotamian astronomy and astrology as seen by Greek literature: the Chaldaeans’, in Galter, H. D. (ed.), Die Rolle der Astronomie in den Kulturen Mesopotamiens: Beiträge zum 3. Grazer Morgenländischen Symposion (23.–27. September 1991) (Grazer Morgenländische Studien 3). Graz: GrazKult, 1357.Google Scholar
Lambert, W. G. (1976) ‘Berossus and Babylonian eschatology’, Iraq 38.2: 171–3.Google Scholar
Lane Fox, R. (2011) ‘The first Hellenistic man’, in Erskine, A. and Llewellyn-Jones, L. (eds.), Creating a Hellenistic World. Swansea: Classical Press of Wales, 129.Google Scholar
Lanfranchi, G. B. (2013) ‘Babyloniaca, Book 3: Assyrians, Babylonians and Persians’, in Haubold, J., Lanfranchi, G. B., Rollinger, R., and Steele, J. M. (eds.), The World of Berossos: Proceedings of the 4th International Colloquium on ‘The Ancient Near East Between Classical and Ancient Oriental Traditions’, Hatfield College, Durham 7th–9th July 2010 (Classica et Orientalia 5). Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz Verlag, 6174.Google Scholar
Lanzillotta, E. (1996) ‘Semo di Delo’, in Lanzillotta, E. and Schilardi, D. (eds.), Le Cicladi e il mondo egeo: seminario internazionale di studi, Roma, 19–21 novembre 1992. Rome: Università degli studi di Roma ‘Tor vergata’, Dipartimento di storia, 285326.Google Scholar
Laqueur, R. (1938) ‘Philippos (40)’, RE 19.2: 2349.Google Scholar
Le Bohec, S. (1985) ‘Les philoi des rois antigonides’, REG 98: 93124.Google Scholar
Le Bohec, S. (1993) Antigone Dôsôn: roi de Macédoine. Nancy: Presses universitaires de Nancy.Google Scholar
Le Boulluec, A. (2000) ‘Alien wisdom’, in Jacob, C. and de Polignac, F. (eds.), Alexandria, Third Century BC: The Knowledge of the World in a Single City. Alexandria, Egypt: Harpocrates Publishing, 5672.Google Scholar
Lee, H. D. P. (1948) ‘Place-names and the date of Aristotle’s biological works’, CQ 42.3–4: 61–7.Google Scholar
Leemans, W. F. (1960) Foreign Trade in the Old Babylonian Period as Revealed by Texts from Southern Mesopotamia. Leiden: Brill.Google Scholar
Le Guen, B. (2001) Les associations de technites dionysiaques à l’époque hellénistique (Études d’Archéologie Classique XI–XII) (2 vols). Nancy: A.D.R.A.Google Scholar
Lehmann-Haupt, C. F. (1929) ‘Neue Studien zu Berossos’, Klio 22: 125–60.Google Scholar
Lehmann-Haupt, C. F. (1938) ‘Berossos’, RlA 2: 117.Google Scholar
Lehoux, D. (2007) Astronomy, Weather, and Calendars in the Ancient World: Parapegmata and Related Texts in Classical and Near-Eastern Societies. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Leichty, E. (1970) The Omen Series Šumma Izbu (Texts from Cuneiform Sources 4). Locust Valley, NY: J.J. Augustin.Google Scholar
Lenormant, F. (1871) Essai de commentaire des fragments cosmogoniques de Bérose, d’après les textus cunéiformes et les monuments de l’art Asiatique. Paris: Maisonneuve.Google Scholar
Lenormant, F. (1880) Les origines de l’histoire d’après la Bible et les traditions des peuples orientaux, 2nd edition. Paris: Maisonneuve.Google Scholar
Lenzi, A. (2008a) ‘The Uruk list of kings and sages and Late Mesopotamian scholarship’, JNER 8.2: 137–69.Google Scholar
Lenzi, A. (2008b) Secrecy and the Gods: Secret Knowledge in Ancient Mesopotamia and Biblical Israel (SAAS 19). Helsinki: Neo-Assyrian Text Corpus Project, University of Helsinki.Google Scholar
Lévi-Strauss, C. (1962) Le totémisme aujourd’hui. Paris: Presses universitaires de France.Google Scholar
Lieberman, S. J. (1990) ‘Canonical and official cuneiform texts: towards an understanding of Assurbanipal’s personal tablet collection’, in Abusch, T., Huehnergard, J., and Steinkeller, P. (eds.), Lingering Over Words: Studies in Ancient Near Eastern Literature in Honor of William L. Moran (Harvard Semitic Studies 37). Atlanta: Scholars Press, 305–36.Google Scholar
Linssen, M. J. H. (2004) The Cults of Uruk and Babylon: The Temple Ritual Texts as Evidence for Hellenistic Cult Practises [sic]. Leiden: Brill.Google Scholar
Lippolis, E. (1988) ‘Il santuario di Athana a Lindo’, Annuario della Scuola archeologica di Atene e della missione italiane in Oriente 667: 97157.Google Scholar
Liverani, M. (1990) Prestige and Interest: International Relations in the Near East ca. 1600–1100 B.C. Padua: Sargon.Google Scholar
Lloyd, G. E. R. (1961) ‘The development of Aristotle’s theory of the classification of animals’, Phronesis 6.1: 5981.Google Scholar
Lloyd, G. E. R. (1996) Adversaries and Authorities: Investigations into Ancient Greek and Chinese Science. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Lloyd, G. E. R. (2002) The Ambitions of Curiosity: Understanding the World in Ancient Greece and China. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Lloyd, G. E. R. (2006) Principles and Practices in Ancient Greek and Chinese Science. Aldershot: Ashgate.Google Scholar
Lloyd, G. E. R. and Sivin, N. (2002) The Way and the Word: Science and Medicine in Early China and Greece. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press.Google Scholar
Lloyd-Jones, H. (1999a) ‘The Pride of Halicarnassus’, ZPE 124: 114.Google Scholar
Lloyd-Jones, H. (1999b) ‘The Pride of Halicarnassus (ZPE 124 [1999] 1–14): corrigenda and addenda’, ZPE 127: 63–5.Google Scholar
López-Ruiz, C. (2010) When the Gods Were Born: Greek Cosmogonies and the Near East. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Lovejoy, A. O. (1936) The Great Chain of Being: A Study of the History of an Idea. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Lovejoy, A. O. (1940) ‘Reflections on the History of Ideas’, JHI 1.1: 323.Google Scholar
Lynch, J. P. (1972) Aristotle’s School: A Study of a Greek Educational Institution. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Ma, J. (1999) Antiochos III and the Cities of Western Asia Minor. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Ma, J. (2013) ‘The Attalids: a military history’, in Thonemann, P. (ed.), Attalid Asia Minor: Money, International Relations, and the State. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 4982.Google Scholar
Maass, E. (1892) Aratea. Berlin: Weidmannsche Buchandlung.Google Scholar
Machinist, P. (1986) ‘On self-consciousness in Mesopotamia’, in Eisenstadt, S. N. (ed.), The Origins and Diversity of Axial Age Civilizations. Albany, NY: State University of New York Press, 183202.Google Scholar
MacLeod, R. (2000) ‘Alexandria in history and myth’, in MacLeod, R. (ed.), The Library of Alexandria: Centre of Learning in the Ancient World. London: I.B. Tauris, 115.Google Scholar
Madreiter, I. (2013) ‘From Berossos to Eusebius: a Christian apologist’s shaping of “pagan” literature’, in Haubold, J., Lanfranchi, G. B., Rollinger, R., and Steele, J. M. (eds.), The World of Berossos: Proceedings of the 4th International Colloquium on ‘The Ancient Near East Between Classical and Ancient Oriental Traditions’, Hatfield College, Durham 7th–9th July 2010 (Classica et Orientalia 5). Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz Verlag, 255–75.Google Scholar
Maehler, H. (2004) ‘Alexandria, the Mouseion, and cultural identity’, in Hirst, A. and Silk, M. (eds.), Alexandria, Real and Imagined. Aldershot: Ashgate, 114.Google Scholar
Malāmāṭ, A. (1998) Mari and the Bible. Leiden: Brill.Google Scholar
Manitius, K. (1894) Hipparchi In Arati et Eudoxi Phaenomena commentariorum libri tres. Leipzig: Teubner.Google Scholar
Marcos, N. F. (2000) The Septuagint in Context: Introduction to the Greek Version of the Bible. Leiden: Brill.Google Scholar
Marcovich, M. (1995) Tatiani Oratio ad Graecos. Theophili Antiocheni ad Autolycum (Patristische Texte und Studien 43–44). Berlin: De Gruyter.Google Scholar
Marincola, J. (2005) ‘Review of Carolyn Higbie, The Lindian Chronicle and the Greek Creation of their Past’, BMCR 2005.04.59.Google Scholar
Martin, J. (1974) Scholia in Aratum vetera. Stuttgart: Teubner.Google Scholar
Massar, N. (2006) ‘La « Chronique de Lindos » : un catalogue à la gloire du sanctuaire d’Athéna Lindia’, Kernos. Revue internationale et pluridisciplinaire de religion grecque antique 19: 229–43.Google Scholar
Matthen, M. and Hankinson, R. J. (1993) ‘Aristotle’s universe: its form and matter’, Synthese 96.3: 417–35.Google Scholar
Maul, S. M. (1991) ‘Neues zu den “Graeco-Babyloniaca”’, ZA 81: 87107.Google Scholar
Maul, S. M. (1995) ‘La fin de la tradition cunéiforme et les Graeco-Babyloniaca’, CCGG 6: 317.Google Scholar
Maul, S. M. (2010) ‘Die Tontafelbibliothek aus dem sogenannten “Haus des Beschwörungspriesters”’, in Heeßel, N. P. and Maul, S. M. (eds.), Assur-Forschungen: Arbeiten aus der Forschungsstelle ‘Edition literarischer Keilschrifttexte aus Assur’ der Heidelberger Akademie der Wissenschaften. Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz Verlag, 189228.Google Scholar
McEwan, G. J. P. (1981) Priest and Temple in Hellenistic Babylonia (Freiburger Altorientalische Studien 4). Wiesbaden: Franz Steiner.Google Scholar
Metcalf, C. (2015) The Gods Rich in Praise: Early Greek and Mesopotamian Religious Poetry (Oxford Classical Monographs). Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Metcalf, C. (2017) ‘The Homeric epics and the Anatolian context – Bachvarova (M. R.) From Hittite to Homer. The Anatolian Background of Ancient Greek Epic’, CR 67.1: 35.Google Scholar
Michalowski, P. (1986) ‘Mental maps and ideology: reflections on Subartu’, in Weiss, H. (ed.), The Origins of Cities in Dry-Farming Syria and Mesopotamia in the Third Millennium B.C. Guilford, CT: Four Quarters, 129–56.Google Scholar
Michalowski, P. (2010) ‘Masters of the four corners of the heavens: views of the universe in early Mesopotamian writings’, in Raaflaub, K. A. and Talbert, R. J. A. (eds.), Geography and Ethnography: Perceptions of the World in Pre-Modern Societies (The Ancient World: Comparative Histories). Chichester, UK: Wiley-Blackwell, 147–68.Google Scholar
Van de Mieroop, M. (1999) ‘Literature and political discourse in ancient Mesopotamia: Sargon II of Assyria and Sargon of Agade’, in Böck, B., Cancik-Kirschbaum, E. and Richter, T., (eds.), Munuscula Mesopotamica: Festschrift für Johannes Renger (AOAT 267). Münster: Ugarit-Verlag, 327–39.Google Scholar
Milano, L., de Martino, S., Fales, F. M., and Lanfranchi, G. B. (eds.) (1999) Landscapes: Territories, Frontiers and Horizons in the Ancient Near East. Papers Presented to the 44th Rencontre Assyriologique Internationale, Venezia, 7–11 July 1997 (3 vols). Padua: Sargon.Google Scholar
Miller, S. (1993) ‘Pambotadai Found?’, BCH 117.1: 225–31.Google Scholar
Minns, E. H. (1915) ‘Parchments of the Parthian period from Avroman in Kurdistan’, JHS 35: 2265.Google Scholar
Mirelman, S. (2015) ‘Birds, balaĝs and snakes (K.4206+)’, JCS 67: 169–86.Google Scholar
Misiewicz, Z. (2016) ‘Mesopotamian lunar omens in Justinian’s Constantinople’, in Steele, J. M. (ed.), The Circulation of Astronomical Knowledge in the Ancient World (Time, Astronomy and Calendars 6). Leiden: Brill, 350–95.Google Scholar
Momigliano, A. (1935) ‘Genesi storica e funzione attuale del concetto di Ellenismo’, Giornale critico della filosofia italiana 16: 1035.Google Scholar
Momigliano, A. (1943) ‘Rostovtzeff’s twofold history of the Hellenistic world’, JHS 63: 116–17.Google Scholar
Momigliano, A. (1954) ‘M. I. Rostovtzeff’, Cambridge Journal 7.6: 334–46.Google Scholar
Momigliano, A. (1970a) ‘J.G. Droysen between Greeks and Jews’, H&T 9: 139–53.Google Scholar
Momigliano, A. (1970b) ‘Hellenismus und Gnosis. Randbemerkungen zu Droysens Geschichte des Hellenismus’, Saeculum 21: 185–8.Google Scholar
Momigliano, A. (1975) Alien Wisdom: The Limits of Hellenization. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Momigliano, A. (1982) ‘Biblical Studies and Classical Studies: simple reflections about historical method’, Biblical Archaeologist 45: 224–8.Google Scholar
Monerie, J. (2012) ‘Notabilité urbaine et administration locale en Babylonie du sud aux époques séleucide et parthe’, in Feyel, C., Fournier, J., Graslin-Thomé, L., and Kirbihler, F. (eds.), Communautés locales et pouvoir central dans l’Orient hellénistique et romain (Études Anciennes 47). Nancy: A.D.R.A., 327–52.Google Scholar
Monerie, J. (2014) D’Alexandre à Zoilos: Dictionnaire prosopographique des porteurs de nom grec dans les sources cunéiformes. Stuttgart: Franz Steiner.Google Scholar
Monerie, J. (2015) ‘Writing Greek with weapons singularly ill-designed for the purpose: the transcription of Greek in cuneiform’, in Rollinger, R. and van Dongen, E. (eds.), Mesopotamia in the Ancient World: Impact, Continuities, Parallels. Proceedings of the Seventh Symposium of the Melammu Project Held in Obergurgl, Austria, November 4–8, 2013. Münster: Ugarit-Verlag, 349–64.Google Scholar
Monerie, J. (2017) L’économie de la Babylonie à l’époque hellénistique (IVème – IIème siècle avant J.C.). Berlin: De Gruyter.Google Scholar
Monroe, M. W. (2016) ‘The micro-zodiac in Babylon and Uruk: Seleucid zodiacal astrology’, in Steele, J. M. (ed.), The Circulation of Astronomical Knowledge in the Ancient World (Time, Astronomy and Calendars 6). Leiden: Brill, 119–38.Google Scholar
Mossé, C. (2000) ‘Demetrius of Phaleron: a philosopher in power?’, in Jacob, C. and de Polignac, F. (eds.), Alexandria, Third Century BC: The Knowledge of the World in a Single City. Alexandria, Egypt: Harpocrates Publishing, 7482.Google Scholar
Mosshammer, A. A. (ed.) (1984) Georgii Syncelli Ecloga chronographica. Leipzig: Teubner.Google Scholar
Moyer, I. S. (2011) Egypt and the Limits of Hellenism. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Mugler, C. (1971) l’Archimede, Oeuvres. Tome II: Des spirales – De l’équilibre des figures planes – L’Arénaire – La Quadrature de la parabole (Collection Budé 202). Paris: Les Belles Lettres.Google Scholar
Murray, O. (1967) ‘Aristeas and Ptolemaic kingship’, JTS 18.2: 337–71.Google Scholar
Murray, O. (1972) ‘Herodotus and Hellenistic culture’, CQ 22.2: 200–13.Google Scholar
Murray, O. (2008) ‘Ptolemaic royal patronage’, in McKechnie, P. and Guillaume, P. (eds.), Ptolemy II Philadelphus and His World. Leiden: Brill, 924.Google Scholar
Nagy, G. (1998) ‘The library of Pergamon as a classical model’, in Koester, H. (ed.), Pergamon: Citadel of the Gods (Harvard Theological Studies 46). Valley Forge, PA: Trinity Press International, 185232.Google Scholar
Netz, R. (2004) The Works of Archimedes: Translated into English, Together with Eutocius’ Commentaries, with Commentary, and Critical Edition of the Diagrams. Volume 1: The Two Books On the Sphere and the Cylinder. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Neugebauer, O. (1955a) ‘The Egyptian “decans”’, Vistas in Astronomy 1: 4751.Google Scholar
Neugebauer, O. (1955b) Astronomical Cuneiform Texts (3 vols). London: L. Humphries.Google Scholar
Neugebauer, O. (1956) ‘Notes on Hipparchus’, in Weinberg, S. S. and Augustin, J. J. (eds.), The Aegean and the Near East: Studies Presented to Hetty Goldman. Locust Valley, NY: J.J. Augustin, 292–6.Google Scholar
Neugebauer, O. (1959) ‘Melothesia and dodecatemoria’, Analecta Biblica 12: 270–5.Google Scholar
Neugebauer, O. (1963) ‘The survival of Babylonian methods in the exact sciences of antiquity and Middle Ages’, PAPhS 107.6: 528–35.Google Scholar
Neugebauer, O. (1975) A History of Ancient Mathematical Astronomy (3 vols). Berlin: Springer.Google Scholar
Neugebauer, O. (1988) ‘A Babylonian lunar ephemeris from Roman Egypt’, in Leichty, E., M. de Ellis, J., and Gerardi, P. (eds.), A Scientific Humanist: Studies in Memory of Abraham Sachs (Occasional Publications of the Samuel Noah Kramer Fund 9). Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Museum, 301–4.Google Scholar
Neugebauer, O. and Parker, R. A. (1960–9) Egyptian Astronomical Texts (4 vols). London: L. Humphries.Google Scholar
Neugebauer, O., Parker, R. A., and Pingree, D. (1982) ‘The zodiac ceilings of Petosiris and Petubastis’, in Osing, J. (ed.), Denkmäler der Oase Dachla. Aus dem Nachlass von Ahmed Fakhry. Mainz am Rhein: von Zabern, 96101.Google Scholar
Neugebauer, O. and Sachs, A. (1952) ‘The “Dodekatemoria” in Babylonian astrology’, AfO 16: 65–6.Google Scholar
Neugebauer, O. and van Hoesen, H. B. (1959) Greek Horoscopes (Memoirs of the American Philosophical Society 48). Philadelphia: American Philosophical Society.Google Scholar
Neujahr, M. (2005) ‘When Darius defeated Alexander: composition and redaction in the Dynastic Prophecy’, JNES 64.2: 101–7.Google Scholar
Neujahr, M. (2012) Predicting the Past in the Ancient Near East: Mantic Historiography in Ancient Mesopotamia, Judah, and the Mediterranean World (Brown Judaic Studies). Providence, RI: SBL Press.Google Scholar
Nicholls, M. C. (2011) ‘Galen and libraries in the Peri Alupias’, JRS 101: 123–42.Google Scholar
Nicholls, M. C. (2013) ‘Roman libraries as public buildings in the cities of the Empire’, in König, J., Oikonomopoulou, K., and Woolf, G. (eds.), Ancient Libraries. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 261–76.Google Scholar
Nicolai, R. (2015) ‘Historiography, ethnography, geography’, in Montari, F., Matthaios, S., and Rengakos, A. (eds.), Brill’s Companion to Ancient Greek Scholarship. Leiden: Brill, 1090–125.Google Scholar
Nicolet, C. (1991) Space, Geography, and Politics in the Early Roman Empire. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.Google Scholar
Norman, K. R. (1972) ‘Notes on the Greek version of Aśoka’s Twelfth and Thirteenth Rock Edicts’, JRAS 2: 111–18.Google Scholar
Norman, K. R. (1991) ‘Studies in the Minor Rock Edicts of Aśoka’, JRAS 1.2: 243–53.Google Scholar
Nuyens, F. (1948) L’évolution de la psychologie d’Aristote. Leuven: Institut Supérior de Philosophie.Google Scholar
O’Donnell, J. J. (1998) Avatars of the Word: From Papyrus to Cyberspace. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Oelsner, J. (1972) ‘Zur Bedeutung der “Graeco-Babyloniaca” für die Überlieferung des Sumerischen und Akkadischen’, MIO 17: 356–64.Google Scholar
Oelsner, J. (1978) ‘Kontinuität und Wandel in Gesellschaft und Kultur Babyloniens in hellenistischer Zeit’, Klio 60: 101–16.Google Scholar
Oelsner, J. (1986) Materialien zur babylonischen Gesellschaft und Kultur in hellenistischer Zeit. Budapest: Eötvös Loránd Tudományegyetem.Google Scholar
Oelsner, J. (2002a) ‘Hellenization of the Babylonian culture?’, in Panaino, A. and Pettinato, G. (eds.), Ideologies as Intercultural Phenomena (Melammu Symposia 3). Milan: Università di Bologna & IsIAO, 183–96.Google Scholar
Oelsner, J. (2002b) Sie ist gefallen, sie ist gefallen, Babylon, die große Stadt’: Vom Ende einer Kultur (Sitzungsberichte der Sächsischen Akademie der Wissenschaften zu Leipzig, Philologisch-historische Klasse 138.1). Leipzig: Verlag der Sächsischen Akademie der Wissenschaften.Google Scholar
Oelsner, J. (2003) ‘Cuneiform archives in Hellenistic Babylonia: aspects of content and form’, in Brosius, M. (ed.), Ancient Archives and Archival Traditions: Concepts of Record-Keeping in the Ancient World. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 284301.Google Scholar
Oelsner, J. (2013) ‘Überlegungen zu den „Graeco-Babyloniaca“’, in Sassmannshausen, L. (ed.), He Has Opened Nisaba’s House of Learning: Studies in Honor of Åke Waldemar Sjöberg on the Occasion of His 89th Birthday on August 1st 2013 (Cuneiform Monographs 46). Leiden: Brill: 147–64.Google Scholar
Offner, G. (1950) ‘À propos de la sauvegarde des tablettes en Assyro-Babylonie’, RA 44.3: 135–43.Google Scholar
Ogden, D. (2002) ‘Introduction. From chaos to Cleopatra’, in Ogden, D. (ed.), The Hellenistic World: New Perspectives. Swansea: Classical Press of Wales, ixxxv.Google Scholar
Ohly, K. (1928) Stichometrische Untersuchungen. Leipzig: Harrassowitz.Google Scholar
Orlinsky, H. M. (1975) ‘The Septuagint as Holy Writ and the philosophy of its translators’, Hebrew Union College Annual 46: 89114.Google Scholar
Ossendrijver, M. (forthcoming) Babylonian Mathematical Astronomy: Tabular Texts (Sources and Studies in the History of Mathematics and Physical Sciences). New York: Springer.Google Scholar
Ossendrijver, M. (2011a) ‘Science in action: networks in Babylonian astronomy’, in Cancik-Kirschbaum, E., van Ess, M., and Marzahn, J. (eds.), Babylon: Wissenskultur in Orient und Okzident. Berlin: De Gruyter, 213–21.Google Scholar
Ossendrijver, M. (2011b) ‘Exzellente Netzwerke: die Astronomen von Uruk’, in Selz, G. (ed.), The Empirical Dimension of Near Eastern Studies (Wiener Offene Orientalistik 6). Vienna: LIT Verlag, 231–44.Google Scholar
Ossendrijver, M. (2012) Babylonian Mathematical Astronomy: Procedure Texts (Sources and Studies in the History of Mathematics and Physical Sciences). New York: Springer.Google Scholar
Ossendrijver, M. (2015) ‘Babylonian mathematical astronomy’, in Ruggles, C. L. N. (ed.), Handbook of Archaeoastronomy and Ethnoastronomy. New York: Springer, 1863–70.Google Scholar
Ossendrijver, M. (2016a) ‘Translating Babylonian mathematical astronomy: Neugebauer and beyond’, in Jones, A., Proust, C., and Steele, J. M. (eds.), A Mathematician’s Journeys: Otto Neugebauer and Modern Transformations of Ancient Science (Archimedes 45). London: Springer, 333–42.Google Scholar
Ossendrijver, M. (2016b) ‘Ancient Babylonian astronomers calculated Jupiter’s position from the area under a time-velocity graph’, Science 351: 482–4.Google Scholar
van Paassen, C. (1957) The Classical Tradition of Geography. Groningen: J. B. Wolters.Google Scholar
Paganini, M. C. D. (2011) Gymnasia and Greek Identity in Ptolemaic and Early Roman Egypt, DPhil thesis, Oxford University.Google Scholar
Parker, B. (2000) ‘The earliest known reference to the Ionians in the cuneiform sources’, AHB 14: 6977.Google Scholar
Parker, R. A. (1959) A Vienna Demotic Papyrus on Eclipse- and Lunar-Omina (Brown Egyptological Studies 2). Providence, RI: Brown University Press.Google Scholar
Parpola, A. and Parpola, S. (1975) ‘On the relationship of the Sumerian toponym Meluḫḫa and Sanskrit mleccha’, StOr 46: 205–38.Google Scholar
Parpola, S. (1983a) ‘Assyrian library records’, JNES 42.1: 129.Google Scholar
Parpola, S. (1983b) Letters from Assyrian Scholars to the Kings Esarhaddon and Assurbanipal. Part II: Commentary and Appendices (AOAT 5). Kevelaer; Butzon & Bercker.Google Scholar
Parpola, S. (1986) ‘The royal archives of Nineveh’, in Veenhof, K. R. (ed.), Cuneiform Archives and Libraries: Papers Read at the 30e Rencontre Assyriologique Internationale, Leiden, 4–8 July 1983 (Publications de l’Institut historique-archéologique néerlandais de Stamboul 57). Leiden: Nederlands Instituut voor het Nabije Oosten, 223–36.Google Scholar
Parpola, S. (1993a) ‘Mesopotamian astrology and astronomy as domains of the Mesopotamian “wisdom”’, in Galter, H. D. (ed.), Die Rolle der Astronomie in den Kulturen Mesopotamiens: Beiträge zum 3. Grazer Morgenländischen Symposion (23.–27. September 1991) (Grazer Morgenländische Studien 3). Graz: GrazKult, 4759.Google Scholar
Parpola, S. (1993b) Letters from Assyrian and Babylonian Scholars (SAA 10). Helsinki: Neo-Assyrian Text Corpus Project, Helsinki University.Google Scholar
Pearce, L. and Doty, L. T. (2000) ‘The activities of Anu-belšunu, Seleucid scribe’, in Marzahn, J. and Neumann, H. (eds.), Assyriologia et Semitica. Festschrift für Joachim Oelsner anläßlich seines 65. Geburtstages am 18. Februar 1997 (AOAT 252). Münster: Ugarit-Verlag, 331–41.Google Scholar
Pearson, L. (1938) ‘Apollonius of Rhodes and the old geographers’, AJPh 59.4: 443–59.Google Scholar
Pedde, F. (1991) ‘Frēhat en-Nufēǧi: Zwei seleukidenzeitliche Tumuli bei Uruk’, Baghdader Mitteilungen 22: 521–35.Google Scholar
Pedde, F. (1995) ‘Seleukidische und parthische Zeit’, in Boehmer, R. M., Pedde, F. and Salje, B. (eds.), Uruk: Die Gräber (Ausgrabungen in Uruk-Warka Endberichte 10). Mainz: von Zabern, 140–99.Google Scholar
Pédech, P. (1976) La géographie des Grecs. Paris: Presses universitaires de France.Google Scholar
Pedersén, O. (1998) Archives and Libraries in the Ancient Near East, 1500–300 BC. Bethesda, MD: CDL Press.Google Scholar
Pedersén, O. (2005) Archive und Bibliotheken in Babylon: Die Tontafeln der Grabung Robert Koldeweys 1899–1917. Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz.Google Scholar
Petrie, C. (2002) ‘Seleucid Uruk: an analysis of ceramic distribution’, Iraq 64: 85123.Google Scholar
Petrovic, A. (2009) ‘Epigrammatic contests, poeti vaganti and local history’, in Hunter, R. L. and Rutherford, I. (eds.), Wandering Poets in Ancient Greek Culture: Travel, Locality, and Panhellenism. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 195216.Google Scholar
Petrovic, I. (2014) ‘Posidippus and Achaemenid royal propaganda’, in Hunter, R. L., Rengakos, A., and Sistakou, E. (eds.), Hellenistic Studies at a Crossroads: Exploring Texts, Contexts and Metatexts. Berlin: De Gruyter, 273300.Google Scholar
Pettinato, G. (1970–1) ‘Cuneiform inscriptions discovered at Seleucia on the Tigris (1964–1970)’, Mesopotamia 56: 4966.Google Scholar
Pfeiffer, R. (1968) History of Classical Scholarship: From the Beginnings to the End of the Hellenistic Age. Oxford: Clarendon Press.Google Scholar
Pinches, T. (1902) ‘Greek transcriptions of Babylonian tablets’, PSBA 24: 108–19.Google Scholar
Pingree, D. E. (1963) ‘Astronomy and astrology in India and Iran’, Isis 54.2: 22946.Google Scholar
Pingree, D. E. (1973a) ‘The Mesopotamian origin of early Indian mathematical astronomy’, JHA 4: 112.Google Scholar
Pingree, D. E. (1973b) Hephaestionis Thebani apotelesmaticorum libri tres. Berlin: Teubner.Google Scholar
Pingree, D. E. (1986) Vettii Valentis Antiocheni anthologiarum libri novem. Berlin: De Gruyter.Google Scholar
Pingree, D. E. (1992) ‘Hellenophilia versus the History of Science’, Isis 83.4: 554–63.Google Scholar
Pingree, D. E. (1997) From Astral Omens to Astrology: From Babylon to Bīkāner. Rome: Istituto italiano per l’Africa et l’Oriente.Google Scholar
Pingree, D. E. (1998) ‘Legacies in astronomy and celestial omens’, in Dalley, S. (ed.), The Legacy of Mesopotamia. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 125–37.Google Scholar
Pirngruber, R. (2012) The Impact of Empire on Market Prices in Babylon in the Late Achaemenid and Seleucid Periods, ca. 400 – 140 B.C., PhD thesis, Vrije Universiteit, Amsterdam.Google Scholar
Pirngruber, R. (2013) ‘The historical sections of the Astronomical Diaries in context: developments in a Late Babylonian scientific corpus’, Iraq 75: 197210.Google Scholar
Pirngruber, R. (2017) The Economy of Late Achaemenid and Seleucid Babylonia. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Platt, V. J. (2011) Facing the Gods: Epiphany and Representation in Graeco-Roman Art, Literature and Religion. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Pocock, J. G. A. (1971) Politics, Language, and Time: Essays on Political Thought and History. London: Athenaeum.Google Scholar
Pocock, J. G. A. (2009) Political Thought and History: Essays on Theory and Method. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Podossinov, A. V. (ed.) (2014) The Periphery of the Classical World in Ancient Geography and Cartography. Leuven: Peeters.Google Scholar
Pongratz-Leisten, B. (2006) ‘Berosus’, in Cancik, H. and Schneider, H. (eds.) Brill’s New Pauly (Antiquity Volumes). Brill Online, DOI:10.1163/1574-9347_bnp_e215790.Google Scholar
Potts, D. T. (1982) ‘The road to Meluhha’, JNES 41.4: 279–88.Google Scholar
Potts, D. T. (1990) The Arabian Gulf in Antiquity (2 vols). Oxford: Clarendon Press.Google Scholar
Potts, D. T. (2000) ‘Before Alexandria: libraries in the Ancient Near East’, in MacLeod, R. (ed.), The Library of Alexandria: Centre of Learning in the Ancient World. London: I.B. Tauris, 1933.Google Scholar
Poulsen, V. and Dyggve, E. (1960) Le sanctuaire d’Athana Lindia et l’architecture lindienne. Berlin: De Gruyter.Google Scholar
Préaux, C. (1978) Le monde hellénistique: la Grèce et l’Orient de la mort d’Alexandre à la conquête romaine de la Grèce, 323–146 av. J.-C. (2 vols). Paris: Presses universitaires de France.Google Scholar
Primo, A. (2009) La storiografia sui Seleucidi: da Megastene a Eusebio di Cesarea (Studi Ellenistici 10). Pisa: Fabrizio Serra.Google Scholar
Prontera, F. (1983) Geografia e geografi nel mondo antico: guida storica e critica. Rome: Laterza.Google Scholar
Prontera, F. (2011) Geografia e storia nella Grecia antica. Florence: L.S. Olschki.Google Scholar
Proust, C. and Steele, J. M. (2019) ‘Introduction: scholars, scholarly archives and the practice of scholarship in Late Babylonian Uruk’, in Steele, J. M. and Proust, C. (eds.), Scholars and Scholarship in Late Babylonian Uruk. Berlin: Springer, 645.Google Scholar
Pugliese Carratelli, G. and Garbini, G. (1964) A Bilingual Graeco-Aramaic Edict by Aśoka (Serie Orientale Roma XXIX). Rome: Ist. per il medio e estremo Oriente.Google Scholar
Raaflaub, K. A. and Talbert, R. J. A. (2010) Geography and Ethnography: Perceptions of the World in Pre-Modern Societies. Chichester, UK; Wiley-Blackwell.Google Scholar
Radner, K. (2009) ‘The Assyrian king and his scholars: the Syro-Anatolian and the Egyptian schools’, in Luukko, M., Svärd, S., and Mattila, R. (eds.), Of God(s), Trees, Kings, and Scholars: Neo-Assyrian and Related Studies in Honour of Simo Parpola (Studia Orientalia 106). Helsinki: Finnish Oriental Society, 221–38.Google Scholar
Radner, K. (2011) ‘Royal decision-making: kings, magnates and scholars’, in Radner, K. and Robson, E. (eds.), The Oxford Handbook of Cuneiform Culture. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 358–79.Google Scholar
Radner, K. (2017) ‘Assur’s “Second Temple Period”: the restoration of the cult of Aššur, c. 538 BCE’, in Levin, C. and Müller, R. (eds.), Herrschaftslegitimation in vorderorientalischen Reichen der Eisenzeit. Tübingen: Mohr Siebeck, 7796.Google Scholar
Ragep, F. J. (1996) ‘Introduction’, in Ragep, F. J., Ragep, S. P., and Livesey, S. J. (eds.), Tradition, Transmission, Transformation: Proceedings of Two Conferences on Pre-Modern Science Held at the University of Oklahoma (Collection de travaux de l’académie internationale d’histoire des sciences 37). Brill: Leiden, xvxxxiv.Google Scholar
Rajak, T. (2009) Translation and Survival: The Greek Bible of the Ancient Jewish Diaspora. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Rapin, C. (1992) La trésorerie du palais hellénistique d’Aï Khanoum: l’apogée et la chute du royaume grec de Bactriane (Fouilles d’Ai Khanoum VIII). Paris: De Boccard.Google Scholar
Rawlins, D. (1991) ‘Hipparchos’ ultimate solar orbit and the Babylonian tropical year’, DIO and the Journal for Hysterical Astronomy 1.1: 4966.Google Scholar
Rawlins, D. (2002) ‘Aristarchos and the “Babylonian” month length’, in Steele, J. M. and Imhausen, A. (eds.), Under One Sky: Astronomy and Mathematics in the Ancient Near East (AOAT 297). Münster: Ugarit-Verlag, 295–6.Google Scholar
Rawlinson, H. C. and Pinches, Th. (1884) The Cuneiform Inscriptions of Western Asia V. A Selection from the Miscellaneous Inscriptions of Assyria and Babylonia. London: British Museum.Google Scholar
Reade, J. (1986) ‘Archaeology and the Kuyunjik archives’, in Veenhof, K. R. (ed.), Cuneiform Archives and Libraries: Papers Read at the 30e Rencontre Assyriologique Internationale, Leiden, 4–8 July 1983 (Publications de l’Institut historique-archéologique néerlandais de Stamboul 57). Leiden: Nederlands Instituut voor het Nabije Oosten, 213–22.Google Scholar
Reade, J. (1998) ‘Ninive (Nineveh)’, RlA 9: 388433.Google Scholar
Reade, J. (2015) ‘Xenophon’s route through Babylonia and Assyria’, Iraq 77: 173202.Google Scholar
Reculeau, H. (2012) ‘Hana, Hanaean’, in Bagnall, R. S., Brodersen, K., Champion, C. B., Erskine, A., and Huebner, S. R. (eds.), The Encyclopedia of Ancient History. Wiley-Blackwell Online, DOI:10.1002/9781444338386.wbeah24091.Google Scholar
Rehm, A. (1949) ‘Parapegma’, RE 18.4: 12951366.Google Scholar
Reiner, E. (1993) ‘Two Babylonian precursors to astrology’, NABU 1993.1: 21–2.Google Scholar
Reiner, E. (1995) Astral Magic in Babylonia (Transactions of the American Philosophical Society 85,4). Philadelphia: American Philosophical Society.Google Scholar
Reiner, E. (2000) ‘Early zodiologia and related matters’, in George, A. R. and Finkel, I. L. (eds.), Wisdom, Gods and Literature: Studies in Assyriology in Honour of W. G. Lambert. Winona Lake, IN: Eisenbrauns, 4217.Google Scholar
Reisner, G. (1896) Sumerisch-babylonische Hymnen nach Thontafeln griechischer Zeit (Königliche Museen zu Berlin. Mittheilungen aus den orientalischen Sammlungen 10). Berlin: W. Spemann.Google Scholar
Rescher, N. (2005) Cosmos and Logos: Studies in Greek Philosophy. Berlin: De Gruyter.Google Scholar
Richter, J. (1825) Berosi Chaldaeorum historiae quae supersunt cum commentatione prolixiori de Berosi vita et librorum eius indole. Leipzig: C. H. F. Hartmann.Google Scholar
Rigsby, K. J. (1996) Asylia: Territorial Inviolability in the Hellenistic World. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Ritner, R. K. (2000) ‘Innovations and adaptations in ancient Egyptian medicine’, JNES 59.2: 107–17.Google Scholar
Robson, E. (2019) Ancient Knowledge Networks: A Social Geography of Cuneiform Scholarship in the First Millennium BC. London: UCL Press.Google Scholar
Robson, E. (2005) ‘Review of Francesca Rochberg, The Heavenly Writing: Divination, Horoscopy, and Astronomy in Mesopotamian Culture’, BMCR 2005.06.29.Google Scholar
Robson, E. (2007) ‘Secrets de famille: prêtre et astronome à Uruk à l’époque hellénistique’, in Jacob, C. M. (ed.), Les lieux de savoir, I: Espaces et communautés. Paris: Albin Michel, 44061.Google Scholar
Robson, E. (2008a) ‘Mesopotamian medicine and religion: current debates, new perspectives’, Religion Compass 2.4: 455–83.Google Scholar
Robson, E. (2008b) Mathematics in Ancient Iraq: A Social History. Princeton: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Robson, E. (2013) ‘Reading the libraries of Assyria and Babylonia’, in König, J., Oikonomopoulou, K., and Woolf, G. (eds.), Ancient Libraries. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 3856.Google Scholar
Robson, E. (2018) ‘Do not disperse the collection! Motivations and strategies for protecting cuneiform scholarship in the first millennium B.C.E.’, in Popović, M., Roig Lanzillotta, L., and Wilde, C. (eds.), Sharing and Hiding Religious Knowledge in Early Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. Berlin: De Gruyter, 845.Google Scholar
Robson, E. and Stevens, K. (2019) ‘Scholarly tablet collections in first-millennium Assyria and Babylonia’, in Barjamovic, G. and Ryholt, K. (eds.), The Earliest Libraries: Library Tradition in the Ancient Near East. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 317–64.Google Scholar
Rochberg, F. (1993) ‘The cultural locus of astronomy in Late Babylonia’, in Galter, H. D. (ed.), Die Rolle der Astronomie in den Kulturen Mesopotamiens: Beiträge zum 3. Grazer Morgenländischen Symposion (23.–27. September 1991) (Grazer Morgenländische Studien 3). Graz: GrazKult, 3145.Google Scholar
Rochberg, F. (1998) Babylonian Horoscopes (Transactions of the American Philosophical Society 88,1). Philadelphia: American Philosophical Society.Google Scholar
Rochberg, F. (1999) ‘Babylonian horoscopy: the texts and their relations’, in Swerdlow, N. M. (ed.), Ancient Astronomy and Celestial Divination (Dibner Institute Studies in the History of Science and Technology). Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 3959.Google Scholar
Rochberg, F. (2000) ‘Scribes and scholars: the ṭupšar Enūma Anu Enlil’, in Marzahn, J. and Neumann, H. (eds.), Assyriologica et Semitica: Festschrift für Joachim Oelsner anläßlich seines 65. Geburtstages am 18. Februar 1997 (AOAT 252). Münster: Ugarit-Verlag, 35975.Google Scholar
Rochberg, F. (2004) The Heavenly Writing: Divination, Horoscopy, and Astronomy in Mesopotamian Culture. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Rochberg, F. (2006) ‘Old Babylonian celestial divination’, in Guinan, A. K., M. de Ellis, J., Ferrara, A. J. et al. (eds.), If a Man Builds a Joyful House: Assyriological Studies in Honor of Erle Verdun Leichty (Cuneiform Monographs 31). Leiden: Brill, 33748.Google Scholar
Rochberg, F. (2008) ‘Babylonian astronomy: the Hellenistic transmission’, MUSJ 61: 1332.Google Scholar
Rochberg, F. (2010a) ‘Babylonian astral science in the Hellenistic world: reception and transmission’, CASLMU eSeries nr. 4.Google Scholar
Rochberg, F. (2010b) In the Path of the Moon: Babylonian Celestial Divination and Its Legacy (Studies in Ancient Magic and Divination 6). Leiden: Brill.Google Scholar
Rochberg, F. (2011) ‘Observing and describing the world through divination and astronomy’, in Radner, K. and Robson, E. (eds.), The Oxford Handbook of Cuneiform Culture. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 618–36.Google Scholar
Rochberg, F. (2012) ‘The expression of terrestrial and celestial order in ancient Mesopotamia’, in Talbert, R. J. A. (ed.), Ancient Perspectives: Maps and Their Place in Mesopotamia, Egypt, Greece and Rome (The Kenneth Nebenzahl Jr. lectures in the history of cartography). Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 946.Google Scholar
Rochberg, F. (2016) ‘The Brown School of the History of Science: historiography and the astral sciences’, in Steele, J. M. (ed.), The Circulation of Astronomical Knowledge in the Ancient World (Time, Astronomy and Calendars 6). Leiden: Brill, 517.Google Scholar
Rochberg-Halton, F. (1984) ‘New evidence for the history of astrology’, JNES 43.2: 115–40.Google Scholar
Rochberg-Halton, F. (1987) ‘TCL 6 13: mixed traditions in Late Babylonian astrology’, ZA 77.2: 20728.Google Scholar
Rochberg-Halton, F. (1988a) ‘Elements of the Babylonian contribution to Hellenistic astrology’, JAOS 108.1: 5162.Google Scholar
Rochberg-Halton, F. (1988b) ‘Benefic and malefic planets in Babylonian astrology’, in Leichty, Erle, Ellis, M. de J., Maria, and Gerardi, P (eds.), A Scientific Humanist: Studies in Memory of Abraham Sachs (Occasional Publications of the Samuel Noah Kramer Fund). Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Museum, 323–8.Google Scholar
Rochberg-Halton, F. (1988c) Aspects of Babylonian Celestial Divination: The Lunar Eclipse Tablets of Enūma Anu Enlil (Archiv für Orientforschung, Beiheft 22). Horn, AT: Verlag Ferdinand Berger & Söhne Gesellschaft.Google Scholar
Rochberg-Halton, F. (1989) ‘Babylonian horoscopes and their sources’, Orientalia 58.1: 102–23.Google Scholar
Roisman, J. (1984) ‘Ptolemy and his rivals in his History of Alexander’, CQ 34.2: 373–85.Google Scholar
Roller, D. W. (2010) Eratosthenes’ Geography. Princeton: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Roller, D. W. (2015) Ancient Geography: The Discovery of the World in Classical Greece and Rome. London: I.B. Tauris.Google Scholar
Rollinger, R. (2001) ‘The ancient Greeks and the impact of the ancient Near East: textual evidence and historical perspective (ca. 750–650 BC)’, in Whiting, R. M. (ed.), Mythology and Mythologies: Methodological Approaches to Intercultural Influences. Helsinki: Neo-Assyrian Text Corpus Project, University of Helsinki, 233–64.Google Scholar
Rollinger, R. (2012) ‘From Sargon of Agade and the Assyrian kings to Khusrau I and beyond: on the persistence of Ancient Near Eastern traditions’, in Lanfranchi, G. B., Bonacossi, D. M., Pappi, C., and Ponchia, S. (eds.), LEGGO! Studies Presented to Frederick Mario Fales on the Occasion of His 65th Birthday (Leipziger Altorientalische Studien 2). Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz Verlag, 725–43.Google Scholar
Rollinger, R. (2013) ‘Berossos and the monuments: city walls, sanctuaries, palaces and the Hanging Garden’, in Haubold, J., Lanfranchi, G. B., Rollinger, R., and Steele, J. M. (eds.), The World of Berossos: Proceedings of the 4th International Colloquium on ‘The Ancient Near East Between Classical and Ancient Oriental Traditions’, Hatfield College, Durham 7th–9th July 2010 (Classica et Orientalia 5). Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz Verlag, 137–62.Google Scholar
Romm, J. S. (1989) ‘Aristotle’s elephant and the myth of Alexander’s scientific patronage’, AJPh 110.4: 566–75.Google Scholar
Romm, J. S. (1994) The Edges of the Earth in Ancient Thought: Geography, Exploration, and Fiction. Princeton: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
van Rooy, C. A. (1958) ‘Die probleem van die oorsprong van die groot Alexandrynse bibliothek’, AClass 1: 147–61.Google Scholar
Rose, H. J. and Hornblower, S. (2012) ‘Euhemerus’, in Hornblower, S., Spawforth, A., and Eidinow, E. (eds.), Oxford Classical Dictionary, 4th edition. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 547.Google Scholar
Rostovtzeff, M. I. (1919) ‘Ἐπιφάνειαι’, Klio 16: 203–6.Google Scholar
Rostovtzeff, M. I. (1926) A History of the Ancient World. Volume I: The Orient and Greece. Oxford: Clarendon Press.Google Scholar
Rostovtzeff, M. I. (1932) Caravan Cities. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Rostovtzeff, M. I. (1941) The Social and Economic History of the Hellenistic World (3 vols). Oxford: Clarendon Press.Google Scholar
Ruffing, K. (2013) ‘Berossos in modern scholarship’, in Haubold, J., Lanfranchi, G. B., Rollinger, R., and Steele, J. M. (eds.), The World of Berossos: Proceedings of the 4th International Colloquium on ‘The Ancient Near East Between Classical and Ancient Oriental Traditions’, Hatfield College, Durham 7th–9th July 2010 (Classica et Orientalia 5). Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz Verlag, 291308.Google Scholar
Rutz, M. T. (2016) ‘Astral knowledge in an international age: transmission of the cuneiform tradition, ca. 1500–1000 B.C.’, in Steele, J. M. (ed.), The Circulation of Astronomical Knowledge in the Ancient World (Time, Astronomy and Calendars 6). Leiden: Brill, 1854.Google Scholar
Rzepka, J. (2009) ‘Anaxandridas (404)’, in Worthington, I. (ed.), Brill’s New Jacoby. Brill Online, DOI:10.1163/1873-5363_bnj_a404.Google Scholar
Sabra, A. I. (1987) ‘The appropriation and subsequent naturalization of Greek science in medieval Islam: a preliminary statement’, History of Science 25.3: 223–43.Google Scholar
Sachs, A. (1948) ‘A classification of the Babylonian astronomical tablets of the Seleucid period’, JCS 2.4: 271–90.Google Scholar
Sachs, A. (1952) ‘Babylonian horoscopes’, JCS 6.2: 4975.Google Scholar
Sachs, A. (1976) ‘The latest datable cuneiform tablets’, in Eichler, B. (ed.), Kramer Anniversary Volume: Cuneiform Studies in Honor of Samuel Noah Kramer (AOAT 25). Kevalaer: Butzon & Bercker, 379–98.Google Scholar
Sachs, A. and Hunger, H. (1988) Astronomical Diaries and Related Texts from Babylonia. Volume I, Diaries from 652 B.C. to 262 B.C. Vienna: Verlag der Österreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften.Google Scholar
Sachs, A. and Hunger, H. (1989) Astronomical Diaries and Related Texts from Babylonia. Volume II, Diaries from 261 B.C. to 165 B.C. Vienna: Verlag der Österreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften.Google Scholar
Sachs, A. and Hunger, H. (1996) Astronomical Diaries and Related Texts from Babylonia. Volume III, Diaries from 164 B.C. to 61 B.C. Vienna: Verlag der Österreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften.Google Scholar
Salles, J.-F. (1987) ‘The Arab-Persian Gulf under the Seleucids’, in Kuhrt, A. and Sherwin-White, S.M. (eds.), Hellenism in the East: The Interaction of Greek and Non-Greek Civilizations from Syria to Central Asia After Alexander. Berkeley: University of California Press, 75109.Google Scholar
Savalli-Lestrade, I. (1998) Les philoi royaux dans l’Asie hellénistique. Geneva: Droz.Google Scholar
Savalli-Lestrade, I. (2017) ‘ΒΙΟΣ ΑΥΛΙΚΟΣ: The multiple ways of life of courtiers in the Hellenistic Age’, in Erskine, A., Llewellyn-Jones, L. and Wallace, S. (eds.) The Hellenistic Court: Monarchic Power and Elite Society from Alexander to Cleopatra. Swansea: Classical Press of Wales, 101–20.Google Scholar
Sayce, A. (1902) ‘The Greeks in Babylonia: Graeco-cuneiform texts’, PSBA 24: 120–5.Google Scholar
Scharfe, H. (1971) ‘The Maurya dynasty and the Seleucids’, ZVS 85: 211–25.Google Scholar
Schaudig, H. (2001) Die Inschriften Nabonids von Babylon und Kyros’ des Grossen samt den in ihrem Umfeld entstandenen Tendenzschriften: Textausgabe und Grammatik (AOAT 256). Münster: Ugarit-Verlag.Google Scholar
Schiaparelli, G. V. (1908) ‘I primordi dell’astronomia presso i babilonesi’, Rivista di scientia 3.6: 213–59.Google Scholar
Schileico, W. (1928) ‘Ein babylonischer Weihtext in griechischer Schrift’, AfO 5: 1113.Google Scholar
Schironi, F. (2009) From Alexandria to Babylon: Near Eastern Languages and Hellenistic Erudition in the Oxyrhynchus Glossary (P.Oxy. 1802 + 4812) (Sozomena 4). Berlin: De Gruyter.Google Scholar
Schironi, F. (2016) ‘Scholarship, Hellenistic’, in Bagnall, R. S., Brodersen, K., Champion, C. B., Erskine, A., and Huebner, S. R. (eds.), The Encyclopedia of Ancient History. Wiley-Blackwell Online, DOI:10.1002/9781444338386.wbeah30157.Google Scholar
Schlumberger, D. (1964) ‘Une nouvelle inscription grecque d’Açoka’, CRAI 108.1: 126–40.Google Scholar
Schlumberger, D. and Benveniste, É. (1967) ‘A new Greek inscription of Asoka at Kandahar’, EI 37: 193200.Google Scholar
Schlumberger, D., Robert, L., Dupont-Sommer, A., and Benveniste, É. (1958) ‘Une bilingue gréco-araméenne d’Aśoka’, JA 246: 148.Google Scholar
Schnabel, P. (1923) Berossos und die babylonisch-hellenistische Literatur. Leipzig: Teubner.Google Scholar
Scholz, B. (2008) ‘Τὴν Γλῶσσαν Μάθωμεν ’Ακκαδικήν – Der Sinn der Graeco-Babyloniaca’, in Lafer, R. and Strobel, K. (eds.), Antike Lebenswelten: Konstanz – Wandel – Wirkungsmacht. Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz Verlag, 455–64.Google Scholar
Schuster-Brandis, A. (2008) Steine als Schutz- und Heilmittel: Untersuchung zu ihrer Verwendung in der Beschwörungskunst Mesopotamiens im 1. Jt. v. Chr. (AOAT 46). Münster: Ugarit-Verlag.Google Scholar
Schwartz, E. (1897) ‘Berossos’, RE 3.1: 309–16.Google Scholar
Scurlock, J. (2000) ‘Physician, exorcist, conjurer, magician: a tale of two healing professionals’, in Abusch, T. and van der Toorn, K. (eds.), Mesopotamian Magic: Textual, Historical and Interpretative Perspectives (Ancient Magic and Divination 1). Leiden: Brill, 6979.Google Scholar
Scurlock, J. (2007) ‘Whose truth and whose justice? The Uruk and other Late Akkadian prophecies revisited’, in Holloway, S. W. (ed.), Orientalism, Assyriology and the Bible. Sheffield: Phoenix Press, 447–65.Google Scholar
Seux, M.-J. (1976) Hymnes et prières aux dieux de Babylonie et d’Assyrie (Littératures anciennes du Proche-Orient 8). Paris: Cerf.Google Scholar
Shaya, J. (2005) ‘The Greek temple as museum: the case of the legendary treasure of Athena from Lindos’, AJA 109.3: 423–42.Google Scholar
Shehata, D. (2013) ‘Status and organisation of the Babylonian lamentation priests’, in Emerit, S. (ed.), Le statut du musicien dans la Méditerranée ancienne. Égypte, Mésopotamie, Grèce, Rome (Bibliothèque d’étude 159). Cairo: Institut Français d’Archéologie Orientale, 6984.Google Scholar
Sherwin-White, S. and Roueché, C. M. (1985) ‘Some aspects of the Seleucid empire: the Greek inscriptions from Failaka, in the Arabian Gulf’, Chiron: Mitteilungen der Kommission für Alte Geschichte und Epigraphik des Deutschen Archäologischen Instituts 15: 139.Google Scholar
Sherwin-White, S. M. (1987) ‘Seleucid Babylonia: a case study for the installation and development of Greek rule’, in Kuhrt, A. and Sherwin-White, S. M. (eds.), Hellenism in the East: The Interaction of Greek and Non-Greek Civilizations from Syria to Central Asia After Alexander. Berkeley: University of California Press, 131.Google Scholar
Shipley, G. (2000) The Greek World After Alexander, 323–30 BC (Routledge History of the Ancient World). London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Shipley, G. (2007) ‘Review of Marcotte (D.) (ed.) Géographes grecs. Tome I, Introduction générale; Ps.-Scymnos: Circuit de la terre.’, CR 57.2: 348–54.Google Scholar
Shubert, S. B. (1993) ‘The oriental origins of the Alexandrian library’, Libri 43.2: 142–72.Google Scholar
Sidoli, N. (2008) ‘Review of Unexpected Links Between Egyptian and Babylonian Mathematics and Amazing Traces of a Babylonian Origin in Greek Mathematics by Jöran Friberg’, Aestimatio: Critical Reviews in the History of Science 5: 141–6.Google Scholar
Sircar, D. C. (1979) Asokan Studies. Calcutta: Indian Museum Calcutta.Google Scholar
Skempis, M. and Ziogas, I. (2014) Geography, Topography, Landscape: Configurations of Space in Greek and Roman Epic. Berlin: De Gruyter.Google Scholar
Skinner, J. (2012) The Invention of Greek Ethnography: From Homer to Herodotus. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Skinner, Q. (1969) ‘Meaning and understanding in the History of Ideas’, H&T 8.1: 353.Google Scholar
Smith, G. (1876) The Chaldaean Account of Genesis. New York: Scribner, Armstrong and Co.Google Scholar
Sollberger, E. (1962) ‘Graeco-Babyloniaca’, Iraq 24.1: 6372.Google Scholar
Sollenberger, M. J. (2000) ‘Diogenes Laertius’ life of Demetrius of Phalerum’, in Fortenbaugh, W. W. and Schütrumpf, E. (eds.), Demetrius of Phalerum: Text, Translation, and Discussion. New Brunswick: Transaction Publishers, 311–29.Google Scholar
Solmsen, F. (1960) Aristotle’s System of the Physical World: A Comparison with His Predecessors. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press.Google Scholar
van der Spek, R. J. (1987) ‘The Babylonian City’, in Kuhrt, A. and Sherwin-White, S. M. (eds.), Hellenism in the East: The Interaction of Greek and Non-Greek Civilizations from Syria to Central Asia After Alexander. Berkeley: University of California Press, 5774.Google Scholar
Van der Spek, R. J. (1993) ‘New evidence on Seleucid land policy’, in Sancisi-Weerdenburg, H., van der Spek, R. J., Teitler, H. C., and Wallinga, H. T. (eds.), De Agricultura. In Memoriam Pieter Willem de Neeve. Amsterdam: J. C. Gieben, 6179.Google Scholar
Van der Spek, R. J. (2000) ‘The Šatammus of Esagila in the Seleucid and Arsacid periods’, in Marzahn, J. and Neumann, H. (eds.), Assyriologica et Semitica: Festschrift für Joachim Oelsner anläßlich seines 65. Geburtstages am 18. Februar 1997 (AOAT 252). Münster: Ugarit-Verlag, 437–46.Google Scholar
Van der Spek, R. J. (2003) ‘Darius III, Alexander the Great and Babylonian scholarship’, in Henkelman, W. and Kuhrt, A. (eds.), A Persian Perspective: Essays in Memory of Heleen Sancisi-Weerdenburg (Achaemenid History 13). Leiden: Nederlands Instituut voor het Nabije Oosten, 289346.Google Scholar
Van der Spek, R. J. (2005) ‘Ethnic segregation in Hellenistic Babylon’, in van Soldt, W., Kalvelagen, R., and Katz, D. (eds.), Ethnicity in Ancient Mesopotamia. Papers read at the 48th Rencontre Assyriologique Internationale, Leiden, 1–4 July 2002 (Publications de l’Institut historique-archéologique néerlandais de Stamboul 102). Leiden: Nederlands Instituut voor het Nabije Oosten, 393408.Google Scholar
Van der Spek, R. J. (2008) ‘Berossus as a Babylonian chronicler and Greek historian’, in van der Spek, R. J. (ed.), Studies in Ancient Near Eastern World View and Society Presented to Marten Stol on the Occasion of His 65th Birthday, 10 November 2005, and His Retirement from the Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam. Bethesda, MD: CDL Press, 277318.Google Scholar
van der Spek, R. J. and Wallenfels, R. (2014) ‘Copy of record of entitlement and exemptions to formerly royal lands’, in Spar, I. and Jursa, M. (eds.), The Ebabbar Temple Archive and Other Texts from the Fourth to the First Millennium B.C. (Cuneiform Texts from the Metropolitan Museum of Art 4). New York: Metropolitan Museum of Art, 213–27.Google Scholar
Sprawski, S. (2010) ‘Aristoteles of Chalkis (423)’, in Worthington, I. (ed.), Brill’s New Jacoby. Brill Online, DOI:10.1163/1873-5363_bnj_a423.Google Scholar
von Staden, H. (1989) Herophilus: The Art of Medicine in Early Alexandria: Edition, Translation and Essays. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Stadhouders, H. (2011) ‘The pharmacopoeial handbook Šammu šikinšu – an edition’, JMC 18: 155.Google Scholar
Stadhouders, H. (2012) ‘The pharmacopoeial handbook Šammu šikinšu – a translation’, JMC 19: 120.Google Scholar
Staikos, K. S. (2004) The History of the Library in Western Civilization. Volume I. From Minos to Cleopatra: The Greek World from the Minoans’ Archival Libraries to the Universal Library of the Ptolemies. New Castle, DE: Oak Knoll Press.Google Scholar
Steele, J. M. (2000a) ‘A re-analysis of the eclipse observations in Ptolemy’s Almagest’, Centaurus 42.2: 89108.Google Scholar
Steele, J. M. (2000b) ‘A 3405: an unusual astronomical text from Uruk’, AHES 55.2: 103135.Google Scholar
Steele, J. M. (2000c) ‘Eclipse prediction in Mesopotamia’, AHES 54.5: 421–54.Google Scholar
Steele, J. M. (2000d) Observations and Predictions of Eclipse Times by Early Astronomers. Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers.Google Scholar
Steele, J. M. (2002a) ‘BM 36948: a Saturn ephemeris calculated using System A from Babylon’, JHA 33: 2614.Google Scholar
Steele, J. M. (2002b) ‘Some lunar ephemerides and related texts from Babylon’, in Wunsch, C. (ed.), Mining the Archives: Festschrift for Christopher Walker on the Occasion of His 60th Birthday, 4 October 2002. Dresden: ISLET, 293318.Google Scholar
Steele, J. M. (2004) ‘Applied historical astronomy: an historical perspective’, JHA 35: 337–55.Google Scholar
Steele, J. M. (2006a) ‘Miscellaneous lunar tables from Babylon’, AHES 60.2: 12355.Google Scholar
Steele, J. M. (2006b) ‘Greek influence on Babylonian astronomy?’, MAA 6.3: 15360.Google Scholar
Steele, J. M. (2010a) ‘Newly identified lunar and planetary tables from Babylon in the British Museum’, SCIAMVS 11: 211–39.Google Scholar
Steele, J. M. (2010b) ‘A new scheme from Babylon for the synodic arc of Saturn’, JHA 41.2: 2618.Google Scholar
Steele, J. M. (2011a) ‘Visual aspects of the transmission of Babylonian astronomy and its reception into Greek astronomy’, Ann. Sci. 68.4: 453–65.Google Scholar
Steele, J. M. (2011b) ‘Astronomy and culture in Late Babylonian Uruk’, Proceedings of the International Astronomical Union 7, nr. 278: 331–41.Google Scholar
Steele, J. M. (2013a) ‘Shadow-length schemes in Babylonian astronomy’, SCIAMVS 14: 339.Google Scholar
Steele, J. M. (2013b) ‘The “astronomical fragments” of Berossos in context’, in Haubold, J., Steele, J., Lanfranchi, G. B., and Rollinger, R. (eds.), The World of Berossos: Proceedings of the 4th International Colloquium on ‘The Ancient Near East Between Classical and Ancient Oriental Traditions’, Hatfield College, Durham 7th–9th July 2010. Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz Verlag, 99113.Google Scholar
Steele, J. M. (2015a) ‘A Late Babylonian compendium of calendrical and stellar astrology’, JCS 67: 187215.Google Scholar
Steele, J. M. (2015b) ‘Mesopotamian astrological geography’, in Barthel, P. and van Kooten, G. H. (eds.), The Star of Bethlehem and the Magi: Interdisciplinary Perspectives from Experts on the Ancient Near East, the Greco-Roman World, and Modern Astronomy (Themes in Biblical Narrative: Jewish and Christian Traditions 19). Leiden: Brill, 199216.Google Scholar
Steele, J. M. (2016a) ‘Introduction’, in Steele, J. M. (ed.), The Circulation of Astronomical Knowledge in the Ancient World (Time, Astronomy and Calendars 6). Leiden: Brill, 14.Google Scholar
Steele, J. M. (2016b) ‘The circulation of astronomical knowledge between Babylon and Uruk’, in Steele, J. M. (ed.), The Circulation of Astronomical Knowledge in the Ancient World (Time, Astronomy and Calendars 6). Leiden: Brill, 83118.Google Scholar
Steele, J. M. (2016c) ‘Neugebauer’s Astronomical Cuneiform Texts and its reception’, in Jones, A., Proust, C., and Steele, J. M. (eds.), A Mathematician’s Journeys: Otto Neugebauer and Modern Transformations of Ancient Science (Archimedes 45). London: Springer, 303–32.Google Scholar
Steele, J. M. (2019) ‘The early history of the Astronomical Diaries’, in Haubold, J., Steele, J. M., and Stevens, K. (eds.), Keeping Watch in Babylon: The Astronomical Diaries in Context. Leiden: Brill, 1952.Google Scholar
Steinkeller, P. (2003) ‘An Ur III Manuscript of the Sumerian King List’, in Sallaberger, W., Volk, K., and Zgoll, A. (eds.), Literatur, Politik und Recht in Mesopotamien: Festschrift für Claus Wilcke (Orientalia Biblica et Christiana 14). Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz Verlag, 267–92.Google Scholar
Stephens, S. A. (2003) Seeing Double: Intercultural Poetics in Ptolemaic Alexandria. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Stevens, K. (2013) ‘Secrets in the library: protected knowledge and professional identity in Late Babylonian Uruk’, Iraq 75: 211–53.Google Scholar
Stevens, K. (2014) ‘The Antiochus Cylinder, Babylonian scholarship and Seleucid imperial ideology’, JHS 134: 6688.Google Scholar
Stevens, K. (2015) ‘From Herodotus to a “Hellenistic” world? The eastern geographies of Aristotle and Theophrastus’, in Barker, E., Bouzarovski, S., Pelling, C., and Isaksen, L. (eds.), New Worlds from Old Texts: Revisiting Ancient Space and Place. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 121–52.Google Scholar
Stevens, K. (2016) ‘Empire begins at home: local elites and imperial ideologies in Hellenistic Greece and Babylonia’, in Lavan, M., Payne, R. E., and Weisweiler, J. (eds.), Cosmopolitanism and Empire: Universal Rulers, Local Elites, and Cultural Integration in the Ancient Near East and Mediterranean. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 6588.Google Scholar
Stevens, K. (2019) ‘From Babylon to Baḫtar: the geography of the Astronomical Diaries’, in Haubold, J., Steele, J. M., and Stevens, K. (eds.), Keeping Watch in Babylon: The Astronomical Diaries in Context. Leiden: Brill, 198236.Google Scholar
Stol, M. (2004) ‘An Assyriologist reads Hippocrates’, in Horstmanshoff, H. F. J. and Stol, M. (eds.), Magic and Rationality in Ancient Near Eastern and Graeco-Roman Medicine (Studies in Ancient Medicine 27). Leiden: Brill, 6378.Google Scholar
Stolper, M. W. (2006) ‘Iranica in post-Achaemenid Babylonian texts’, in Briant, P. and Joannès, F. (eds.), La transition entre l’empire achéménide et les royaumes hellénistiques (vers 350–300 av. J.-C.). Actes du colloque au Collège de France (22–23 novembre 2004) (Persika 9). Paris: De Boccard, 223–60.Google Scholar
Strassmaier, J. N. (1882) Die altbabylonischen Verträge aus Warka (Abhandlungen des V Internationalen Orientalistenkongresses zu Berlin). Berlin: A. Asher & Co.Google Scholar
Strassmaier, J. N. and Pinches, T. G. (1955) Late Babylonian Astronomical and Related Texts (Brown University Studies 18). Providence, RI: Brown University Press.Google Scholar
Streck, M. (2003) ‘Oannes’, RlA 10: 13.Google Scholar
Strootman, R. (2007) The Hellenistic Royal Court. Court Culture, Ceremonial and Ideology in Greece, Egypt and the Near East, 336–30 BCE, PhD thesis, Utrecht University.Google Scholar
Strootman, R. (2010) ‘Literature and the kings’, in Clauss, J. J. and Cuypers, M. (eds.), A Companion to Hellenistic Literature. Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwell, 3045.Google Scholar
Strootman, R. (2011) ‘Hellenistic court society: the Seleukid imperial court under Antiochos the Great, 223–187 BCE’, in Duindam, J., Artan, T., and Kunt, M. (eds.), Royal Courts in Dynastic States and Empires: A Global Perspective. Leiden: Brill, 6389.Google Scholar
Strootman, R. (2013) ‘Babylonian, Macedonian, king of the world: the Antiochos Cylinder from Borsippa and Seleukid imperial integration’, in Stavrianopoulou, E. (ed.), Shifting Social Imaginaries in the Hellenistic Period: Narrations, Practices, and Images. Leiden: Brill, 6797.Google Scholar
Tadmor, H. (1999) ‘World dominion: the expanding horizon of the Assyrian empire’, in Milano, L., de Martino, S., Fales, F. M., and Lanfranchi, G. B. (eds.), Landscapes: Territories, Frontiers and Horizons in the Ancient Near East. Papers Presented to the 44th Rencontre Assyriologique Internationale, Venezia, 7–11 July 1997. Part I: Invited Lectures. Padua: Sargon, 5562.Google Scholar
Talbert, R. J. A. (ed.) (2012) Ancient Perspectives: Maps and Their Place in Mesopotamia, Egypt, Greece and Rome (The Kenneth Nebenzahl Jr. lectures in the history of cartography). Chicago: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Tannery, P. (1888) ‘La grande année d’Aristarque de Samos’, Memoires de la société des sciences physiques et naturelles de Bordeaux 4: 7996.Google Scholar
Tarn, W. W. (1913) Antigonos Gonatas. Oxford: Clarendon Press.Google Scholar
Tarn, W. W. (1966) The Greeks in Bactria and India, 2nd edition. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Tcherikover, V. (1958) ‘The Ideology of the Letter of Aristeas’, HTR 51.2: 5985.Google Scholar
Thalmann, W. G. (2011) Apollonius of Rhodes and the Spaces of Hellenism. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Thapar, R. (1960) ‘Aśoka and buddhism’, P&P 18.1: 4351.Google Scholar
Thapar, R. (2012) Asoka and the Decline of the Mauryas, 3rd edition (Oxford India Perennials Series). Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Thomas, R. (2014) ‘Local history, polis history, and the politics of place’, in Parmeggiani, G. (ed.), Between Thucydides and Polybius: The Golden Age of Greek Historiography. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 239–62.Google Scholar
Thompson, D. J. (2000) ‘Philadelphus’ procession: dynastic power in a Mediterranean context’, in Mooren, L. (ed.), Politics, Administration and Society in the Hellenistic and Roman World: Proceedings of the International Colloquium, Bertinoro 19–24 July 1997 (Studia Hellenistica 36). Leuven: Peeters, 365–88.Google Scholar
Thompson, D. J. (2007) ‘Education and culture in Hellenistic Egypt and beyond’, in Delgado, J. A. F., Pordomingo, F., and Stramaglia, A. (eds.), Escuela y Literatura en Grecia Antigua: Actas del simposio internacional, Universidad de Salamanca, 17–19 Noviembre de 2004. Cassino: Edizioni dell’Università degli Studi di Cassino, 121–40.Google Scholar
Thompson, D. W. (1910) Aristotle. Historia Animalium. Oxford: Clarendon Press.Google Scholar
Thompson, J. W. (1940) Ancient Libraries. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Thonemann, P. (2016) The Hellenistic Age. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Thurston, H. (2002) ‘Greek mathematical astronomy reconsidered’, Isis 93.1: 5869.Google Scholar
Tigay, J. (1984) ‘An early technique of Aggadic exegesis’, in Tadmor, H. and Weinfeld, M. (eds.), History, Historiography and Interpretation: Studies in Biblical and Cuneiform Literatures. Jerusalem: Magnes Press, Hebrew University, 169–89.Google Scholar
Tinney, S. (1999) ‘On the curricular setting of Sumerian literature’, Iraq 61: 159–72.Google Scholar
Tinney, S. (2011) ‘Tablets of schools and scholars: a portrait of the Old Babylonian corpus’, in Radner, K. and Robson, E. (eds.), The Oxford Handbook of Cuneiform Culture. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 577–96.Google Scholar
Todd, R. (1990) Cleomedis Caelestia (Μετέωρα). Berlin: De Gruyter.Google Scholar
Too, Y. L. (2010) The Idea of the Library in the Ancient World. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Toomer, G. J. (1988) ‘Hipparchus and Babylonian astronomy’, in Leichty, E., M. de Ellis, J., and Gerardi, P. (eds.), A Scientific Humanist: Studies in Memory of Abraham Sachs (Occasional Publications of the Samuel Noah Kramer Fund 9). Philadelphia: University Museum, 35362.Google Scholar
Tuman, V. S. (1984) ‘The tomb of Antiochus revisited: planetary alignments and the deification of the king’, Archaeoastronomy 7: 5669.Google Scholar
Tuplin, C. (2013) ‘Berossos and Greek historiography’, in Haubold, J., Lanfranchi, G. B., Rollinger, R., and Steele, J. M. (eds.), The World of Berossos: Proceedings of the 4th International Colloquium on ‘The Ancient Near East Between Classical and Ancient Oriental Traditions’, Hatfield College, Durham 7th–9th July 2010 (Classica et Orientalia 5). Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz Verlag, 177–97.Google Scholar
Turner, E. G. (1971) Greek Manuscripts of the Ancient World. Oxford: Clarendon Press.Google Scholar
Ungnad, A. (1923) ‘Auslautende Explosivlaute im Sumerischen’, OLZ 26.1–6:424–5.Google Scholar
Ungnad, A. (1941) ‘Besprechungskunst und Astrologie in Babylonien’, AfO 14: 251284.Google Scholar
Vallance, J. (1988) ‘Theophrastus and the study of the intractable: scientific method in De lapidibus and De igne, in Fortenbaugh, W. W. and Sharples, R. (eds.), Theophrastean Studies on Natural Science, Physics and Metaphysics, Ethics, Religion and Rhetoric (Rutgers University Studies in Classical Humanities 3). New Brunswick: Transaction Publishers, 2540.Google Scholar
Vatai, F. L. (1984) Intellectuals in Politics in the Greek World: From Early Times to the Hellenistic Age. London: Croom Helm.Google Scholar
Veenhof, K. R. (ed.) (1986) Cuneiform Archives and Libraries: Papers Read at the 30e Rencontre Assyriologique Internationale, Leiden, 4–8 July 1983 (Publications de l’Institut historique-archéologique néerlandais de Stamboul 57). Leiden: Nederlands Instituut voor het Nabije Oosten.Google Scholar
Veldhuis, N. (2000) ‘Kassite exercises: literary and lexical extracts’, JCS 52: 6794.Google Scholar
Veldhuis, N. (2004) Religion, Literature, and Scholarship: The Sumerian Composition Nanše and the Birds, With a Catalogue of Sumerian Bird Names. Leiden: Brill/Styx.Google Scholar
Veldhuis, N. (2014) History of the Cuneiform Lexical Tradition. Münster: Ugarit-Verlag.Google Scholar
Verbrugghe, G. and Wickersham, J. M. (1996) Berossos and Manetho, Introduced and Translated: Native Traditions in Ancient Mesopotamia and Egypt. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.Google Scholar
Verderame, L. (2015) ‘Astronomy, divination, and politics in the Neo-Assyrian Empire’, in Ruggles, C. L. N. (ed.), Handbook of Archaeoastronomy and Ethnoastronomy. New York: Springer, 1847–53.Google Scholar
Villard, P. (1999) ‘Les limites du monde connu à l’époque néo-assyrienne’, in Milano, L., de Martino, S., Fales, F. M., and Lanfranchi, G. B. (eds.), Landscapes: Territories, Frontiers and Horizons in the Ancient Near East. Papers Presented to the 44th Rencontre Assyriologique Internationale, Venezia, 7–11 July 1997. Part II: Geography and Cultural Landscapes. Padua: Sargon, 7381.Google Scholar
Visscher, M. (2016) Beyond Alexandria: Literature and Empire in the Seleucid World, PhD thesis, Durham University.Google Scholar
Vlastos, G. (1975) Plato’s Universe. Seattle: University of Washington Press.Google Scholar
De Vleeschauwer, H. J. (1977) ‘Afterword: origins of the Mouseion of Alexandria’, in Wright, H. C. (ed.), The Oral Antecedents of Greek Librarianship. Provo, UT: Brigham Young University Press, 175201.Google Scholar
van der Waerden, B. L. (1953) ‘History of the Zodiac’, AfO 16: 216–30.Google Scholar
Van der Waerden, B. L. (1972) ‘Aegyptische Planetenrechnung’, Centaurus 16.2: 6591.Google Scholar
Van der Waerden, B. L. (1984) ‘Greek astronomical calendars I: the parapegma of Euctemon’, AHES 29.2: 101–14.Google Scholar
Wace, A. J. (1945) ‘Recent Ptolemaic finds in Egypt’, JHS 65: 106–9.Google Scholar
Waddell, W. G. (1940) Manetho (Loeb Classical Library). London: Heinemann.Google Scholar
Waerzeggers, C. (2003) ‘The Babylonian revolts against Xerxes and the “End of Archives”’, AfO 50: 150–73.Google Scholar
Waerzeggers, C. (2010) The Ezida Temple of Borsippa: Priesthood, Cult, Archives (Achaemenid History 15). Leiden: Nederlands Instituut voor het Nabije Oosten.Google Scholar
Waerzeggers, C. (2011) ‘The Babylonian priesthood in the long sixth century BC’, BICS 54.2: 5970.Google Scholar
Waerzeggers, C. (2012) ‘The Babylonian Chronicles: classification and provenance’, JNES 71.2: 285–98.Google Scholar
Walbank, F. W. (1967) A Historical Commentary on Polybius. Volume II: Commentary on Books VII–XVIII. Oxford: Clarendon Press.Google Scholar
Walbank, F. W. (1991) ‘The Hellenistic world: new trends and directions’, SCI 11: 90113.Google Scholar
Walbank, F. W. (1993) The Hellenistic World, 3rd edition. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Wallenfels, R. (1993a) ‘Zodiacal signs among the seal impressions from Hellenistic Uruk’, in Cohen, M. E., Snell, D. C., and Weisberg, D. B. (eds.), The Tablet and the Scroll: Near Eastern Studies in Honor of William W. Hallo. Bethesda, MD: CDL Press, 2819.Google Scholar
Wallenfels, R. (1993b) ‘Apkallu-Sealings from Hellenistic Uruk’, Baghdader Mitteilungen 24: 309–24.Google Scholar
Waterman, L. (1931) Preliminary Report upon the Excavations at Tel Umar, Iraq. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.Google Scholar
Waterman, L. (1933) Second Preliminary Report upon the Excavations at Tel Umar, Iraq. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.Google Scholar
Wee, J. Z. (2015) ‘Discovery of the Zodiac Man in cuneiform’, JCS 67: 217–33.Google Scholar
Wee, J. Z. (2016) ‘Virtual moons over Babylonia: the Calendar Text system, its micro-zodiac of 13, and the making of medical zodiology’, in Steele, J. M. (ed.), The Circulation of Astronomical Knowledge in the Ancient World (Time, Astronomy and Calendars 6). Leiden: Brill, 139229.Google Scholar
Weeden, M. (2018) ‘Review of: Current Research in Cuneiform Palaeography. Proceedings of the Workshop Organised at the 60th Rencontre Assyriologique Internationale, Warsaw 2014, edited by Devecchi, E., Müller, G. G. W., and Mynářová, J.’, JNES 77.1: 122–8.Google Scholar
Weidner, E. F. (1913) ‘Beiträge zur Erklärung der astronomischen Keilschrifttexte (3)’, OLZ 16.6: 20412.Google Scholar
Weidner, E. F. (1919) ‘Babylonische Hypsomatabilder’, OLZ 22: 1016.Google Scholar
Weidner, E. F. (1952) ‘Das Reich Sargons von Akkad’, AfO 16: 124.Google Scholar
Weidner, E. F. (1963) ‘Astrologische Geographie im Alten Orient’, AfO 20: 117–21.Google Scholar
Weidner, E. F. (1967) Gestirn-Darstellungen auf babylonischen Tontafeln (Sitzungsberichte der österreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften, philosophisch-historische Klasse 254,2). Vienna: Hermann Böhlaus Nachf.Google Scholar
von Weiher, E. (1983) Spätbabylonische Texte aus Uruk. Teil II. Berlin: Mann.Google Scholar
von Weiher, E. (1988) Spätbabylonische Texte aus Uruk. Teil III. Berlin: Mann.Google Scholar
von Weiher, E. (1993) Uruk. Spätbabylonische Texte aus dem Planquadrat U 18. Teil 4. Mainz am Rhein: von Zabern.Google Scholar
von Weiher, E. (1998) Uruk. Spätbabylonische Texte aus dem Planquadrat U 18. Teil 5. Mainz am Rhein: von Zabern.Google Scholar
Weissbach, F. H. (1911) Die Keilinschriften der Achämeniden (Vorderasiatischen Bibliothek 3). Leipzig: J. C. Hinrichs.Google Scholar
Wendel, C. (1949) Die griechisch-römische Buchbeschreibung verglichen mit der des vordern Orients. Halle: Niemeyer.Google Scholar
West, M. L. (1971) Early Greek Philosophy and the Orient. Oxford: Clarendon Press.Google Scholar
West, M. L. (1997) The East Face of Helicon: West Asiatic Elements in Greek Poetry and Myth. Oxford: Clarendon Press.Google Scholar
Westbrook, R. (2005) ‘Patronage in the Ancient Near East’, JESHO 48.2: 210–33.Google Scholar
Westenholz, A. (2007) ‘The Graeco-Babyloniaca once again’, ZA 97.2: 262313.Google Scholar
Westermann, A. (1845) Biographoi. Vitarum scriptores graeci minores. Brunswick: Westermann.Google Scholar
Wiesehöfer, J. (1998) ‘Geschenke, Gewürze und Gedanken: Überlegungen zu den Beziehungen zwischen Seleukiden und Mauryas’, in Dabrowa, E. (ed.), Ancient Iran and the Mediterranean World: Proceedings of an International Conference in Honour of Professor Jósef Wolski Held at the Jagiellonian University Cracow in September 1996 (Studies in Ancient History 2). Krakau: Jagiellonian University Press, 225–36.Google Scholar
von Wilamowitz-Moellendorf, U. (1884) Homerische Untersuchungen. Berlin: Weidmannsche Buchandlung.Google Scholar
Wilcke, C. (1982) ‘Review of Hermann Hunger, Spätbabylonische Texte aus Uruk, I’, Bib. Or. 39: 141–5.Google Scholar
Wilcke, C. (2001) ‘Gestaltetes Altertum in antiker Gegenwart: Königslisten und Historiographie des älteren Mesopotamien’, in Kuhn, D. and Stahl, H. (eds.), Die Gegenwart des Altertums. Formen und Funktionen des  Altertumsbezugs in den Hochkulturen der Alten Welt. Heidelberg: Forum, 93116.Google Scholar
Will, É. (1982) Histoire politique du monde hellénistique: 323–30 av. J.-C. Tome II: Des avènements d’Antiochos III et de Philippe V à la fin des Lagides (Annales de l’Est 32). Nancy: Presses universitaires de Nancy.Google Scholar
Will, É. (1985) ‘Pour une “anthropologie coloniale” du monde hellénistique’, in Eadie, J. W. and Ober, J. (eds.), The Craft of the Ancient Historian: Essays in Honor of Chester G. Starr. Lanham, MD: University Press of America, 273301.Google Scholar
Wright, B. G. (2015) The Letter of Aristeas: ‘Aristeas to Philocrates’ or ‘On the Translation of the Law of the Jews’. Berlin: De Gruyter.Google Scholar
Zadok, R. (1985) Geographical Names According to New- and Late-Babylonian Texts (Répertoire géographique des textes cunéiformes 8). Wiesbaden: Reichert.Google Scholar
Zarmakoupi, M. (2011) The Villa of the Papyri at Herculaneum: Archaeology, Reception, and Digital Reconstruction. Berlin: De Gruyter.Google Scholar
Zuntz, G. (1953) The Text of the Epistles: A Disquisition upon the Corpus Paulinum (Sweich Lectures of the British Academy 1946). London: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure coreplatform@cambridge.org is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

  • Bibliography
  • Kathryn Stevens, University of Durham
  • Book: Between Greece and Babylonia
  • Online publication: 29 May 2019
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108303552.010
Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

  • Bibliography
  • Kathryn Stevens, University of Durham
  • Book: Between Greece and Babylonia
  • Online publication: 29 May 2019
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108303552.010
Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

  • Bibliography
  • Kathryn Stevens, University of Durham
  • Book: Between Greece and Babylonia
  • Online publication: 29 May 2019
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108303552.010
Available formats
×