The prescriptions on how to eulogize the city, provided in 3rd century by Menander Rhetor in his treatise On Epideictic, reflect the encomiastic convention according to which Pindar composed his poetic encomia urbis. Among the topoi that the poet applies to praise Athens one can list the ancient origin of the city, including the identification of its founder, the practiced habits concerning the form of politeia as well as those concerning the professional skills and abilities of the inhabitants, their virtues and deeds in war and in peace. In Pindar’s victory odes, the praise of the city is always subordinated to the praise of an individual victor. Therefore, the poet praises the outstanding individuals, members of aristocratic families, wh...
In the aristocratic milieu of the Panhellenic games beauty was regarded as an outward manifestation ...
This paper explores the melic poets’ take on art and its sponsors. Since much has been written on th...
Pindar's skolion for the Olympic victor Xenophon of Corinth (fr. 122) has received considerable atte...
The prescriptions on how to eulogize the city, provided in 3rd century by Menander Rhetor in his tre...
Pindar’s epinikian odes were poems commissioned to celebrate athletic victories in the first half of...
Over the last decade a growing number of scholars have questioned the veracity of the longstanding c...
António Dinis da Cruz e Silva, member of Arcádia Lusitana, the literary academy he helped to found, ...
Andrew Morrison, in his recent chapter in Aegina: Contexts for Choral Lyric Poetry, proposes that th...
This chapter comprises a narratological analysis of Pindar’s longest victory-ode, Pythian 4, compose...
Pindar\u27s Odes are not simple expressions of praise, but complex utterances which exhibit a variet...
In Pi. Pyth. 1, 71 – 80 the battles of Himera and Kyme, in which the Deinomenid rulers of Syracuse d...
The thesis is a commentary on four Pindaric odes for the Emmenid dynasty of Acragas: Olympian 2, Oly...
Throughout the classical and Hellenistic periods, Athens had attempted, with consistent success, to ...
« Between rhetorics and spectacle : about enargeia and phantasia in the ancient scholia to Pindar » ...
In this article, the author investigates the richness of a synaesthetical association recurrent in t...
In the aristocratic milieu of the Panhellenic games beauty was regarded as an outward manifestation ...
This paper explores the melic poets’ take on art and its sponsors. Since much has been written on th...
Pindar's skolion for the Olympic victor Xenophon of Corinth (fr. 122) has received considerable atte...
The prescriptions on how to eulogize the city, provided in 3rd century by Menander Rhetor in his tre...
Pindar’s epinikian odes were poems commissioned to celebrate athletic victories in the first half of...
Over the last decade a growing number of scholars have questioned the veracity of the longstanding c...
António Dinis da Cruz e Silva, member of Arcádia Lusitana, the literary academy he helped to found, ...
Andrew Morrison, in his recent chapter in Aegina: Contexts for Choral Lyric Poetry, proposes that th...
This chapter comprises a narratological analysis of Pindar’s longest victory-ode, Pythian 4, compose...
Pindar\u27s Odes are not simple expressions of praise, but complex utterances which exhibit a variet...
In Pi. Pyth. 1, 71 – 80 the battles of Himera and Kyme, in which the Deinomenid rulers of Syracuse d...
The thesis is a commentary on four Pindaric odes for the Emmenid dynasty of Acragas: Olympian 2, Oly...
Throughout the classical and Hellenistic periods, Athens had attempted, with consistent success, to ...
« Between rhetorics and spectacle : about enargeia and phantasia in the ancient scholia to Pindar » ...
In this article, the author investigates the richness of a synaesthetical association recurrent in t...
In the aristocratic milieu of the Panhellenic games beauty was regarded as an outward manifestation ...
This paper explores the melic poets’ take on art and its sponsors. Since much has been written on th...
Pindar's skolion for the Olympic victor Xenophon of Corinth (fr. 122) has received considerable atte...