Phrynichus’ fragment TrGF 3 F 14, featuring the somewhat loose mention of “hospitable gifts” and beheadings, presents textual and attributive problems. I suggest to amend the δούσας generally printed by editors (itself a correction) into δοῦναι, which seems more compatible with the surrounding text. The markedly ironic nature of the fragment, sometimes hypothesized in the past, is thus fully confirmed: someone’s hospitable gifts consist precisely in the killing and beheading of xenoi. More than from the Phoenicians or the Danaids, which have been considered so far, now it could be assumed that the fragment comes from another tragedy by Phrynichus, the Antaeus. The cruel protagonist is in fact said by Pindarus (Istm. 52-55) to decapitate the...
This dissertation presents the edition and commentary of an unpublished papyrus belonging to Cologne...
none1noIl presente contributo preliminarmente prende in considerazione le informazioni fornite dalle...
This article analyses the different versions of the Atridae’s story which coexist within theOdyssey....
Phrynichus’ fragment TrGF 3 F 14, featuring the somewhat loose mention of “hospitable gifts” and beh...
In the long journey that the Attic tragedies have made to the date, Sophocles’ Antigone is one of th...
Messa in scena dopo la morte di Euripide, l’Ifigenia in Aulide si può ragionevolmente considerare un...
This contribution constitutes the second instalment of an investigation published in this journal (L...
In this article, I offer a philological analysis of an epic fragment transmitted by a Pindaric schol...
The article deals with three euripidean passages (from Electra, Iphigenia among the Taurians and Hel...
Il contributo intende indagare, sui temi della maledizione e della morte e sui problemi della loro c...
In the only surviving fragment of Aristias’ Antaeus (TrGF 9 F 1) a difficulty arises when one tries ...
Il presente lavoro ha come scopo quello di delineare la caratterizzazione del personaggio di Androma...
When quoting from satyr dramas, ancient sources were not always consistent in indicating...
Of the Péliades, the earliest tragedy by Euripides, staged in 455 BC, neither testimonies nor the fr...
Il lavoro è incentrato sulla tradizione retorica dei drammi frammentari di Euripide. Un’analisi dell...
This dissertation presents the edition and commentary of an unpublished papyrus belonging to Cologne...
none1noIl presente contributo preliminarmente prende in considerazione le informazioni fornite dalle...
This article analyses the different versions of the Atridae’s story which coexist within theOdyssey....
Phrynichus’ fragment TrGF 3 F 14, featuring the somewhat loose mention of “hospitable gifts” and beh...
In the long journey that the Attic tragedies have made to the date, Sophocles’ Antigone is one of th...
Messa in scena dopo la morte di Euripide, l’Ifigenia in Aulide si può ragionevolmente considerare un...
This contribution constitutes the second instalment of an investigation published in this journal (L...
In this article, I offer a philological analysis of an epic fragment transmitted by a Pindaric schol...
The article deals with three euripidean passages (from Electra, Iphigenia among the Taurians and Hel...
Il contributo intende indagare, sui temi della maledizione e della morte e sui problemi della loro c...
In the only surviving fragment of Aristias’ Antaeus (TrGF 9 F 1) a difficulty arises when one tries ...
Il presente lavoro ha come scopo quello di delineare la caratterizzazione del personaggio di Androma...
When quoting from satyr dramas, ancient sources were not always consistent in indicating...
Of the Péliades, the earliest tragedy by Euripides, staged in 455 BC, neither testimonies nor the fr...
Il lavoro è incentrato sulla tradizione retorica dei drammi frammentari di Euripide. Un’analisi dell...
This dissertation presents the edition and commentary of an unpublished papyrus belonging to Cologne...
none1noIl presente contributo preliminarmente prende in considerazione le informazioni fornite dalle...
This article analyses the different versions of the Atridae’s story which coexist within theOdyssey....