The chapter discusses the evidence for Herodotus’ recitations, the relationship with Homeric rhapsodes in the fifth century BCE, and the place of the Histories between orality and literacy. It also includes considerations on Herodotus’ explicit references to Homer, the Homeric poems, and the traditions pertaining to the Trojan War. An overview on Herodotean scholarship follows, with particular emphasis on intertextuality, which is in turn followed by some examples of Homeric intertexts in the Histories. A summary of the book’s contents rounds off this introduction
Introduction to a special issue of Phoenix on Homer and Near Eastern epic with the following contrib...
Homer’s Iliad and Odyssey are the only early Greek heroic epics to have survived the transition to w...
This book looks at two of the most important ancient Greek historians living in the fifth century bc...
The chapter discusses the evidence for Herodotus’ recitations, the relationship with Homeric rhapsod...
This introductory chapter focuses on myth and its multiple relationships with the concepts of truth ...
Herodotus was quite widely read in antiquity, and discussion about him was rather animated. Ancient ...
Scholars have long recognized that Herodotus wrote his Histories when literature was often researche...
This chapter explores one aspect of historiography's debt to epic, and uses this as a basis for some...
In his book, The Histories, Herodotus of Halicarnassus expertly displayed his inquiries into the cul...
This paper consists of four parts. The first one provides a short commentary on the oral tradition o...
Did Homer tell the ‘truth\u27 about the Trojan War? If so, how much, and if not, why not? The issue ...
Herodotus' discussion of the Trojan War in Histories 2.112-20 consists mainly of two strands: a hist...
The edited book explores the relationship between Herodotus and Homer and the reason why Herodotus w...
This article tends to summarize some specific literary features of the Homeric poems – Iliad and Ody...
This thesis is a study of Quintus Smyrnaeus’ Posthomerica, a Greek epic of the third century C.E. wr...
Introduction to a special issue of Phoenix on Homer and Near Eastern epic with the following contrib...
Homer’s Iliad and Odyssey are the only early Greek heroic epics to have survived the transition to w...
This book looks at two of the most important ancient Greek historians living in the fifth century bc...
The chapter discusses the evidence for Herodotus’ recitations, the relationship with Homeric rhapsod...
This introductory chapter focuses on myth and its multiple relationships with the concepts of truth ...
Herodotus was quite widely read in antiquity, and discussion about him was rather animated. Ancient ...
Scholars have long recognized that Herodotus wrote his Histories when literature was often researche...
This chapter explores one aspect of historiography's debt to epic, and uses this as a basis for some...
In his book, The Histories, Herodotus of Halicarnassus expertly displayed his inquiries into the cul...
This paper consists of four parts. The first one provides a short commentary on the oral tradition o...
Did Homer tell the ‘truth\u27 about the Trojan War? If so, how much, and if not, why not? The issue ...
Herodotus' discussion of the Trojan War in Histories 2.112-20 consists mainly of two strands: a hist...
The edited book explores the relationship between Herodotus and Homer and the reason why Herodotus w...
This article tends to summarize some specific literary features of the Homeric poems – Iliad and Ody...
This thesis is a study of Quintus Smyrnaeus’ Posthomerica, a Greek epic of the third century C.E. wr...
Introduction to a special issue of Phoenix on Homer and Near Eastern epic with the following contrib...
Homer’s Iliad and Odyssey are the only early Greek heroic epics to have survived the transition to w...
This book looks at two of the most important ancient Greek historians living in the fifth century bc...