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Zoologica Pindarica

Classical Quarterly 26 (02):198- (1976)

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  1. Pindar's "Nemean" XI.Mary R. Lefkowitz - 1979 - Journal of Hellenic Studies 99:49-56.
    Pindar, perhaps more than any other ancient poet, seems to demand from his interpreters declarations of their critical premises. In recent years scholars customarily have made initial acknowledgment to the work of E. R. Bundy, as psychoanalysts must to Freud, before they begin to offer their own modifications to and expansions of his fundamental work. Much contemporary scholarship has concentrated on the identification and classification in the odes of the elements whose function Bundy labelled and explained. But useful as this (...)
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  • Prosopographica Pindarica.Christopher Carey - 1989 - Classical Quarterly 39 (01):1-.
    Pindar's Eighth Olympian celebrates the victory of Alkimedon of Aigina in the boys' wrestling at Olympia in 460. This victory was the sixth won by a member of this family . The absence of detail about most of these victories suggests that the family had had little success in the great Panhellenic competitions and that the majority were won at minor festivals. However, one of the remaining five victories was certainly won in one of the four festivals which made up (...)
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  • Prosopographica Pindarica.Christopher Carey - 1989 - Classical Quarterly 39 (1):1-9.
    Pindar's Eighth Olympian celebrates the victory of Alkimedon of Aigina in the boys' wrestling at Olympia in 460. This victory was the sixth won by a member of this family (line 76). The absence of detail about most of these victories suggests that the family had had little success in the great Panhellenic competitions and that the majority were won at minor festivals. However, one of the remaining five victories was certainly won in one of the four festivals which made (...)
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  • Virgil's callimachean pindar: Kingship and the baby iamus in eclogue 4.23–5.Zsolt Adorjáni - 2021 - Classical Quarterly 71 (2):649-654.
    This article argues for an allusion in Virgil's Eclogue 4 to one of Pindar's victory odes. It will be suggested that this Pindaric pretext is viewed by the Latin poet through a Callimachean perspective which adds to it further layers of significance. Consequently, the evidence will be discussed for reading the allusion in terms of royal ideology which places Virgil's poem in the tradition of Hellenistic ruler-encomia.
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