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  1.  12
    A Career in the Navy (Arist. Knights 541–4).Dwora Gilula - 1989 - Classical Quarterly 39 (01):259-.
    Aristophanes' description of the stages of promotion in the Athenian navy recently received renewed attention, when Mastromarco and Halliwell enlisted it in their battle against the traditional opinion that Aristophanes' early career fell into two stages, a secret one of writing plays but not producing them, and a public one in which he undertook both activities. Mastromarco argues for a tripartite career, and Halliwell, who is against a too strict correlation, for a gradual development, a sort of a complex apprenticeship, (...)
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  2.  7
    Did Martial Have A Jewish Slave? (7.35).Dwora Gilula - 1987 - Classical Quarterly 37 (02):532-.
    Mart. 11.75 is a variation on the same theme and may serve as a commentary on 7.35. As it was not common to wear clothing in the bath, a Roman lady not wanting mentulam videre should not have gone to a public bath, where all the nude males, including Martial and his slave , were definitely not spadones.
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  3.  12
    Four Deadly Sins?(Arist. Wasps 74–84).Dwora Gilula - 1983 - Classical Quarterly 33 (02):358-.
    The two slaves, Xanthias and Sosias, posted by their master's son to guard his ‘sick’ father Philocleon, challenge the audience to guess the nature of the mysterious and strange disease &nuó&sgr&ogr&nu &lambda&lambdaó&kappa&ogr&tau&ogr&nu, 71) on account of which the father must be kept inside the house. When the correct answer to the riddle is finally disclosed, Philocleon is revealed to beis revealed to be φιληλιαστσ , namely a man ‘who loves to be a juror’ and to spend his days in the (...)
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