Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Colophon
- ERRATA ET CORRIGENDA
- Contents
- No. XLIII
- No. XLIV
- Essay “On the evidence from Scripture that the Soul, immediately after the Death of the body, is not in a state of sleep or insensibility; but of happiness or misery: and on the moral uses of that doctrine.” Part II
- Comicorum Graecorum Fragmenta, Specimen Editionis
- Oxford Prize Essay, 1801:—Gulielmi Jones, Eguitis Aurati, Laudatio
- Latin Poem: Non tangenda rates tramiliunt vada
- On the Theology of the Greeks. Part II
- Classical Criticism
- On the Origin, Progress, Prevalence, and Decline, of Idolatry. Part III
- Notæ et Curae sequentes in Arati Diosemea
- Simonidis Fragmenta duo emendata a G. B.
- De Origine ac Vi Verborum, ut vocant, Depouentium et Mediorum Graecæ linguæ, præsertim Latinæ
- On the New Translation of the Bible
- Inscriptio Eliaca explicata a G. B
- Andocides emendatus a G. B.
- Critical Observations on the article in the Quarterly Review, No. XLV., entitled “The Course of the Niger.”
- An obscure passage in the first Catilinarian Oration of Cicero explained
- MS. Fragment of a Greek Ritual
- In Herodotum Emendationes, G. B.
- Thucydides Emendatus
- On the Ancient British Language of Cornwall. [Concluded.]
- De Patavinitate Liviana
- Amcenitates Philosophic, No. I. Containing Observations on, and Corrections of, Passages in Hermes, Hermias, Jamblichus, and Proclus
- Notice of Mr. Elmsley's Ed. of the Medea of Euripides No.III
- Remarks on a Passage in Dr. Vincent's ‘Periplus of the Erythrean Sea.’
- An Account of the Libraries at Leiden, Hanover, Cassel, Gotha, Weimar, Jena, Erlangen, Leipzig, and Dresden
- On the Arabic Inscription, discovered in the Pyramid of Cephrenes
- On the state of Religion and Philosophy among certain Writers of Antiquity, and the reasofis of their silence respecting the Christian Religion
- Adversaria Literaria
- Literary Intelligence
On the state of Religion and Philosophy among certain Writers of Antiquity, and the reasofis of their silence respecting the Christian Religion
from No. XLIV
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 July 2015
- Frontmatter
- Colophon
- ERRATA ET CORRIGENDA
- Contents
- No. XLIII
- No. XLIV
- Essay “On the evidence from Scripture that the Soul, immediately after the Death of the body, is not in a state of sleep or insensibility; but of happiness or misery: and on the moral uses of that doctrine.” Part II
- Comicorum Graecorum Fragmenta, Specimen Editionis
- Oxford Prize Essay, 1801:—Gulielmi Jones, Eguitis Aurati, Laudatio
- Latin Poem: Non tangenda rates tramiliunt vada
- On the Theology of the Greeks. Part II
- Classical Criticism
- On the Origin, Progress, Prevalence, and Decline, of Idolatry. Part III
- Notæ et Curae sequentes in Arati Diosemea
- Simonidis Fragmenta duo emendata a G. B.
- De Origine ac Vi Verborum, ut vocant, Depouentium et Mediorum Graecæ linguæ, præsertim Latinæ
- On the New Translation of the Bible
- Inscriptio Eliaca explicata a G. B
- Andocides emendatus a G. B.
- Critical Observations on the article in the Quarterly Review, No. XLV., entitled “The Course of the Niger.”
- An obscure passage in the first Catilinarian Oration of Cicero explained
- MS. Fragment of a Greek Ritual
- In Herodotum Emendationes, G. B.
- Thucydides Emendatus
- On the Ancient British Language of Cornwall. [Concluded.]
- De Patavinitate Liviana
- Amcenitates Philosophic, No. I. Containing Observations on, and Corrections of, Passages in Hermes, Hermias, Jamblichus, and Proclus
- Notice of Mr. Elmsley's Ed. of the Medea of Euripides No.III
- Remarks on a Passage in Dr. Vincent's ‘Periplus of the Erythrean Sea.’
- An Account of the Libraries at Leiden, Hanover, Cassel, Gotha, Weimar, Jena, Erlangen, Leipzig, and Dresden
- On the Arabic Inscription, discovered in the Pyramid of Cephrenes
- On the state of Religion and Philosophy among certain Writers of Antiquity, and the reasofis of their silence respecting the Christian Religion
- Adversaria Literaria
- Literary Intelligence
Summary
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Classical Journal , pp. 454 - 467Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2013First published in: 1820