Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-g8jcs Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-25T08:41:11.110Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Abbreviations and Bibliography

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 April 2021

Ian Du Quesnay
Affiliation:
University of Cambridge
Tony Woodman
Affiliation:
University of Virginia
Get access

Summary

Image of the first page of this content. For PDF version, please use the ‘Save PDF’ preceeding this image.'
Type
Chapter
Information
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2021

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Abbreviations and Bibliography

Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie (1875–1912). 56 vols. Leipzig

Catalogue of Books Printed in the XVth Century now in the British Museum (1908–1971). 10 vols. London

Cancik, H. and Schneider, H. (2002–10). Brill’s New Pauly: Encyclopaedia of the Ancient World. Leiden/Boston

Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani (1960– ). Rome

Cornell, T. J. (ed.) (2013).The Fragments of the Roman Historians. 3 vols. Oxford

Keil, H. (ed.) (1857–70). Grammatici Latini. 8 vols. Leipzig

Gesamtkatalog der Wiegendrucke. www.gesamtkatalogderwiegendrucke.de

Incunabula Short Title Catalogue. istc.bl.uk

Steinby, E. M. (ed.) (1993–2000). Lexicon Topographicum Urbis Romae. 6 vols. Rome

Neue Deutsche Biographie (1953– ). Berlin

Page, D. L. (1962). Poetae Melici Graeci. Oxford

Thesaurus Linguae Latinae (1876– ). Leipzig/Berlin

Acosta-Hughes, B. (2010). Arion’s Lyre: Archaic Poetry into Hellenistic Poetry. PrincetonGoogle Scholar
Adams, J. N. (1978). ‘Conventions of naming in Cicero’, CQ 28.145–66Google Scholar
Adams, J. N. (1981). ‘Culus, clunes and their synonyms in Latin’, Glotta 59.231–64Google Scholar
Adams, J. N. (1982). The Latin Sexual Vocabulary. LondonGoogle Scholar
Adams, J. N. (1983). ‘Words for “prostitute” in Latin’, RhM 126.321–58Google Scholar
Adams, J. N. (1992). ‘British Latin: the text, interpretation and language of the Bath curse tablets’, Britannia 23.126Google Scholar
Adams, J. N. (1995). ‘The language of the Vindolanda writing tablets: an interim report’, JRS 85.86134Google Scholar
Adams, J. N. (1999). ‘Nominative personal pronouns and some patterns of speech in Republican and Augustan poetry’, in Adams, and Mayer, (1999) 97133Google Scholar
Adams, J. N. (2003). ‘The new Vindolanda tablets’, CQ 53.530–75CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Adams, J. N. (2007). The Regional Diversification of Latin 200 BC – AD 600. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Adams, J. N. (2013). Social Variation and the Latin Language. CambridgeCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Adams, J. N. (2016). An Anthology of Informal Latin 200 BC – AD 900. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Adams, J. N. (forthcoming). Asyndeton and Latin Literature. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Adams, J. N. and Mayer, R. (eds.) (1999). Aspects of the Language of Latin Poetry. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Adams, J. N. and Vincent, N. (eds.) (2016). Early and Late Latin: Continuity or Change? CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Adler, E. (1981). Catullan Self-Revelation. New YorkGoogle Scholar
Agnesini, A. (2004). Plauto in Catullo. Edizioni e saggi universitari di filologia classica 63. BolognaGoogle Scholar
Agnesini, A. (2007). Il carme 62 di Catullo: edizione critica e commento. CesenaGoogle Scholar
Agnesini, A. (2009). ‘Catull. 67.1s.: incipit della ianua o explicit della Coma?’, Paideia 66.521–40Google Scholar
Agnesini, A. (2011). ‘Una rilettura di Catull. 1.8s.: lo snodo tra dedica a Nepote e invocazione alla Musa’, in Biondi, (2011) 121Google Scholar
Agnesini, A. (2012). ‘Lepos, mores, pathos, furor, risus … Per una “ri-sistemazione” di alcuni carmina catulliani’, in Morelli, (2012) 171202Google Scholar
Albertini, A. (1953). ‘Calfurnio bresciano: la sua edizione di Catullo (1481)’, Commentari dell’Ateneo di Brescia 29–79. BresciaGoogle Scholar
Alexander, M. C. (1990). Trials in the Late Roman Republic, 149 BC to 50 BC. Phoenix Suppl. 26. TorontoGoogle Scholar
Allen, K. (1915). ‘Doctus Catullus’, CP 10.222–3Google Scholar
Allen, W. S. (1965). Vox Latina: The Pronunciation of Classical Latin. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Allenspach, J. and Frasso, G. (1980). ‘Vicende, cultura e scritti di Gerolamo Squarzafico, Alessandrino’, IMU 23.233–92Google Scholar
Ancona, R. (2002). ‘The untouched self: Sapphic and Catullan Muses in Horace, Odes 1.22’, in Spentzou, E. and Fowler, D. P. (eds.), Cultivating the Muse: Struggles for Power and Inspiration in Classical Literature 161–86. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Anon. (1874). ‘Santen, Laurens or Louw van’, in van der Aa, A. J. (ed.), Biographisch woordenboek der Nederlanden (Haarlem, 1852–1878, 21 vols.). Vol. 17.101–4Google Scholar
Aranjo, D. (2005). ‘Catulle au début du XXe siècle: une anthologie’, Babel: Littératures plurielles 12.145–76Google Scholar
Arena, V. and Mac Góráin, F. (eds.) (2017). Varronian moments. BICS Suppl. 60.2Google Scholar
Arkins, B. D. (1979). ‘Glubit in Catullus 58.5’, LCM 4.85–6Google Scholar
Arkins, B. D. (2007). ‘The modern reception of Catullus’, in Skinner, (2007a) 461–78Google Scholar
Armstrong, R. (2013). ‘Journeys and nostalgia in Catullus’, CJ 109.4371Google Scholar
Atkinson, T. (2011). Catulla et al. TarsetGoogle Scholar
Auhagen, U. (2003). ‘Lusus und Gloria – Plinius’ Hendecasyllabi (Epist. 4, 14; 5, 3 und 7, 4)’, in Castagna, L. and Lefèvre, E. (eds.), Plinius der Jüngere und seine Zeit 313. Munich/LeipzigCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Austin, R. G. (1960). M. Tulli Ciceronis Pro M. Caelio Oratio. 3rd edn. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Avanzi, G. (ed.) [1535]. Catullus, Tibullus, Propertius, Gallus. [Venice]Google Scholar
Avanzi, G., and Manuzio, A. (1502). Catullus, Tibullus, Propertius. VeniceGoogle Scholar
Avanzi, G., and Manuzio, A. (1515). Catullus, Tibullus, Propertius. 2nd edn. VeniceGoogle Scholar
Axelson, B. (1945). Unpoetische Wörter. LundGoogle Scholar
Baehrens, E. (1874). Analecta Catulliana. JenaGoogle Scholar
Baehrens, E. (1876, 1885). Catulli Veronensis Liber. Vols. 1–2. LeipzigGoogle Scholar
Bain, D. (1979). ‘PLAVTVS VORTIT BARBARE. Plautus, Bacchides 526–61 and Menander Dis Exapaton 102–12’, in West, and Woodman, (1979) 1734Google Scholar
Baker, R. J. (1975). ‘Domina at Catullus 68, 68: mistress or chatelaine?’, RhM 118.124–9Google Scholar
Baldi, P. and Cuzzolin, P. (eds.) (2009). New Perspectives on Historical Latin Syntax 1: Syntax of the Sentence. Berlin and New YorkGoogle Scholar
Balmer, J. (2004a). Catullus: Poems of Love and Hate. TarsetGoogle Scholar
Balmer, J. (2004b). Chasing after Catullus. TarsetGoogle Scholar
Balmer, J. (2013). Piecing Together the Fragments: Translating Classical Verse, Creating Contemporary Poetry. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Balsamo, J. and Galand-Hallyn, P. (eds.) (2000). La Poétique de Jean Second et son influence au XVIe siècle. Les Cahiers de l’humanisme 1. ParisGoogle Scholar
Barbaud, T. (2008). ‘Catulle versus Horace: révolte et sagesse poétiques’, REL 86.8096Google Scholar
Barchiesi, A. (1993). ‘Future reflexive: two modes of allusion and Ovid’s Heroides’, HSCP 95.333–65Google Scholar
Barchiesi, A. (2001). ‘Horace and iambos: the poet as literary historian’, in Cavarzere, Aloni and Barchiesi, (2001) 141–64Google Scholar
Barchiesi, A. (2005). ‘The search for the perfect book: a PS to the New Posidippus’, in Gutzwiller, K. (ed.), The New Posidippus: A Hellenistic Poetry Book 320–42. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Barchiesi, A. and Scheidel, W. (eds.) (2010). The Oxford Handbook of Roman Studies. OxfordCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bardon, H. (1970). Propositions sur Catulle. BrusselsGoogle Scholar
Bardon, H. (1973). Catulli Veronensis Carmina. StuttgartGoogle Scholar
Barrett, A. A. (1972). ‘Catullus 52 and the consulship of Vatinius’, TAPA 103.2338Google Scholar
Bauer, B. L. M. (2010). ‘Forerunners of Romance -mente adverbs in Latin prose and poetry’, in Dickey, andChahoud, (2010) 339–53Google Scholar
Baumbach, M. and Bär, S. (eds.) (2012). Brill’s Companion to Greek and Latin Epyllion and its Reception. Leiden/BostonGoogle Scholar
Bausi, F., Campanelli, M., Gentile, S., Hankins, J. (eds.) (2013). Autografi dei letterati italiani. Il Quattrocento. Tomo I. RomeGoogle Scholar
Beard, M. (1994). ‘The Roman and the foreign: the cult of the “Great Mother” in Imperial Rome’, in Thomas, N. and Humphrey, C. (eds.), Shamanism, History and the State 164–89. Ann ArborGoogle Scholar
Bellandi, F. (2007). Lepos e Pathos: Studi su Catullo. BolognaGoogle Scholar
Bellandi, F. (2012). ‘Catullo e la politica romana’, in Citroni, M. (ed.), Letteratura e ciuitas: Transizioni dalla Reppublica all’Impero, in ricordo di Emanuele Narducci 4771. PisaGoogle Scholar
Benferhat, Y. (2005). ‘Catulle et les affrontements politico-littéraires à Rome à la fin de la république’, in Poignault, R. (ed.), Présence de Catulle et des élégiaques latins (Actes du colloque tenu à Tours 28–30 novembre 2002) 131–48. Clermont-FerrandGoogle Scholar
Berry, D. H. (1996). Cicero: Pro P. Sulla Oratio. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Bertone, S. (2018). ‘Innovazione e continuità tra le edizioni aldine di Catullo curate dall’Avanzi (Ald. 1502 – Ald. 1515)’, Paideia 73.2071–84Google Scholar
Bessone, F. (2013). ‘Latin precursors’, in Thorsen, (2013) 3956Google Scholar
Bessone, F. (2014). ‘Polis, court, empire: Greek culture, Roman society, and the system of genres’, in Augoustakis, A. (ed.), Flavian Poetry and its Greek Past 215–33. LeidenGoogle Scholar
Bessone, F. and Fucecchi, M. (eds.) (2017). The Literary Genres in the Flavian Age. Berlin/BostonGoogle Scholar
Billanovich, G. (1959). ‘Dal Livio di Raterio (Laur. 63, 19) al Livio del Petrarca (B. M., Harl. 2493’, Italia Medioevale e Umanistica 2.103–78Google Scholar
Billanovich, G. (1988). ‘Il Catullo della Cattedrale di Verona’, in Krämer, S. and Bernhard, M. (eds.), Scire litteras. Forschungen zum mittelalterlichen Geistesleben (Bayerische Akademie der Wissenschaften, Philosophisch-Historische Klasse Abhandlungen, nf 99) 3557. MunichGoogle Scholar
Bing, P. (2009). The Scroll and the Marble. Studies in Reading and Reception in Hellenistic Poetry. Ann ArborGoogle Scholar
Biondi, G. G. (2011). Il Liber di Catullo: tradizione, modelli e Fortleben, Quaderni di Paideia 14. CesenaGoogle Scholar
Biondi, G. G. (2015). ‘Catullus, Sabellico (& Co.) and … Giorgio Pasquali’, in Kiss, (2015a) 2952Google Scholar
Black, R., Kraye, J., and Nuvoloni, L. (eds.) (2016). Palaeography, Manuscript Illumination and Humanism in Renaissance Italy: Studies in Memory of A. C. de la Mare. Warburg Institute Colloquia 28. LondonGoogle Scholar
Bleisch, P. (1999). ‘The empty tomb at Rhoeteum: Deiphobus and the problem of the past in Aeneid 6.494-547’, CA 18.187226Google Scholar
Bonadeo, A. (2017) ‘Scattered remarks about the ‘non-genre’ of Statius’ Siluae’, in Bessone, and Fucecchi, (2017) 157–66Google Scholar
Bonnet, M. (1877). Review of Baehrens’s Teubner edition of Catullus, Revue Critique d’Histoire et de Littérature 4.5865Google Scholar
Bonvicini, M. (2012). Il novus libellus di Catullo: trasmissione del testo, problematicità della grafia e dell’interpunzione. Quaderni di Paideia 15. CesenaGoogle Scholar
Bottari, G. (2010). Fili della cultura veronese del Trecento. VeronaGoogle Scholar
Boulet, J. (2009). ‘“Will he rise and recover[?]”: Catullus, castration, and censorship in Swinburne’s “Dolores”’, Victorian Poetry 47.747–58Google Scholar
Braden, G. (1979). ‘Vivamus, mea Lesbia in the English Renaissance’, English Literary Renaissance 9.199224Google Scholar
Braga, D. (1950). Catullo e i poeti Greci. Messina/FlorenceGoogle Scholar
Bramble, J. C. (1974). Persius and the Programmatic Satire. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Braund, D. (1996). ‘The politics of Catullus 10: Memmius, Caesar and the Bithynians’, Hermathena 160.4557Google Scholar
Braund, D. and Gill, C. (eds.) (2003). Myth, History and Culture in Republican Rome. ExeterGoogle Scholar
Brink, C. O. (1971, 1982). Horace on Poetry. Vol. 2 The Ars Poetica and Vol. 3 Epistles Book II. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Broughton, T. R. S. (1955, 1968, 1986). The Magistrates of the Roman Republic. 3 vols. Cleveland/AtlantaGoogle Scholar
Bunting, B. (2000). Collected Poems. NewcastleGoogle Scholar
Burrus, V. (2007). ‘Mapping as metamorphosis: initial reflections on gender and ancient religious discourses’, in Penner, T. and Vander Stichele, C. (eds.), Mapping Gender in Ancient Religious Discourses 110. AtlantaGoogle Scholar
Butler, J. (1990). Gender Trouble: Feminism and the Subversion of Identity. New YorkGoogle Scholar
Butler, J. (2004). Undoing Gender. New YorkGoogle Scholar
Butrica, J. L. (1984). The Manuscript Tradition of Propertius. Phoenix Suppl. 17. TorontoGoogle Scholar
Butrica, J. L. (2002). ‘Catullus 107.7–8’, CQ 52.608–9Google Scholar
Butrica, J. L. (2006). ‘The Fabella of Sulpicia (“Epigrammata Bobiensia” 37)’, Phoenix 60.70121Google Scholar
Butrica, J. L. (2007). ‘History and transmission of the text’, in Skinner, (2007a) 1334Google Scholar
Butterfield, D. (2008a). ‘The poetic treatment of atque from Catullus to Juvenal’, Mnem. 61.386413Google Scholar
Butterfield, D. (2008b). ‘On the avoidance of eius in Latin poetry’, RhM 151.151–67Google Scholar
Butterfield, D. (2008c). ‘Sigmatic ecthlipsis in Lucretius’, Hermes 136.182205Google Scholar
Butterfield, D. (2015a). ‘cui uideberis bella: the influence of Baehrens and Housman on the text of Catullus’, in Kiss, (2015a) 107–28Google Scholar
Butterfield, D. (ed.) (2015b). Varro Varius: The Polymath of the Roman World. Cambridge Classical Journal Suppl. 39. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Cairns, F. (1969). ‘Catullus 1’, Mnemosyne 22. 153–8 (= (2012a) 1–5)Google Scholar
Cairns, F. (1972). Generic Composition in Greek and Roman Poetry. EdinburghGoogle Scholar
Cairns, F. (1973). ‘Catullus’ “basia” poems (5, 7, 48)’, Mnemosyne 26.1522 (= (2012a) 6–12)CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cairns, F. (1974). ‘Venusta Sirmio: Catullus 31’, in Woodman and West (1974) 116 (= (2012a) 18–35)Google Scholar
Cairns, F. (2003). ‘Catullus in and about Bithynia: Poems 68, 10, 28 and 47’, in Braund and Gill (2003) 163–90 (= (2012a) 99–121)Google Scholar
Cairns, F. (2005). ‘Catullus 45: text and interpretation’, CQ 55.534–41 (= (2012a) 36–46)Google Scholar
Cairns, F. (2008). ‘The Hellenistic epigramma longum’, in Morelli (2008) 5580Google Scholar
Cairns, F. (2010). ‘The genre Oarystys’, Wiener Studien 123.101–29 (= (2012a) 4776)Google Scholar
Cairns, F. (2012a). Roman Lyric. Berlin/BostonGoogle Scholar
Cairns, F. (2012b). ‘Poem 45: the wooing of Acme and Septimius’, in Du Quesnay and Woodman (2012) 112–29Google Scholar
Cairns, F. (2016). Hellenistic Epigram: Contexts of Exploration. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Calboli, G. (2009). ‘Latin syntax and Greek’, in Baldi and Cuzzolin (2009) 65193Google Scholar
Cameron, A. (1980). ‘Poetae Novelli’, HSCP 84.127–75Google Scholar
Cameron, A. (1995). Callimachus and his Critics. PrincetonGoogle Scholar
Campana, P. (2012). Il ciclo di Gellio nel liber catulliano: Per una nuova lettura di Catull. 74, 80, 88, 89, 90, 91, 116. PisaGoogle Scholar
Campbell, D. A. (1960). ‘Galliambic poems of the 15th and 16th centuries: sources of the Bacchic Odes of the Pléiade School’, Bibliothèque d’Humanisme et Renaissance 22.490510Google Scholar
Canobbio, A. (2017). ‘Bi-partition and non-distinction of poetical genres in Martial’, in Bessone, and Fucecchi, (2017) 103116Google Scholar
Carson, A. (2000). Men in the Off Hours. New YorkGoogle Scholar
Carson, A. (2010). Nox. New YorkGoogle Scholar
Casson, L. (1971). Ships and Seamanship of the Ancient World. PrincetonGoogle Scholar
Cavarzere, A., Aloni, A. and Barchiesi, A. (eds.) (2001). Iambic Ideas: Essays on a Poetic Tradition from Archaic Greece to the Late Roman Empire. Lanham, Md.Google Scholar
Cavazza, S. (2013). ‘Negri, Palladio (Palladius FUSCUS)’, online at www.treccani.it, cf. DBI 78.157Google Scholar
Cazzaniga, E. (1944). Catulli Veronensis Liber. TurinGoogle Scholar
Celentano, M. S. (1991). ‘Il fiore reciso dall’ aratro: ambiguità di una similitudine (Catull. 11, 22–24)’, QUCC 37.83100Google Scholar
Cenerini, F. (1989). ‘O colonia quae cupis ponte ludere longo (Cat. 17): Cultura e politica’, Athenaeum 67.4155Google Scholar
Cerroni, M. (2003). ‘Guarini (Guarino), Alessandro, il Vecchio’, DBI 60.333–4Google Scholar
Chahoud, A. (2010). ‘Idiom(s) and literariness in classical literary criticism’, in Dickey, and Chahoud, (2010) 4264Google Scholar
Chahoud, A. (2016). ‘Varro’s Latin and Varro on Latin’, in Ferri, and Zago, (2016) 1532Google Scholar
Chahoud, A. (2018). ‘Verbal mosaics: speech patterns and generic stylization in Lucilius’, in Breed, B. W., Keitel, E. and Wallace, R. (eds.), Lucilius and Satire in Second-Century Rome 132161. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Cheney, P. and Hardie, P. (eds.) (2015). The Oxford History of Classical Reception in English Literature. Vol. 2 1558–1660. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Chevallier, R. (1977). ‘La géographie de Catulle’, Bulletin de l’Association Guillaume Budé 187–193Google Scholar
Christenson, D. (2000). Plautus: Amphitruo. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Cignolo, C. (2002). Terentiani Mauri de litteris, de syllabis, de metris. 1 Introduzione, testo critico e traduzione italiana. 2 Commento, appendici e indici. Bibliotheca Weidmanniana, Collectanea grammatica Latina, 2.1 and 2. Hildesheim/Zurich/New YorkGoogle Scholar
Citroni, M. (1975). M. Valerii Martialis Epigrammaton Liber Primus. FlorenceGoogle Scholar
Clare, R. J. (1997). ‘Catullus 64 and the Argonautica of Apollonius Rhodius: allusion and exemplarity’, PCPS 42.6088Google Scholar
Clark, C. (2008). ‘The poetics of manhood? Nonverbal behavior in Catullus 51’, CP 103.257–81Google Scholar
Clausen, W. V. (1964). ‘Callimachus and Latin poetry’, GRBS 5.181–96Google Scholar
Clausen, W. V. (1970). ‘Catullus and Callimachus’, CP 74.8594Google Scholar
Clausen, W. V. (1986). ‘Cicero and the new poetry’, HSCP 90.159–70Google Scholar
Clausen, W. V. (1987). Virgil’s Aeneid and the Tradition of Hellenistic Poetry. Berkeley/Los Angeles/LondonGoogle Scholar
Clausen, W. V. (1994). A Commentary on Virgil: Eclogues. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Clédat, L. (1890). Catulle. Manuscrit de St-Germain-des-Prés. ParisGoogle Scholar
Clemens, R. and Graham, T. (2007). Introduction to Manuscript Studies. Ithaca/LondonGoogle Scholar
Coleman, R. (1975). ‘Greek influence on Latin syntax’, Trans. Philol. Soc. 74.101–56Google Scholar
Coleman, R. (1977). Vergil: Eclogues. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Coleman, R. (1999). ‘Poetic diction, poetic discourse, and the poetic register’, in Adams and Mayer (1999) 2193Google Scholar
Commager, S. (1962). The Odes of Horace: A Critical Study. New HavenGoogle Scholar
Connolly, J. (2007). ‘Virile tongues: rhetoric and masculinity’, in Dominik, W. and Hall, J. (eds.), A Companion to Roman Rhetoric 8396. Chichester/Malden, Mass.Google Scholar
Connor, P. J. (1974). ‘Catullus 8: the lover’s conflict’, Antichthon 8.93–6Google Scholar
Contarino, R. (1986). ‘Dal Pozzo, Francesco (detto il Puteolano)’, DBI 32.213–16Google Scholar
Conte, G. B. (1986). The Rhetoric of Imitation. Genre and Poetic Memory in Virgil and Other Latin Poets. IthacaGoogle Scholar
Copley, F. C. (1957). Catullus: The Complete Poetry. Ann ArborGoogle Scholar
Corbeill, A. (1996). Controlling Laughter: Political Humor in the Late Roman Republic. PrincetonGoogle Scholar
Corbeill, A. (2004). Nature Embodied: Gesture in Ancient Rome. PrincetonGoogle Scholar
Corbeill, A. (2010). ‘Gender studies’, in Barchiesi, and Scheidel, (2010) 220–33Google Scholar
Corbeill, A. (2015). Sexing the World: Grammatical Gender and Biological Sex in Ancient Rome. PrincetonGoogle Scholar
Cornell, T. J. (ed.) (2013). The Fragments of the Roman Historians. Vols. 1–3. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Corradino dall’Aglio, G. F. (1738). Cajus Valerius Catullus in integrum restitutus. VeniceGoogle Scholar
Courtney, E. (1985). ‘Three poems of Catullus’, BICS 32.85100Google Scholar
Courtney, E. (1995). Musa Lapidaria. A Selection of Latin Verse Inscriptions. AtlantaGoogle Scholar
Courtney, E. (1996–97). ‘Catullus’ yacht (or was it?)’, CJ 92.113–22Google Scholar
Courtney, E. (2003). The Fragmentary Latin Poets. (Revision of 1st edn., 1993.) OxfordGoogle Scholar
Cowan, R. (2015). ‘On not being Archilochus properly: Cato, Catullus and the idea of iambos’, MD 74.952Google Scholar
Crabbe, A. (1977). ‘ignoscenda quidem … Catullus 64 and the fourth Georgic’, CQ 27.342–51Google Scholar
Crawford, M. H. (1996). Roman Statutes. 2 vols. BICS Supplement 64. LondonGoogle Scholar
Cremona, V. (1958). ‘Problemi di ortografia catulliana’, Aevum 32.401–33Google Scholar
Crowther, N. B. (1970). ‘ΟΙ ΝΕΩΤΕΡΟΙ, poetae novi, and cantores Euphorionis’, CQ 20.322–7Google Scholar
Crowther, N. B. (1979). ‘Cantores Euphorionis: a reassessment’, LCM 4.123–5Google Scholar
Csapodi, C., and Csapodi-Gárdonyi, K. (1969). Biblioteca Corviniana. The Library of King Matthias Corvinus of Hungary. Translated from German by Z. Horn. ShannonGoogle Scholar
Cugusi, P. (1996). Aspetti letterari dei ‘Carmina Latina Epigraphica’. BolognaGoogle Scholar
Cunningham, I. C. (1983). ‘An Italian Catullus. Edinburgh, Nat. Lib. of Scotland, Adv. MS. 18.5.2’, Scriptorium 37.122–5Google Scholar
Curran, L. C. (1966). ‘Vision and reality in Propertius 1.3’, YCS 19.189207Google Scholar
Damon, C. (1992). ‘Statius Silvae 4.9: libertas Decembris?’, ICS 17.301–8Google Scholar
D’Angour, A. (2000). ‘Catullus 107: a Callimachean rendering’, CQ 50.615–18Google Scholar
D’Angour, A. (2006). ‘Conquering love: Sappho 31 and Catullus 51’, CQ 56.297300Google Scholar
David-de Palacio, M.-F. (2005). Reviviscences romaines. La latinité au miroir de l’esprit fin-de-siècle. BernGoogle Scholar
Davies, M. (1995). Aldus Manutius: Printer and Publisher of Renaissance Venice. LondonGoogle Scholar
de Hamel, C. (2018). Making Medieval Manuscripts. OxfordGoogle Scholar
de la Mare, A. C. (1973). The Handwriting of Italian Humanists. Vol. 1. OxfordGoogle Scholar
de la Mare, A. C. (1976). ‘The return of Petronius to Italy’, in Alexander, J. J. G. and Gibson, M. T. (eds.), Medieval Learning and Literature. Essays Presented to Richard William Hunt 220–51. OxfordGoogle Scholar
de la Mare, A. C. (1985). ‘New research on humanistic scribes in Florence’, in Garzelli, A., Miniatura fiorentina del rinascimento 1440–1525: un primo censimento (Inventari e Cataloghi Toscani 18 and 19) 1.393600Google Scholar
de la Mare, A. C. (1996). ‘Vespasiano da Bisticci as producer of classical manuscripts in fifteenth-century Florence’, in Chavannes-Mazal, C. A. and Smith, M. M. (eds.), Medieval Manuscripts of the Latin Classics: Production and Use 166207. Los Altos Hills/LondonGoogle Scholar
de la Mare, A. C., and Thomson, D. F. S. (1973). ‘Poggio’s earliest manuscript?’, Italia Medioevo e Umanistica 16.179–95Google Scholar
de la Mare, A. C., and Nuvoloni, L. (2009). The Handwriting of the Italian Humanists. Vol. 2: Bartolomeo Sanvito: The Life and Work of a Renaissance Scribe. ParisGoogle Scholar
Delattre, D. (ed.) (2007). Philodème de Gadara sur la musique livre IV. ParisGoogle Scholar
Della Corte, F. (1976). Personaggi catulliani. 2nd edn. FirenzeGoogle Scholar
Della Corte, F. (1989). ‘Tre poeti traducono Catullo’, Aufidus 7.159–67Google Scholar
Dench, E. (2005). Romulus’ Asylum: Roman Identities from the Age of Alexander to the Age of Hadrian. OxfordGoogle Scholar
De Robertis, T. (2016). ‘I primi anni della scrittura umanistica’, in Black, et al. (2016) 5585Google Scholar
De Robertis, T., Tanturli, G., and Zamponi, S. (2008). Coluccio Salutati e l’invenzione dell’umanesimo. FlorenceGoogle Scholar
Deuling, J. K. (1999). ‘Catullus and Mamurra’, Mnemosyne 52.188–94Google Scholar
De Vaan, M. (2008). Etymological Dictionary of Latin and the Other Italic Languages. Leiden Indo-European etymological dictionary series, 7. Leiden/BostonGoogle Scholar
Devine, A. M. and Stephens, L. D. (2006). Latin Word Order: Structured Meaning and Information. OxfordGoogle Scholar
De Vries, [S. G.] (1911). ‘Vossius (Isaac)’, Nieuw Nederlandsch Biografisch Woordenboek 1.1519–25Google Scholar
Dewar, M. (1991). Statius Thebaid IX. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Dewar, M. (2014). Leisured Resistance: Villas, Literature and Politics in the Roman World. LondonGoogle Scholar
Dibdin, T. F. (1827). An Introduction to the Knowledge of Rare and Valuable Editions of the Greek and Latin Classics. Vols. 1–2. LondonGoogle Scholar
Dickey, E. (2000). ‘O dee ree PIE: the vocative problems of Latin words ending in –eus’, Glotta 76.3249Google Scholar
Dickey, E. (2002). Latin Forms of Address from Plautus to Apuleius. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Dickey, E. (2012). ‘How to say “please” in Classical Latin’, CQ 62.731–48Google Scholar
Dickey, E. and Chahoud, A. (eds.) (2010). Colloquial and Literary Latin. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Dixon, S. (2001). Reading Roman Women: Sources, Genres and Real Life. LondonGoogle Scholar
Doering, F. W. (1788–92). C. Valerii Catulli carmina varietate lectionis et perpetua adnotatione illustrata. 2 vols. LeipzigGoogle Scholar
Doering, F. W. (1826). C. Valerius Catullus ex editione Frid. Guil. Doeringi, rev. J. Naudet. ParisGoogle Scholar
Doering, F. W. (1834). C. Valerii Catulli Veronensis Carmina. AltonaGoogle Scholar
Dominik, W. J. (1994) Speech and Rhetoric in Statius’ Thebaid. HildesheimGoogle Scholar
Dominik, W. J., Newlands, C. E. and Gervais, K. (eds.) (2015). The Brill Companion to Statius. LeidenGoogle Scholar
Döpp, S. (2005). ‘Munera et Musarum et Veneris: Catull c. 68 in der Entwicklungsgeschichte der römischen Elegie’, in Tar, I. and Meyer, P. (eds.), Studia Catulliana in memoriam Stephani Caroli Horváth (1931–1966), Acta Universitatis Szegediensis Acta Antiqua et Archaeologica xxix 519. SzegedGoogle Scholar
Douglas, A. E. (1966). Cicero: Brutus. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Dousa, J. the Elder (1581). Praecidanea pro Q. Valerio Catullo. AntwerpGoogle Scholar
Dousa, J. the Younger (1592a). Catullus, Tibullus, Propertius. LeidenGoogle Scholar
Dousa, J. (1592b). In Catullum, Tibullum, Propertium Coniectanea et Notae. LeidenGoogle Scholar
Drinkwater, M. O. (2013). ‘Militia amoris: fighting in love’s army’, in Thorsen (2013) 194206Google Scholar
Duckett, E. S. (1925). Catullus in English Poetry. Northampton, Mass.Google Scholar
Duhigg, J. (1967). ‘The elegiac metre of Catullus’, Antichthon 5.5767Google Scholar
Dunn, D. (2016a). The Poems of Catullus. LondonGoogle Scholar
Dunn, D. (2016b). Catullus’ Bedspread: The Life of Rome’s Most Erotic Poet. LondonGoogle Scholar
Du Quesnay, I. M. Le M. (1976). ‘Virgil’s Fifth Eclogue’, PVS 16.1841Google Scholar
Du Quesnay, I. M. Le (1977). ‘Vergil’s Fourth Eclogue’, PLLS 1.2599Google Scholar
Du Quesnay, I. M. Le (2012). ‘Three problems in Poem 66’, in Du Quesnay, and Woodman, (2012) 153–83Google Scholar
Du Quesnay, I. M. Le (2017). ‘Contextualising Catullus: a re-examination of 66.1–14’, in Woodman, A. J. and Wisse, J. (eds.), Word and Context in Latin Poetry. Studies in Memory of David West (PCPS/CCJ Suppl. 40) 1342. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Du Quesnay, I. and Woodman, T. [= A. J.] (eds.) (2012). Catullus: Poems, Books, Readers. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Dyck, A. R. (2013). Cicero Pro Marco Caelio. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Dyson[= Dyson Hejduk], J. (2007). ‘The Lesbia Poems’, in Skinner, (2007a) 254–75Google Scholar
Dyson[= Dyson Hejduk], J. (2008). Clodia: A Sourcebook. Norman, Okla.Google Scholar
Dyson, S. L. (1985). ‘The Transpadane frontier’, in The Creation of the Roman Frontier 4286. PrincetonGoogle Scholar
Eckstein, F. A. (1877). ‘Doering, F. W.’, ADB 5.289–91Google Scholar
Edmunds, L. (2001). Intertextuality and the Reading of Latin Poetry. Baltimore/LondonGoogle Scholar
Edwards, C. (1993). The Politics of Immorality in Ancient Rome. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Edwards, M. (1989). ‘Greek into Latin: a note on Catullus and Sappho’, Latomus 48.590600Google Scholar
Edwards, M. (1992). ‘Apples, blood and flowers: Sapphic bridal imagery in Catullus’, in Deroux, C. (ed.), Studies in Latin Literature 6.181203. BrusselsGoogle Scholar
Eisenhut, W. (1983). Catulli Veronensis Liber. LeipzigGoogle Scholar
Elder, J. P. (1963). Review of Fordyce (1961), CP 58.199203Google Scholar
Eliot, T. S. (1928). The Sacred Wood: Essays on Poetry and Criticism. 2nd edn. LondonGoogle Scholar
Ellis, R. (1867). Catulli Veronensis Liber. (1st edn.) OxfordGoogle Scholar
Ellis, R. (1871). The Poems and Fragments of Catullus. LondonGoogle Scholar
Ellis, R. (1876). A Commentary on Catullus. (1st edn.) OxfordGoogle Scholar
Ellis, R. (1878). Catulli Veronensis Liber. (2nd edn.) OxfordGoogle Scholar
Ellis, R. (1889). A Commentary on Catullus. (2nd edn.) OxfordGoogle Scholar
Ellis, R. (1904). Catulli Carmina. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Evrard, E. (2005). ‘Polymètres et épigrammes de Catulle. Analyse quantitative du vocabulaire et de la syntaxe des propositions’, in Poignault, R. (ed.), Présence de Catulle et des elégiaques latins (Actes du colloque tenu à Tours, 2830 novembre 2002) 6583. Clermont-FerrandGoogle Scholar
Evrard-Gillis, J. (1976). La récurrence lexicale dans l’oeuvre de Catulle. Etude linguistique. ParisGoogle Scholar
Facchini Tosi, C. (1983). La ripetizione lessicale nei poeti latini: Venti anni di studi (1960–1980). BolognaGoogle Scholar
Fain, G. L. (2008). Writing Epigrams: The Art of Composition in Catullus, Callimachus and Martial. (Collection Latomus 312.) BrusselsGoogle Scholar
Fantuzzi, M. and Hunter, R. (2004). Tradition and Innovation in Hellenistic Poetry. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Farrell, J. (1991). Vergil’s Georgics and the Traditions of Ancient Epic. New York/OxfordGoogle Scholar
Farron, S. (1993). Vergil’s Aeneid: A Poem of Grief and Love. Mnemosyne Suppl. 122. Leiden/New York/CologneGoogle Scholar
Fedeli, P. (1983). Catullus’ Carmen 61. (Orig. Italian 1972.) AmsterdamGoogle Scholar
Fedeli, P. (1994). Sexti Properti elegiarum libri IV. (2nd edn.) Stuttgart/LeipzigGoogle Scholar
Feeney, D. (1992).‘“Shall I compare thee … ?”: Catullus 68b and the limits of analogy’, in T. [=A. J.] Woodman andPowell, J. (eds.), Author and Audience in Latin Literature 3344. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Feeney, D. (2007). Caesar’s Calendar: Ancient Time and the Beginnings of History. Berkeley/Los Angeles/LondonGoogle Scholar
Feeney, D. (2010). ‘Fathers and sons: the Manlii Torquati and family continuity in Catullus and Horace’, in Kraus, C. S., Marincola, J., Pelling, C. (eds.), Ancient Historiography and its Contexts: Studies in Honour of A. J. Woodman 205–23. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Feeney, D. (2012). ‘Representation and the materiality of the book in the polymetrics’, in Du Quesnay, and Woodman, (2012) 2947Google Scholar
Feeney, D. (2013). ‘Catullus 61: epithalamium and comparison’, CCJ [PCPS] 59.7097Google Scholar
Feldherr, A. (2000). ‘Non inter nota sepulchra: Catullus 101 and Roman funerary ritual’, CA 19.209–31 (= Gaisser (2007a) 399–426)Google Scholar
Feldherr, A. (2007). ‘The intellectual climate’, in Skinner (2007a) 92110Google Scholar
Ferguson, J. (1956). ‘Catullus and Horace’, AJP 77.118Google Scholar
Ferguson, J. (1960). ‘Catullus and Ovid’, AJP 81.337–57Google Scholar
Ferguson, J. (1971–2). ‘Catullus and Virgil’, PVS 11.25–47Google Scholar
Fernandelli, M. (2015). Chartae laboriosae: Autore e lettore nei carmi maggiori di Catullo (c. 64 & 65). ParmaGoogle Scholar
Fernandes Pereira, B. (1991). As Orações de Obediência de Aquiles Estaço. CoimbraGoogle Scholar
Ferri, R. (2011). ‘The language of Latin epic and lyric poetry’, in Clackson, J. (ed.), A Companion to the Latin Language 344–66. Malden, Mass./OxfordGoogle Scholar
Ferri, R. and Zago, A. (eds.) (2016). The Latin of the Grammarians: Reflections about Language in the Roman World. TurnhoutGoogle Scholar
Fiesoli, G. (2000). La genesi del lachmannismo. TavarnuzzeGoogle Scholar
Fiesoli, G. (2006). ‘Giovannantonio Volpi lettore di Catullo: i modelli, il metodo, la fortuna’, Seicento e Settecento 1.144Google Scholar
Fitzgerald, W. (1988). ‘Power and impotence in Horace’s Epodes’, Ramus 17.176–91 (= Lowrie, M. (ed.) (2009), Horace: Odes and Epodes 141–59. Oxford)Google Scholar
Fitzgerald, W. (1995). Catullan Provocations: Lyric Poetry and the Drama of Position. Berkeley/Los Angeles/LondonGoogle Scholar
Fitzgerald, W. (2007). Martial: The World of the Epigram. ChicagoGoogle Scholar
Flemming, R. (2010). ‘Sexuality’, in Barchiesi and Scheidel (2010) 797814Google Scholar
Fletcher, G. B. A. (1968). ‘Lucretiana’, Latomus 27.884–93Google Scholar
Fletcher, H. G., III. (1988). New Aldine Studies: Documentary Essays on the Life and Work of Aldus Manutius. San FranciscoGoogle Scholar
Flores, E. (2000). Quinto Ennio Annali (libri I–VIII): Introduzione, testo critico con apparato, traduzione. Vol. 1. NaplesGoogle Scholar
Flores, E. et al. (2002). Quinto Ennio Annali (libri I–VIII): Commentari (Book 7: Tomasco, D.). Vol. 2. NaplesGoogle Scholar
Floridi, L. (2007). Stratone di Sardi. Epigrammi. AlessandriaGoogle Scholar
Floridi, L. (2014). Lucillio. Epigrammi. Berlin/BostonGoogle Scholar
Flynn, L. (2011). Profit and Loss. London.Google Scholar
Flynn, L. (2017). The Radio. London.Google Scholar
Fo, A. (2002). ‘Ancora sulla presenza dei classici nella poesia italiana contemporanea’, Semicerchio: rivista di poesia comparata 26–27.2452Google Scholar
Fo, A. (ed.) (2018). Gaio Valerio Catullo: Le poesie. Turin.Google Scholar
Foley, H. P. (1978). ‘“Reverse similes” and sex roles in the Odyssey’, Arethusa 11.726Google Scholar
Fontaine, M. (2010). Funny Words in Plautine Comedy. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Ford, P. (1978). ‘Leonora and Neaera: a consideration of George Buchanan’s erotic poetry’, Bibliothèque d’humanisme et renaissance 40.513–24. GenevaGoogle Scholar
Ford, P. (1980). ‘George Buchanan’s court poetry and the Pléiade’, French Studies 34.137–52Google Scholar
Ford, P. (1982). George Buchanan: Prince of Poets. AberdeenGoogle Scholar
Ford, P. (1997). ‘Jean Salmon Macrin’s Epithalamiorum liber and the joys of conjugal love’, in Ford, P. and De Smet, I. (eds.), Eros et Priapus: érotisme et obscénité dans la littérature néo-latine 6584. GenevaGoogle Scholar
Ford, P. (2011). ‘Obscenity and the Lex Catulliana: uses and abuses of Catullus 16 in French Renaissance poetry’, in Roberts, H., Peureux, G. and Wajeman, L. (eds.), Obscénités Renaissantes 4860. GenevaGoogle Scholar
Ford, P. (2013). The Judgment of Palaemon. LeidenGoogle Scholar
Ford, P., Bloemendal, J. and Fantazzi, C. (eds.) (2014). Brill’s Encyclopedia of the Neo-Latin World. LeidenGoogle Scholar
Fordyce, C. J. (1961). Catullus. A Commentary. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Fordyce, C. J. (1973). Catullus: A Commentary. (2nd edn.) OxfordGoogle Scholar
Forster, L. (1969). The Icy Fire: Five Studies in European Petrarchism. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Forsyth, P. Y. (1991). ‘The thematic unity of Catullus 11’, CW 84.457–64Google Scholar
Foucault, M. (1990). History of Sexuality. Vol. 1. Repr. New YorkGoogle Scholar
Fowler, D. P. (1987). ‘Vergil on killing virgins’, in Whitby, M., Hardie, P. and Whitby, M. (eds.), Homo viator: Classical Essays for John Bramble 185–98. Bristol/Oak Park, Ill.Google Scholar
Fowler, D. P. (1989). ‘First thoughts on closure: problems and prospects’, MD 22.75122 (= (2000) 239–83)Google Scholar
Fowler, D. P. (2000). Roman Constructions. Readings in Postmodern Latin. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Fowler, D. P. (2002a). Lucretius on Atomic Motion. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Fowler, D. P. (2002b). ‘Masculinity under threat? The poetics and politics of inspiration in Latin poetry’, in Spentzou, E. and Fowler, D. P. (eds.), Cultivating the Muse: Struggles for Power and Inspiration in Classical Literature 141–59. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Fox, M. (2015). ‘The bisexuality of Orpheus’, in Masterson, Sorkin and Robson, (2015) 335–51Google Scholar
Fraenkel, E. (1955). ‘Vesper adest (Catullus LXII)’, JRS 45.18Google Scholar
Fraenkel, E. (1956). ‘Catulls Trostgedicht für Calvus’, WS 69.278–88Google Scholar
Fraenkel, E. (1962). Review of Fordyce (1961), Gnomon 34.253–63Google Scholar
Francese, C. (2001). Parthenius of Nicaea and Roman Poetry. Frankfurt/New YorkGoogle Scholar
Franck, J. (1881). ‘Johann von Speyer’, ADB 14.472–5Google Scholar
Fredricksmeyer, E. A. (1985). ‘Catullus to Caecilius on good poetry (c. 35)’, AJP 106.213–21Google Scholar
Frenz, B. and Stelte, I. (2012). ‘Catullus’, in Walde, C. (ed.), The Reception of Classical Literature (Brill New Pauly Supplement 5) 92102. Leiden/BostonGoogle Scholar
Friedrich, G. (1908). Catulli Veronensis liber. Leipzig/BerlinGoogle Scholar
Fuhrer, T. (1994). ‘The question of genre and metre in Catullus’ polymetrics’, QUCC 46.95108Google Scholar
Fulkerson, L. (2013). ‘Seruitium amoris: the interplay of dominance, gender and poetry’, in Thorsen (2013) 180–93Google Scholar
Gaca, K. L. (2008). ‘Reinterpreting the Homeric simile of Iliad 16.7–11: the girl and her mother in ancient Greek warfare’, AJP 129.145–71Google Scholar
Gaisser, J. H. (1977). ‘Mythological exempla in Propertius 1.2 and 1.15’, AJP 98.381–91Google Scholar
Gaisser, J. H. (1992). ‘Catullus’, in Brown, V. (ed. in chief), Catalogus Translationum et Commentariorum: Mediaeval and Renaissance Latin Translations and Commentaries vii.197292. Washington, DCGoogle Scholar
Gaisser, J. H. (1993). Catullus and his Renaissance Readers. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Gaisser, J. H. (1995). ‘Threads in the labyrinth: competing views and voices in Catullus 64’, AJP 116.579616Google Scholar
Gaisser, J. H. (ed.) (2001). Catullus in English. BasingstokeGoogle Scholar
Gaisser, J. H. (ed.) (2007a) Oxford Readings in Classical Studies: Catullus. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Gaisser, J. H. (2007b). ‘Catullus in the Renaissance’, in Skinner (2007a) 439–60Google Scholar
Gaisser, J. H. (2009). Catullus . Blackwell Introductions to the Classical World. ChichesterGoogle Scholar
Gaisser, J. H. (2015). ‘From Giovanni Pontano to Pierio Valeriano: five Renaissance commentators on Latin erotic poetry’, in Kraus, C. S., Stray, C. (eds.), Classical Commentaries: Explorations in a Scholarly Genre 275–98. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Gale, M. R. (2005). Review of Nappa (2001) and Skinner (2003), CR 55.511–14Google Scholar
Gale, M. R. (2007). ‘Lucretius and previous poetic traditions’, in Gillespie, S. and Hardie, P. (eds.), The Cambridge Companion to Lucretius 5975. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Gale, M. R. (2012). ‘Putting on the yoke of necessity: myth, intertextuality and moral agency in Catullus 68’, in Du Quesnay, and Woodman, (2012) 184211Google Scholar
Gale, M. R. (2018). ‘Between pastoral and elegy: the discourse of desire in Catullus 45’, Paideia 73.15891604Google Scholar
Gamberini, F. (1983). Stylistic Theory and Practice in the Younger Pliny. New YorkGoogle Scholar
Garcea, A. (2012). Caesar’s De Analogia. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Gardner, H. H. (2007). ‘Ariadne’s lament: the semiotic impulse of Catullus 64’, TAPA 137.147–79Google Scholar
Gärtner, T. (2007). ‘Kritisch-exegetische Überlegungen zu Catullgedichten’, Acta Ant. Hung. 47.141Google Scholar
Gebhardus, I. (1621). Cai Valeri Catulli, Albi Tibulli, Sexti Aureli Properti Quae exstant. Frankfurt am MainGoogle Scholar
Geldner, F. (1974). ‘Johann von Speyer’, NDB 10.567–8Google Scholar
Ghiselli, A. (2005). Catullo: il passer di Lesbia e altri scritti catulliani. BolognaGoogle Scholar
Giardina, G. (2011). ‘Per il testo e la interpretazione di Catullo 1.9-10’, Prometheus 37.5660Google Scholar
Gibson, B. (2006). Statius, Silvae 5. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Gibson, R. K. and Morello, R. (2012). Reading the Letters of Pliny the Younger: An Introduction. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Gibson, R. K. and Steel, C. (2010). ‘The indistinct literary careers of Cicero and Pliny the Younger’, in Hardie, P. and Moore, H. (eds.), Classical Literary Careers and their Reception 118–37. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Giesecke, A. L. (2000). Atoms, Ataraxy, and Allusion. Cross-generic Imitation of the De Rerum Natura in Early Augustan Poetry. Zurich/New YorkGoogle Scholar
Ginguené, P.-L. (1813). ‘Corradino dall’Aglio (Jean-François)’, in Michaud, L.-G. (ed.), Biographie universelle ancienne et moderne (Paris, 1811–1828, 54 vols.). Vol. 9.647–8Google Scholar
Girot, J.-E. (2012). Marc-Antoine Muret: Des Isles Fortunées au rivage romain. GenevaGoogle Scholar
Gleason, M. (1995). Making Men: Sophists and Self-presentation in Ancient Rome. PrincetonGoogle Scholar
Godwin, J. (1995). Catullus: Poems 61–68. WarminsterGoogle Scholar
Godwin, J. (2008). Reading Catullus. BristolGoogle Scholar
Goldberg, C. (1992). Carmina Priapea: Einleitung, Übersetzung, Interpretation und Kommentar. HeidelbergGoogle Scholar
Goldberg, S. M. (2005). Constructing Literature in the Roman Republic. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Goldberg, S. M. (2011). ‘Roman comedy gets back to basics’, JRS 101.206–21Google Scholar
Goldhill, S. (2001). ‘The erotic eye: visual stimulation and cultural conflict’, in Goldhill, S. (ed.), Being Greek Under Rome 154–94. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Goldsmith, N. (2013). Shaggy Crowns: Ennius’ Annales and Virgil’s Aeneid. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Goold, G. P. (1958). ‘A new text of Catullus’, Phoenix 12.93116Google Scholar
Goold, G. P. (1973). C. Valerii Carmina. Groton, Mass.Google Scholar
Goold, G. P. (1974). ‘O patrona virgo’, in Evans, J. A. S. (ed.), Polis and Imperium 253–64. TorontoGoogle Scholar
Goold, G. P. (1983/1989). Catullus. (Rev. edn. 1989). LondonGoogle Scholar
Gow, A. S. F. and Page, D. L. (1965). The Greek Anthology: Hellenistic Epigrams. 2 vols. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Gow, A. S. F (1968). The Greek Anthology: The Garland of Philip and Some Contemporary Epigrams. 2 vols. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Gowers, E. (2012). Horace: Satires Book I. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Gowers, E. (2016). ‘Girls will be boys and boys will be girls, or, what is the gender of Horace’s Epodes?’, in Bather, P. and Stocks, C. (eds.), Horace’s Epodes: Context, Intertexts, and Reception 103–30. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Grafton, A. (1983). Joseph Scaliger: A Study in the History of Classical Scholarship. Vol. 1 Textual Criticism and Exegesis. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Granarolo, J. (1971). D’Ennius à Catulle. Recherches sur les antécédents romains de la ‘poésie nouvelle’. ParisGoogle Scholar
Grant, J. N. ed. trans. (2017). Aldus Manutius: Humanism and the Latin Classics, The I Tatti Renaissance Library 78. Cambridge, Mass./LondonGoogle Scholar
Gratwick, A. S. (1991). ‘Catullus XXXII’, CQ 41.547–51Google Scholar
Gratwick, A. S. (2002). ‘Vale, Patrona Virgo: the text of Catullus 1.9’, CQ 52.305–20Google Scholar
Graver, M. R. (1998). ‘The manhandling of Maecenas; Senecan abstractions of masculinity’, AJP 119 .60732Google Scholar
Grazzini, S. (2005). ‘La subscriptio del codice G di Catullo (Paris. lat. 14137)’, MD 55.163–71Google Scholar
Green, P. (2005). The Poems of Catullus: A Bilingual Edition Translated with Commentary. Berkeley/Los Angeles/LondonGoogle Scholar
Greene, E. (1995). ‘The Catullan ego: fragmentation and the erotic self’, AJP 116. 7793Google Scholar
Greene, E. (1997). ‘Journey to the remotest meadow: a reading of Catullus 11’, Intertexts 1.147–55Google Scholar
Greene, E. (1998). The Erotics of Domination: Male Desire and the Mistress in Latin Love Poetry. Baltimore/LondonGoogle Scholar
Greene, E. (1999). ‘Refiguring the female voice: Catullus translating Sappho’, Arethusa 32.118Google Scholar
Greene, E. (2006). ‘Catullus, Caesar and Roman masculine identity’, Antichthon 40.4964Google Scholar
Greene, E. (2007).‘Catullus and Sappho’, in Skinner (2007a) 131–50Google Scholar
Griffin, J. (1985). ‘The creation of characters in the Aeneid’, in id., Latin Poets and Roman Life 183–97. LondonGoogle Scholar
Griffith, J. G. (1983). ‘Catullus, Poem 4: a neglected interpretation revived’, Phoenix 37.123–8Google Scholar
Griffith, R. D. (1985). ‘Literary allusion in Virgil, Aeneid 9.435ff.’, Vergilius 31.40–4Google Scholar
Griffith, R. D. (1995). ‘Catullus’ Coma Berenices and Aeneas’ farewell to Dido’, TAPA 125.4759Google Scholar
Grillo, L. and Krebs, C. B. (eds.) (2017). The Cambridge Companion to the Writings of Julius Caesar. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Grossi Turchetti, M. L. (2004). Manoscritti datati della Biblioteca nazionale Braidense di Milano. FlorenceGoogle Scholar
Gruen, E. S. (1967). ‘Cicero and Licinius Calvus’, HSCP 71.215–33Google Scholar
Gruen, E. S. (1974). The Last Generation of the Roman Republic. Berkeley/Los Angeles/LondonGoogle Scholar
Guarini, A. (1521). Alexandri Guarini Ferrariensis in C. V. Catullum Veronensem per Baptistam Patrem Emendatum Expositiones. VeniceGoogle Scholar
Guépin, J. P. (1991). De Kunst van Janus Secundus. AmsterdamGoogle Scholar
Gutzwiller, K. (1998). Poetic Garlands. Hellenistic Garlands in Context. Berkeley/Los Angeles/LondonGoogle Scholar
Gutzwiller, K. (ed.) (2005). The New Posidippus: A Hellenistic Poetry Book. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Gutzwiller, K. (2012). ‘Catullus and the Garland of Meleager’, in Du Quesnay and Woodman (2012) 79111Google Scholar
Hale, W. G. (1896). ‘A new MS. of Catullus’, CR 10.314Google Scholar
Hale, W. G. (1897). ‘First annual report of the managing committee of the American School of Classical Studies in Rome’, AJA 1.568Google Scholar
Hale, W. G. (1898). ‘The “codex Romanus” of Catullus’, CR 12.447–9Google Scholar
Hale, W. G. (1899). ‘Der codex Romanus des Catullus’, Hermes 34.133–44Google Scholar
Hale, W. G. (1906). ‘Catullus once more’, CR 20.160–4Google Scholar
Hale, W. G. (1908). ‘The manuscripts of Catullus’, CP 3.233–56Google Scholar
Hale, W. G. (1910). ‘Benzo of Alexandria and Catullus’, CP 5.5665Google Scholar
Hale, W. G. (1922). ‘Stampini and Pascal on the Catullus manuscripts’, TAPA 53.103–12Google Scholar
Hallett, J. P. (1973). ‘The role of women in Roman Elegy: counter-cultural feminism’, Arethusa 6.103–24Google Scholar
Hallett, J. P. (1996). ‘Nec castrare velis meos libellos: sexual and poetic lusus in Catullus, Martial and the Carmina Priapea’, in Klodt, C. (ed.), Satura lanx: Festschrift für Werner A. Krenkel zum 70. Geburtstag 321–44. HildesheimGoogle Scholar
Hallett, J. P. and Skinner, M. B. (eds.) (1997). Roman Sexualities. PrincetonGoogle Scholar
Harder, A. (2012). Callimachus: Aetia. Vols. 1–2. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Hardie, A. (1983). Statius and the Silvae: Poets, Patrons, and Epideixis in the Graeco-Roman World. LiverpoolGoogle Scholar
Hardie, P. R. (1992). ‘Augustan poets and the mutability of Rome’, in Powell, A. (ed.), Roman Poetry and Propaganda in the Age of Augustus 5982. LondonGoogle Scholar
Hardie, P. R. (1994). Virgil: Aeneid, Book IX. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Hardie, P. R. (2012). ‘Virgil’s Catullan plots’, in Du Quesnay and Woodman (2012) 212–38Google Scholar
Harless, T. C. (1764). ‘Ioannes Franciscus Conradinus de Allio (d’Aglio)’, in id., De Vitis Philologorum Nostra Aetate Clarissimorum, 4 vols. (Bremen, 1764–72). Vol. 1.107–11Google Scholar
Harrington, K. P. (1923). Catullus and his Influence. LondonGoogle Scholar
Harris, B. F. (1980). ‘Bithynia: Roman sovereignty and the survival of Hellenism’, Aufstieg und Niedergang der römischen Welt 2.7.2.857901Google Scholar
Harrison, S. J. (2000). ‘The need for a new text of Catullus’, in Reitz, C. (ed.), Vom Text zum Buch 6379. St. KatharinenGoogle Scholar
Harrison, S. J. (2001). ‘Some generic problems in Horace’s Epodes: or, on (not) being Archilochus’, in Cavarzere, Aloni and Barchiesi (2001) 165–86Google Scholar
Harrison, S. J. (2003). ‘Sparrows and apples: the unity of Catullus 2’, SCI 22.8592Google Scholar
Harrison, S. J. (2004). ‘Altering Attis: ethnicity, gender and genre in Catullus 63’, Mnemosyne 57.520–33 (= Nauta and Harder (2005) 11–24)Google Scholar
Harrison, S. J. (2009). ‘Catullus in New Zealand’, in Harrison, S. J. (ed.), Living Classics: Greece and Rome in Contemporary Poetry in English 295323. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Harrison, S. J. (2015). ‘Menander’s Thais and Catullus’ Lesbia’, CQ 65.887–8Google Scholar
Harrison, S. J. (forthcoming). ‘Roman traces: Michael Longley and Latin poetry’, in Tyler, M. (ed.), The Imaginary Oarsman: Essays on the Poetry of Michael Longley. Syracuse, NYGoogle Scholar
Haupt, M. (1837). Quaestiones Catullianae. LeipzigGoogle Scholar
Havelock, E. A. (1939). The Lyric Genius of Catullus. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Hawkins, S. (2011). ‘Catullus’ Furius’, CP 106.254–60Google Scholar
Hawkins, S. (2012). ‘On the Oscanism salaputium in Catullus 53’, TAPA 142.329–53Google Scholar
Heath, J. R. (1989). ‘Catullus 11: along for the ride’, in Deroux, C. (ed.), Studies in Latin Literature and Roman History 5.98116. BrusselsGoogle Scholar
Heine, R. (1975). ‘Zu Catull c. 35’, in Heine, R. (ed.), Catull 6284. DarmstadtGoogle Scholar
Henderson, J. (1989). ‘Satire writes “Woman”: gendersong’, PCPS 35.5080Google Scholar
Henderson, J. (1999). ‘Suck it and see: Horace, Epode 8’, in id., Writing Down Rome: Satire, Comedy, and Other Offences in Latin Poetry 93113. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Henderson, J. (2006). ‘Oxford Reds’: Classic Commentaries on Latin Classics: R. G. Austin on Cicero and Virgil, C. J. Fordyce on Catullus, R. G. and R. G. M. Nisbet on Cicero. LondonGoogle Scholar
Herrmann, L. (1957). Les deux livres de Catulle. BrusselsGoogle Scholar
Hersch, K. K. (2007). ‘Violentilla victa’, Arethusa 40.197205Google Scholar
Heusch, H. (1954). Das Archaische in der Sprache Catulls. BonnGoogle Scholar
Heyse, T. (1855). Catull’s Buch der Lieder in deutscher Nachbildung. BerlinGoogle Scholar
Heyworth, S. J. (1995). ‘Dividing poems’, in Pecere, O. and Reeve, M. D. (eds.), Formative Stages of Classical Traditions: Latin Texts from Antiquity to the Renaissance 117–48. SpoletoGoogle Scholar
Heyworth, S. J. (2001). ‘Catullian iambics, Catullian iambi’, in Carvarzere, Aloni and Barchiesi, (2001) 117–40Google Scholar
Heyworth, S. J. (2007). Sexti Properti Elegos. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Heyworth, S. J. (2008). Review of Trappes-Lomax (2007), BMCR 2008.09.32Google Scholar
Heyworth, S. J. (2015). ‘Catullus 62, 67 and other Catullan dialogues’, in Kiss, (2015a) 129–51Google Scholar
Hinds, S. (1998). Allusion and Intertext. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Hinds, S. (2007). ‘Ovid’s Martial, Martial’s Ovid’, JRS 97.113–54Google Scholar
Hofmann, J. B. and Ricottilli, L. (2003). La lingua d’uso latina. Augmented translation of J. B. Hofmann, Lateinische Umgangssprache (3rd edn., Heidelberg 1951) by L. Ricottilli. 3rd edn. (1st edn. 1980). BolognaGoogle Scholar
Hofmann, J. B. and Santyr, A. (1965). Lateinische Syntax und Stilistik (Handbuch der Altertumswissennschaft 2.2.2). MunichGoogle Scholar
Hollis, A. S. (1992). ‘The nuptial rite in Catullus 66 and Callimachus’ poetry for Berenice’, ZPE 91.21–8Google Scholar
Hollis, A. S. (2007). Fragments of Roman Poetry c. 60 BC–AD 20. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Holmes, B. (2012). Gender: Antiquity and its Legacy. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Holoka, J. P. (1985). Gaius Valerius Catullus: A Select Bibliography. New York/LondonGoogle Scholar
Holzberg, N. (2000). ‘Lesbia, the poet, and the two faces of Sappho: “womanufacture” in Catullus’, PCPS 46.2844Google Scholar
Holzberg, N. (2002a). Catull. Der Dichter und sein erotisches Werk. MunichGoogle Scholar
Holzberg, N. (2002b). Martial und das antike Epigramm. DarmstadtGoogle Scholar
Holzberg, N. (2006). ‘Staging the reader response: Ovid and his “contemporary audience” in Ars and Remedia’, in Gibson, R., Green, S. and Sharrock, A. (eds.), The Art of Love. Bimillenial Essays on Ovid’s Ars Amatoria and Remedia Amoris 4053. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Holzberg, N. (2019). ‘Catullus as epigrammatist’, in Henriksén, C. (ed.), A Companion to Ancient Epigram 441–57. HobokenGoogle Scholar
Hopkins, D. and Martindale, C. (eds.) (2012). The Oxford History of Classical Reception in English Literature. Vol. 3: 1660–1790. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Horsfall, N. (2003). Virgil, Aeneid 11: A Commentary. Leiden/BostonGoogle Scholar
Howell, P. (1980). A Commentary on Book 1 of the Epigrams of Martial. LondonGoogle Scholar
Hubbard, T. K. (1983). ‘The Catullan libellus’, Philologus 127.218–37Google Scholar
Hubbard, T. K. (1998). The Pipes of Pan: Intertextuality and Literary Filiation in the Pastoral Tradition from Theocritus to Milton. Ann ArborGoogle Scholar
Hubbard, T. K. (2000). ‘Horace and Catullus: the case of the suppressed precursor in Odes 1.22 and 1.32’, CW 94.2537Google Scholar
Hubbard, T. K. (2005). ‘The Catullan libelli revisited’, Philologus 149.253–77Google Scholar
Hubbard, T. K. (ed.) (2014). A Companion to Greek and Roman Sexualities. ChichesterGoogle Scholar
Hunter, R. (1996). Theocritus and the Archaeology of Greek Poetry. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Hunter, R. (2006). The Shadow of Callimachus. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Hutchinson, B. (2016). Lateness and Modern European Literature. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Hutchinson, G. O. (1998). Cicero’s Correspondence: A Literary Study. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Hutchinson, G. O. (2001). ‘The date of De Rerum Natura’, CQ 51.150–62Google Scholar
Hutchinson, G. O. (2003). ‘The Catullan corpus, Greek epigrams, and the poetry of objects’, CQ 53.206–21 (= (2008) 109–30)Google Scholar
Hutchinson, G. O. (2008). Talking Books: Readings in Hellenistic and Roman Books of Poetry. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Hutchinson, G. O. (2012). ‘Booking lovers: desire and design in Catullus’, in Du Quesnay, and Woodman, (2012) 4878Google Scholar
Infelise, M. (2007). ‘Manuzio, Aldo, il Vecchio’, DBI 69.236–45Google Scholar
Ingleheart, J. (2003). ‘Catullus 2 and 3: a programmatic pair of Sapphic epigrams’, Mnemosyne 56.551–65Google Scholar
Ingleheart, J. (2014). ‘Play on the proper names of individuals in the Catullan corpus: wordplay, the iambic tradition, and the late Republican culture of public abuse’, JRS 104.5172Google Scholar
Jackson, A. (2003). catullus for children. AucklandGoogle Scholar
Jackson, A. (2009). ‘Catullus in the playground’, in Harrison, S. J. (ed.), Living Classics: Greece and Rome in Contemporary Poetry in English 8296. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Jackson, A. (2014). I, Clodia and Other Portraits. AucklandGoogle Scholar
Jackson, G. and Tomasco, D. (eds.) (2009). Quinto Ennio, Annali (Frammenti di collocazione incerta): Commentari. Con un’avvertenza di E. Flores. NaplesGoogle Scholar
Jakobson, R. (1959). ‘On linguistic aspects of translation’, in Brower, R. A. (ed.), On Translation 232–9. Cambridge, Mass.Google Scholar
James, S. L. (1998). ‘Introduction: constructions of gender and genre in Roman comedy and elegy’, Helios 25.316Google Scholar
James, S. L. (2003). Learned Girls and Male Persuasion: Gender and Reading in Roman Love Elegy. Berkeley/Los Angeles/LondonGoogle Scholar
James, S. L. (2012). ‘Elegy and New Comedy’, in Gold, B. K. (ed.), A Companion to Roman Love Elegy 253–68. Malden, Mass./OxfordGoogle Scholar
Janan, M. (1994). ‘When the Lamp is Shattered’: Desire and Narrative in Catullus. Carbondale/ EdwardsvilleGoogle Scholar
Janko, R. (2000). Philodemus ‘On Poems’ Book 1. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Jenkyns, R. (1998). Virgil’s Experience. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Jocelyn, H. D. (1967). The Tragedies of Ennius. Cambridge Classical Texts and Commentaries 10. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Jocelyn, H. D. (1979). ‘Catullus 58 and Ausonius, Ep. 71’, LCM 4.8791Google Scholar
Jocelyn, H. D. (1995). ‘Two features of the style of Catullus’ Phalaecian epigrams’, Sileno 21.6382Google Scholar
Jocelyn, H. D. (1996a). ‘The language of Catullus 17 and that of its immediate neighbours in the transmitted collection’, Sileno 22.137–63Google Scholar
Jocelyn, H. D. (1996b). ‘C. Licinius Macer Calvus fr. 18 Büchner’, Eikasmos 7.243–54Google Scholar
Jocelyn, H. D. (1999). ‘The arrangement and the language of Catullus’ so-called polymetra with special reference to the sequence 10–11–12’, in Adams, and Mayer, (1999) 335–75Google Scholar
Johannsen, N. (2006). Dichter über ihre Gedichte: die Prosavorreden in den Epigrammaton Libri Martialis und in den Silvae des Statius. GöttingenGoogle Scholar
Johnson, T. S. (2012). Horace’s Iambic Criticism: Casting Blame (Iambikē Poiēsis). Mnemosyne Suppl. 334. Leiden/BostonGoogle Scholar
Johnson, W. A. (2004). Bookrolls and Scribes in Oxyrhyncus. TorontoGoogle Scholar
Johnson, W. A. (2009) ‘The ancient book’, in Bagnall, R. S. (ed.), The Oxford Handbook of Papyrology 256–81. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Jones, F. (2008). ‘Catullus’ libellus, the mixing of genres, and the evidence of Carm. 1, 50, and 46’, Mnem. 61 .13037Google Scholar
Jorink, E., and Van Miert, D. (eds.) (2012). Isaac Vossius (1618–1689). Between Science and Scholarship. LeidenGoogle Scholar
Kahane, A. (2017). ‘Virgil’s epitaph, Donatus’ Life, biography and the structure of time’, PVS 29.161–85Google Scholar
Kaster, R. (2005). Emotion, Restraint, and Community in Ancient Rome. Oxford/New YorkGoogle Scholar
Kay, N.M. (1985). Martial Book XI. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Kay, N.M. (2010). ‘Colloquial Latin in Martial’s epigrams’, in Dickey, and Chahoud, (2010) 318–30Google Scholar
Keith, A. (2008). Propertius: Poet of Love and Leisure. LondonGoogle Scholar
Keith, A. (2016). ‘Naming the elegiac mistress: elegiac onomastics in Roman inscriptions’, in Keith, A. and Edmonson, J. (eds.), Roman Literary Cultures: Domestic Politics, Revolutionary Poetics, Civic Spectacle 5988. Phoenix Suppl. 55. Toronto/Buffalo/LondonGoogle Scholar
Kennedy, D. F. (1993). The Arts of Love: Five Studies in the Discourse of Roman Love Elegy. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Kennedy, D. F. (1995). ‘Roman literature’, G&R 42.83–8Google Scholar
Kennedy, D. F. (1999). ‘“Cf.”: analogies, relationships and Catullus 68’, in Braund, S. and Mayer, R. (eds.), amor : roma. Love and Latin Literature 3043. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Kenney, E. J. (1970). ‘Doctus Lucretius’, Mnem. 23.366–92Google Scholar
Kenney, E. J. (1973). Review of Quinn (1970) and Bardon (1970), CR 23.165–7Google Scholar
Kenney, E. J. (1974). The Classical Text: Aspects of Editing in the Age of the Printed Book. Berkeley/Los Angeles/LondonGoogle Scholar
Kenney, E. J. (1977). Lucretius. Greece & Rome New Surveys in the Classics 11. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Kenney, E. J. (2002). ‘Ovid’s language and style’, in Weiden Boyd, B. (ed.), Brill’s Companion to Ovid 2789. Leiden/Boston/CologneGoogle Scholar
Kidwell, C. (1991). Pontano: Poet and Prime Minister. LondonGoogle Scholar
King, J. K. (1988). ‘Catullus’ Callimachean Carmina: cc. 65-116’, CW 81 .38392Google Scholar
Kiss, D. (2009). ‘Catullus 68. Edited with an introduction and detailed commentary.’ Diss. Scuola Normale Superiore di Pisa.Google Scholar
Kiss, D. (2011). Review of D. S. McKie, Essays in the Interpretation of Roman Poetry (Cambridge 2009), Exemplaria Classica 15.257–71Google Scholar
Kiss, D. (2012a). ‘A correction and more on Girolamo Avanzi’s last edition of Catullus (ca. 1535)’, Exemplaria Classica 16.7580Google Scholar
Kiss, D. (2012b). ‘A Renaissance manuscript of Catullus, Tibullus and Propertius. Budapest, Országos Széchényi Könyvtár, Codex Latinus Medii Aevi 137 and Cologny, Bibliotheca Bodmeriana, MS. Bodmer 141’, Acta Antiqua Academiae Scientiarum Hungaricae 52.249–71Google Scholar
Kiss, D. (2012c). ‘Towards a catalogue of the surviving manuscripts of Catullus’, Paideia 67.607–19Google Scholar
Kiss, D. (2013a). Catullus Online: An Online Repertory of Conjectures for Catullus. www.catullusonline.orgGoogle Scholar
Kiss, D. (2013b). ‘Two humanistic conjectures in Catullus: 55.17 papillae and 61.140 soli’, Exemplaria Classica 17.6370Google Scholar
Kiss, D. (2014). Review of Bonvicini (2012), Gnomon 86.746–8Google Scholar
Kiss, D. (ed.) (2015a). What Catullus Wrote: Problems in Textual Criticism, Editing and the Manuscript Tradition. SwanseaGoogle Scholar
Kiss, D. (2015b). ‘Introduction: a sketch of the textual tradition’, in Kiss, (2015a) xiiixxxGoogle Scholar
Kiss, D. (2015c). ‘The lost Codex Veronensis and its descendants: three problems in Catullus’s manuscript tradition’, in Kiss, (2015a) 127Google Scholar
Kiss, D. (2015d). ‘Isaac Vossius, Catullus and the Codex Thuaneus’, CQ 65.344–54Google Scholar
Kiss, D. (2016). ‘The protohistory of the text of Catullus’ in Velaza, J. (ed.), From the Protohistory to the History of the Text (Studien zur klassischen Philologie 173) 125–40. Frankfurt am MainGoogle Scholar
Kiss, D. (2018). ‘The transmission of the poems of Catullus: the role of the incunabula’, Paideia 73.2151–74Google Scholar
Kiss, D. (2020). ‘Catullus Online: a digital critical edition of the poems of Catullus with a repertory of conjectures’, in Chronopoulos, S., Maier, F., Novokhatko, A. (eds.), Digitale Altertumswissenschaften: Thesen und Debatten zu Methoden und Anwendungen, 99114. Heidelberg.Google Scholar
Kiss, D. (forthcoming). ‘Giovanni Francesco Corradino dall’Aglio and a manuscript of Catullus that he did not invent’Google Scholar
Kleiner, D. E. E. and Matheson, S. B. (eds.) (1996). I, Claudia: Women in Ancient Rome. AustinGoogle Scholar
Kleiner, D. E. E. and Matheson, S. B. (eds.) (2000). I, Claudia II: Women in Roman Art and Society. AustinGoogle Scholar
Klooster, J. (2011). Poetry as Window and Mirror: Positioning the Poet in Hellenistic Poetry. LeidenGoogle Scholar
Kloss, G. (1998). ‘Catulls Brückengedicht (c. 17)’, Hermes 126.5879Google Scholar
Klotz, A. (1931). ‘Zu Katull’, RhM 80 .34256Google Scholar
Knight, S. and Tilg, S. (eds.) (2015). Oxford Handbook to Neo-Latin. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Knobles, C. (1971). ‘A significant elision (Cat. 63. 37)’, CP 66.35–6Google Scholar
Knox, P. E. (2007). ‘Catullus and Callimachus’, in Skinner (2007a) 151–71Google Scholar
Knox, P. E. (2011). ‘Cicero as a Hellenistic poet’, CQ 61.192204Google Scholar
Konrad, C. F. (1982). ‘Quaestiones Tappulae’, ZPE 48.219–34Google Scholar
Konstan, D. (1977). Catullus’ Indictment of Rome: The Meaning of Catullus 64. AmsterdamGoogle Scholar
Konstan, D. (2000). ‘Self, sex, and empire in Catullus: the construction of a decentered identity’, in Bécares Botas, V., et al. (eds.), Intertextualidad en las literaturas griega y latina 213231. MadridGoogle Scholar
Konstan, D. (2007). ‘The contemporary political context’, in Skinner, (2007a) 7291Google Scholar
Korenjak, M. (2012). ‘Short mythological epic in Neo-Latin literature’, in Baumbach, M. and Bär, S. (eds.), Brill’s Companion to Greek and Latin Epyllion and its Reception 519–36. Leiden/BostonGoogle Scholar
Koster, S. (1981). ‘Catull beim Wort genommen (Zu c. 8; 83; 93)’, WJA 7.125–34Google Scholar
Krebs, C. (2008). ‘Magni viri: Caesar, Alexander, and Pompey in Cat. 11’, Philologus 152.223–29Google Scholar
Krebs, C. (2013). ‘Caesar, Lucretius and the dates of De Rerum Natura and the Commentarii’, CQ 63.772–79Google Scholar
Kroll, W. (1923). Catull. (1st edn.) LeipzigGoogle Scholar
Kroll, W. (1924). Studien zum Verständnis der römischen Literatur. Reprinted 1964. StuttgartGoogle Scholar
Kroll, W. (1959). Catull. (5th edn.) StuttgartGoogle Scholar
Kronenberg, L. (2014). ‘Me, myself, and I: multiple (literary) personalities in Catullus 35’, CW 107.367–81Google Scholar
Krostenko, B. (2001a). Cicero, Catullus, and the Language of Social Performance. ChicagoGoogle Scholar
Krostenko, B. (2001b). ‘Arbitria urbanitatis: language, style, and characterization in Catullus cc. 39 and 37’, CA 20.239–72Google Scholar
Krostenko, B. (2007). ‘Catullus and elite republican social discourse’, in Skinner, (2007a) 212–32Google Scholar
Kruschwitz, P. (2012). ‘How to avoid profanity in Latin: an exploratory study’, MD 68.938Google Scholar
Kubiak, D. (1981). ‘The Orion episode of Cicero’s Aratea’, CJ 77.1222Google Scholar
Kühnel, J. (1982). ‘Lachmann, Karl’, NDB 13.371–4Google Scholar
Kühner, R. and Stegmann, C. (1976). Ausführliche Grammatik der lateinischen Sprache. 3rd edn. 2 vols. HanoverGoogle Scholar
Lachmann, K. (1829). Q. Valerii Catulli Veronensis liber. LeipzigGoogle Scholar
Lachmann, K. (1850). In T. Lucretii De rerum natura libros commentarius. BerlinGoogle Scholar
Lafaye, G. (1922). Catulle: Poésies. ParisGoogle Scholar
Laguna, G. (1992). Estacio, Silvas III. SevilleGoogle Scholar
Laird, A. (1993). ‘Sounding out ecphrasis: art and text in Catullus 64’, JRS 83.1830Google Scholar
Laird, A. (1997). ‘Approaching characterisation in Virgil’, in Martindale, C. (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to Virgil 282–93. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Laird, A. (2009). ‘Virgil: reception and the myth of biography’, CentoPagine 3.19Google Scholar
Lamb, W. (1821). Poems of Caius Valerius Catullus Translated. LondonGoogle Scholar
Landels, J. G. (1999). Music in Ancient Greece and Rome. London/New YorkGoogle Scholar
Landolfi, L. (1996). ‘Multas per gentes et multa per aequora uectus (Cat. c. 101), Catullo fra Omero ed Apollonio Rodio’, Emerita 64.255–60Google Scholar
Landor, W. S. (1795). The Poems of Walter Savage Landor. LondonGoogle Scholar
Langlands, R. (2006). Sexual Morality in Ancient Rome. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Langslow, D. (2000). Medical Latin in the Roman Empire. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Leary, T. J. (1996). Martial Book XIV: The Apophoreta. LondonGoogle Scholar
Lee, M. O. (1975). ‘Catullus in the Odes of Horace’, Ramus 4.3348Google Scholar
Leigh, M. (2015). ‘Illa domus, illa mihi sedes: on the interpretation of Catullus 68’, in Hunter, R. and Oakley, S. P. (eds.), Latin Literature and its Transmission: Papers in Honour of Michael Reeve 194224. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Leroux, V. (ed.) (2009). Marc-Antoine Muret: Juvenilia. GenevaGoogle Scholar
Levy, H. L. (1968). ‘Catullus and Cangrande della Scala’, TAPA 99.249–53Google Scholar
Lightfoot, J. L. (1999). Parthenius of Nicaea. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Lightfoot, J. L. (2009). Hellenistic Collection: Philitas, Alexander of Aetolia, Hermesianax, Euphorion, Parthenius. Cambridge, Mass./LondonGoogle Scholar
Longley, M. (2008). Wavelengths. LondonGoogle Scholar
Loomis, J. W. (1972). Studies in Catullan Verse: An Analysis of Word Types and Patterns in the Polymetra. LeidenGoogle Scholar
Lorenz, S. (2007). ‘Catullus and Martial’, in Skinner, (2007a) 418–37Google Scholar
Louis, N. (2010). Commentaire historique et traduction du Diuus Augustus de Suétone. BrusselsGoogle Scholar
Lowrie, M. (2006). ‘Hic and absence in Catullus 68’, CP 101.115–32Google Scholar
Lowry, M. (1979). The World of Aldus Manutius: Business and Scholarship in Renaissance Venice. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Luck, G. (1969). The Latin Love Elegy. 2nd edn. LondonGoogle Scholar
Ludwig, W. (1990). ‘The origin and development of the Catullan style in Neo-Latin poetry’, in Godman, P. and Murray, O. (eds.), Latin Poetry and the Classical Tradition 183–97. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Lyles, K. (2004). Vietnam ANZACs: Australian & New Zealand Troops in Vietnam 1962–72. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Lyne, R. O. A. M. (1978a). ‘The Neoteric poets’, CQ 28.167–87 (= (2007) 60–84)Google Scholar
Lyne, R. O. A. M. (1978b). Ciris: A poem attributed to Vergil. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Lyne, R. O. A. M. (1979). ‘Seruitium amoris’, CQ 29. 117–30 (= (2007) 85–100)Google Scholar
Lyne, R. O. A. M. (1980). The Latin Love Poets from Catullus to Horace. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Lyne, R. O. A. M. (1994). ‘Vergil’s Aeneid: subversion by intertextuality: Catullus 66.39–40 and other examples’, G&R 41.187204 (= (2007) 167–83)Google Scholar
Lyne, R. O. A. M. (1998). ‘Love and death: Laodamia and Protesilaus in Catullus, Propertius, and others’, CQ 48.200–12 (= (2007) 211–26)Google Scholar
Lyne, R. O. A. M. (2002). ‘Notes on Catullus’, CQ 52.600–8 (= (2007) 283–92)Google Scholar
Lyne, R. O. A. M. (2007). Collected Papers on Latin Poetry. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Maas, P. (1958). Textual Criticism, trans. B. Flower. OxfordGoogle Scholar
McCarren, V. P. (1977). A Critical Concordance to Catullus. LeidenGoogle Scholar
McClure, L. (2002). Sexuality and Gender in the Classical World. OxfordGoogle Scholar
McDermott, W. C. (1983). ‘Mamurra eques Formianus’, RhM 126.292307Google Scholar
McFarlane, I. D. (1981). Buchanan. LondonGoogle Scholar
McKie, D. S. (1976). Lesbia damnose bibens interpretatur’, Latomus 35.143Google Scholar
McKie, D. S. (1977). ‘The Manuscripts of Catullus: recension in a closed tradition’. Diss. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
McKie, D. S. (1986). ‘Salutati, Poggio, and Codex M of Catullus’, in Diggle, J., Hall, J. B., and Jocelyn, H. D. (eds.), Studies in Latin Literature and its Tradition in Honour of C. O. Brink (PCPS Suppl. 15) 6686. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
McKie, D. S. (2009). Essays in the Interpretation of Roman Poetry. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Macleod, C. W. (1973). ‘Catullus 116’, CQ 23.304–9 (= (1983) 181–6; = Gaisser (2007a) 35–45)Google Scholar
Macleod, C. W. (1974). ‘A use of myth in ancient poetry’, CQ 24.8293 (= (1983) 159–70)Google Scholar
Macleod, C. W. (1983). Collected Essays. OxfordGoogle Scholar
McPeek, J. A. S. (1939). Catullus in Strange and Distant Britain. Cambridge, Mass.Google Scholar
Maggiali, G. (2008). Il carme 68 di Catullo: edizione critica e commento. CesenaGoogle Scholar
Maltby, R. (1991). A Lexicon of Ancient Latin Etymologies. LeedsGoogle Scholar
Maltby, R. (2016). ‘Analytic and synthetic forms of the comparative and superlative from early to late Latin’, in Adams, and Vincent, (2016) 340–66Google Scholar
Manuzio, A. (2017). Humanism and the Latin Classics, ed. and trans. by J. N. Grant. Cambridge, Mass.Google Scholar
Manwell, E. (2007). ‘Gender and masculinity’, in Skinner, (2007a) 111–28Google Scholar
Marchesi, I. (2008). The Art of Pliny’s Letters: A Poetics of Allusion in the Private Correspondence. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Marchesi, I. (2015). ‘Uncluttered spaces, unlittered texts: Pliny’s villas as editorial places’, in Marchesi, I. (ed.), Pliny the Bookmaker 223–51. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Marinone, N. (1997). Berenice da Callimaco a Catullo. BolognaGoogle Scholar
Markley, A. A. (2004). Stateliest Measures: Tennyson and the Literature of Greece and Rome. TorontoGoogle Scholar
Martin, T. (1861). The Poems of Catullus, Translated into English Verse. LondonGoogle Scholar
Martindale, C. (1992). ‘Horace, Ovid and others’, in Jenkyns, R. (ed.), The Legacy of Rome: A New Appraisal 177214. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Maselli, G. (1994). Affari di Catullo: Rapporti di proprietà nell’immaginario dei Carmi. BariGoogle Scholar
Massaro, M. (2010). ‘Il phaselus di Catullo e la nave Argo di Apollonio’, MD 64.942Google Scholar
Mastandrea, P., Perrelli, R., Biondi, G. G., Zurli, R. and Viparelli, V. (eds.) (2007). Musisque Deoque: A Digital Archive of Latin Poetry. www.mqdq.itGoogle Scholar
Masterson, M., Sorkin, N. and Robson, J. (eds.) (2015). Sex in Antiquity: Exploring Gender and Sexuality in the Ancient World. London/New YorkGoogle Scholar
May, J. M. (ed.) (2002). Brill’s Companion to Cicero: Oratory and Rhetoric. LeidenGoogle Scholar
Mendell, C. W. (1935). ‘Catullan echoes in the Odes of Horace’, CP 30.289301Google Scholar
Merli, E. (2017). ‘The festinatio in Flavian poetry: a clarification’, in Bessone, and Fucecchi, (2017) 139–55Google Scholar
Methven, J. (2009). Precious Asses. BridgendGoogle Scholar
Meyer, E. A. (2001). ‘Wooden wit: tabellae in Latin poetry’, in Tylawsky, E. and Weiss, C. (eds.), Essays in Honor of Gordon Williams: Twenty-five years at Yale 201–12. New HavenGoogle Scholar
Meyers, T. L. (ed.) (2004). Uncollected Letters of Algernon Charles Swinburne. Vol. 3. 1890–1909. LondonGoogle Scholar
Miller, P. A. (1994). Lyric Texts and Lyric Consciousness: The Birth of a Genre from Archaic Greece to Augustan Rome. London/New YorkGoogle Scholar
Miller, P. A. (1998). ‘Catullan consciousness, the “care of the self” and the force of the negative in history’, in Larmour, D. H. J., Miller, P. A. and Platter, C. (eds.), Rethinking Sexuality: Foucault and Classical Antiquity 171203. PrincetonGoogle Scholar
Miller, P. A. (2002). Latin Erotic Elegy: An Anthology and Reader. London/New YorkGoogle Scholar
Miller, P. A. (2004). Subjecting Verses: Latin Love Elegy and the Emergence of the Real. Princeton/OxfordGoogle Scholar
Milnor, K. (2014). Graffiti and the Literary Landscape in Roman Pompeii. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Monella, P. (2005). Procne e Filomela: dal mito al simbolo letterario. BolognaGoogle Scholar
Morelli, A. M. (2005). ‘Il Liber Catulli di Terenziano Mauro: l’ Attis e le convenzioni del libro latino’, Segno e Testo 3.7191Google Scholar
Morelli, A. M. (ed.) (2008). Epigramma longum. Da Marziale alla tarda antichità / From Martial to late antiquity. Atti del convegno internazionale, Cassino, 29–31 maggio 2006. CassinoGoogle Scholar
Morelli, A. M. (ed.) (2012). Lepos e mores. Una giornata su Catullo. Atti del convegno internazionale, Cassino, 27 maggio 2010. CassinoGoogle Scholar
Morelli, A. M. (2014). ‘La legge di Postumia. Una lettura di Catull. 27’, Rationes Rerum: Rivista di filologia e storia 4.103–26Google Scholar
Morelli, A. M. (2017). ‘Catullus 23 and Martial. An epigrammatic model and its ‘refraction’ throughout Martial’s libri’, in Bessone, and Fucecchi, (2017) 116–35Google Scholar
Morelli, G. M. (2011–12). Caesii Bassi de metris, Atilii Fortunatiani de metris Horatianis. Collectanea Grammatica Latina. 2 vols. HildesheimGoogle Scholar
Morgan, J. D. (2007 [Unpublished]). ‘Who was “Mentula”?’, American Philological Association, 138th Annual Meeting (San Diego, Calif., January 4–7, 2007), Abstracts, p. 221Google Scholar
Morgan, J. D. (2008). ‘The addressee of Catullus’ Poem 68a’, The Classical Outlook 85.141–50Google Scholar
Morgan, Ll. (2010). Musa Pedestris. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Morgan, Ll. and Taylor, B. (2017). ‘Memmius the Epicurean’, CQ 67.528–41Google Scholar
Morgan, M. G. (1977). ‘Nescio quid febriculosi scorti: a note on Catullus 6’, CQ 27.338–41Google Scholar
Morisi, L. (1999). Gaio Valerio Catullo, Attis (carmen LXIII). BolognaGoogle Scholar
Morrison, M. (1955). ‘Catullus in the Neo-Latin poetry of France before 1550’, Bibliothèque d’humanisme et renaissance 17.36594Google Scholar
Morrison, M. (1963). ‘Catullus and the poetry of the Renaissance in France’, Bibliothèque d’humanisme et renaissance 25.2556Google Scholar
Moul, V. (ed.) (2017). A Guide to Neo-Latin Literature. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Munday, J. (2008). Introducing Translation Studies. Theories and Applications. 2nd edn. London/New YorkGoogle Scholar
Muret, M. A. (1554). Catullus et in eum commentarius M. Antonii Mureti. VeniceGoogle Scholar
Murgatroyd, P. (1975). ‘Militia amoris and the Roman elegists’, Latomus 34.5979Google Scholar
Murgatroyd, P. (1981). ‘Seruitium amoris and the Roman elegists’, Latomus 40.589606Google Scholar
Murley, C. (1943). ‘Life, logic, and language’, CJ 38.280–8Google Scholar
Murphy, T. (1998). ‘Cicero’s first readers: epistolary evidence for the dissemination of his works’, CQ 48.492505Google Scholar
Muse, K. (2009). ‘Fleecing Remus’ magnanimous playboys: wordplay in Catullus 58.5’, Hermes 137.302–13Google Scholar
Muzzioli, G. (1959). ‘Due nuovi codici autografi di Pomponio Leto’, Italia Medioevale e Umanistica 2.337–51Google Scholar
Myers, K. S. (2012). ‘Catullan contexts in Ovid’s Metamorphoses’, in Du Quesnay, and Woodman, (2012) 239254Google Scholar
Mynors, R. A. B. (1958). C. Valerii Catulli carmina. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Mynors, R. A. B. (1966). Catullus. Carmina. Codex Oxoniensis bibliothecae Bodleianae Canonicianus class. lat. 30. LeidenGoogle Scholar
Nappa, C. (1999). ‘The goat, the gout, and the girl: Catullus 69, 71, and 77’, Mnemosyne 52.266–76Google Scholar
Nappa, C. (2001). Aspects of Catullus’ Social Fiction. FrankfurtGoogle Scholar
Nappa, C. (2018). ‘Camerius: Catullus cc. 55 and 58b’, Mnemosyne 71.336–45Google Scholar
Nauta, R. R. (2002). Poetry for Patrons. Literary Communication in the Age of Domitian. Mnem. Suppl. 206. Leiden/Boston/CologneGoogle Scholar
Nauta, R. R. (2004). ‘Catullus 63 in a Roman context’, Mnemosyne 57.596–628 (= Nauta and Harder (2005) 87119)Google Scholar
Nauta, R. R. (2005). ‘Hephaestion and Catullus 63 again’, in Nauta and Harder (2005) 143–8Google Scholar
Nauta, R. R. and Harder, A. (2005). Catullus’ Poem on Attis. Leiden/BostonGoogle Scholar
Navarro Anatolín, F. (1996). Lygdamus. Corpus Tibullianum III.1–6: Lygdami Elegiarum Liber. Trans. J. J. Zoltowski. Mnem. Suppl. 154. Leiden/New York/CologneGoogle Scholar
Nelis, D. (2012). ‘Callimachus in Verona’, in Du Quesnay, and Woodman, (2012) 128Google Scholar
Nethercut, J. S. (2020). ‘How Ennian was Latin epic between the Annals and Lucretius?’, in Damon, C. and Farrell, J. (eds.), Ennius’ Annals: Poetry and History 188–210. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Neudling, C. L. (1955). A Prosopography to Catullus. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Newlands, C. (2011). Statius Silvae Book II. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Newlands, C. (2013a). ‘Architectural ecphrasis in Roman poetry’, in Papanghelis, T. D., Harrison, S. J. and Frangoulidis, S. (eds.), Generic Interfaces in Latin Literature 5780. BerlinGoogle Scholar
Newlands, C. (2013b). ‘Impersonating Hypsipyle: Statius’ Thebaid and Medieval lament’, Dictynna 10.218Google Scholar
Newman, J. K. (1990). Roman Catullus and the Modification of the Alexandrian Sensibility. HildesheimGoogle Scholar
Nicholls, M. C. (2010). ‘Parchment codices in a new text of Galen’, Greece & Rome 57.378–86Google Scholar
Nicholls, M. C. (2011). ‘Galen and libraries in the Peri Alupias’, JRS 101.123–42Google Scholar
Nielsen, I. (1993). ‘Castor, aedes, templum’, in LTUR 1.242–5Google Scholar
Nielsen, R. M. (1987). ‘Catullus and sal (Poem 10)’, AC 56.148–61Google Scholar
Nisbet, R. G. M. (1961). Cicero: In Pisonem. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Nisbet, R. G. M. (1995). Collected Papers on Latin Literature. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Nisbet, R. G. M. and Hubbard, M. (1970, 1978). A Commentary on Horace Odes: Book I and Book II. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Nisbet, R. G. M. and Rudd, N. (2004). A Commentary on Horace Odes: Book III. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Noonan, J. D. (1986). ‘Myth, humor and the sequence of thought in Catullus 95’, CJ 81.299304Google Scholar
Norden, E. (1957). P. Vergilius Maro: Aeneis Buch VI. 4th edn, repr. StuttgartGoogle Scholar
Nott, J. (1795). The Poems of Caius Valerius Catullus, in English Verse. LondonGoogle Scholar
Novati, F. (1891–1911). Epistolario di Coluccio Salutati. RomeGoogle Scholar
Oakley, S. P. (2005). A Commentary on Livy Books VI–X. Vol. 4. OxfordGoogle Scholar
O’Brien, J. (1995). Anacreon Redivivus: A Study of Anacreontic Translation in Mid-Sixteenth-Century France. Ann ArborGoogle Scholar
O’Bryhim, S. (2007). ‘Catullus 23 as Roman comedy’, TAPA 137.133–45Google Scholar
O’Bryhim, S. (2018). ‘Egnatius as dux gregis: Catullus 37 and 39’, CP 113.352–60Google Scholar
O’Hara, J. J. (1990). Death and the Optimistic Prophecy in Vergil’s Aeneid. PrincetonGoogle Scholar
O’Hara, J. J. (1994). ‘“They might be giants”: inconsistency and indeterminacy in Vergil’s war in Italy’, Colby Quarterly 30.206–26Google Scholar
O’Hara, J. J. (1996). ‘Sostratus Suppl. Hell. 733: a lost, possibly Catullan-era elegy on the six sex changes of Tiresias’, TAPA 126.173210Google Scholar
O’Hara, J. J. (2007). Inconsistency in Roman Epic: Studies in Catullus, Lucretius, Vergil, Ovid and Lucan. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Oksala, P. (1964). Vom Gebrauch geographischer Namen bei den römischen Lyrikern der Blütezeit: Catull, Vergil, Horaz. HelsinkiGoogle Scholar
Oldfather, W. A. (1943). ‘The most extreme case of elision in the Latin language?’, CJ 38.478–9Google Scholar
Oliensis, E. (1991). ‘Canidia, canicula, and the decorum of Horace’s Epodes’, Arethusa 24.107–38Google Scholar
Oliensis, E. (1998). Horace and the Rhetoric of Authority. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Oliensis, E. (2009). Freud’s Rome. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Opelt, I. (1965). Die lateinischen Schimpfwörter und verwandte sprachliche Erscheinungen. Eine Typologie. HeidelbergGoogle Scholar
Ormand, K. (2009). Controlling Desires: Sexuality in Ancient Greece and Rome. Westport, Conn.Google Scholar
Osgood, J. (2008). ‘Caesar and Nicomedes’, CQ 58.687–91Google Scholar
Otto, A. (1890). Die Sprichwörter der Römer. LeipzigGoogle Scholar
Owen, S. G. (1893). Catullus with the Pervigilium Veneris. LondonGoogle Scholar
Owen Lee, M. (1962). ‘Illustrative elisions in Catullus’, TAPA 93.144–53Google Scholar
Pächt, O. and Alexander, J. J. G. (1966–73). Illuminated Manuscripts in the Bodleian Library Oxford. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Pagán, V. E. (2010). ‘The power of the epistolary preface from Statius to Pliny’, CQ 60.194201Google Scholar
Page, D. (1955). Sappho and Alcaeus. An Introduction to the Study of Ancient Lesbian Poetry. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Palmer, A. (1879). ‘Ellis’s Catullus’, Hermathena 3.293363Google Scholar
Palmer, A. (1896). Catulli Veronensis Liber. LondonGoogle Scholar
Palmer, A. and Ellis, R. (1875). ‘Scaliger’s Liber Cujacianus of Propertius, Catullus, &c.’, Hermathena 2.124–58Google Scholar
Panayotakis, C. (2010). Decimus Laberius: The Fragments. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Paratore, E. (1963). ‘Osservazioni sui rapporti fra Catullo e gli epigrammisti dell’ Antologia’, in Miscellanea di studi alessandrini in memoria di Augusto Rostagni 562–87. TurinGoogle Scholar
Panoussi, V. (2003). ‘Ego maenas: Maenadism, marriage, and the construction of female identity in Catullus 63 and 64’, Helios 30.101–26Google Scholar
Panoussi, V. (2007). ‘Sexuality and ritual: Catullus’ wedding poems’, in Skinner, (2007a) 276–92Google Scholar
Pasquali, G. (1968). ‘Arte allusiva’, in Pagine stravaganti di un filologo 2.275–82. Florence (= Stravaganze quarte e supreme (Venice 1951) 111–20 = Terze pagine stravaganti (Florence 1942) 185–7)Google Scholar
Passerat, J. (1608). Commentarii in C. Val. Catullum, Albium Tibullum et Sex. Aur. Propertium. ParisGoogle Scholar
Pavlock, B. R. (1979). ‘Frater Ave atque Vale”: Tennyson and Catullus’, Victorian Poetry 17.365–76Google Scholar
Pelliccia, H. (2011). ‘Unlocking Aeneid 6.460: Plautus’ Amphitryon, Euripides’ Protesilaus and the referents of Callimachus’ Coma’, CJ 106 .149219Google Scholar
Peruzzi, M. (ed.) (2008). Ornatissimo codice. La biblioteca di Federico di Montefeltro. Vatican CityGoogle Scholar
Petoletti, M. (2004). ‘Catullo, Properzio e Tibullo nella biblioteca di Francesco Petrarca’, in Ballarani, M., Frasso, G., Monti, C. M. (eds.), Manoscritti e libri a stampa nella Biblioteca Ambrosiana 102–5. MilanGoogle Scholar
Petrini, M. (1997). The Child and the Hero: Coming of Age in Catullus and Vergil. Ann ArborGoogle Scholar
Pfeiffer, R. (1968). History of Classical Scholarship. From the Beginning to the End of the Hellenistic Age. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Phillimore, J. S. (1901). Sexti Properti carmina. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Pighi, J. B. (1950). Catulli codex Bononiensis 2621. BolognaGoogle Scholar
Pistilli, G. (2003). ‘Guarini, Battista’, DBI 60.339–45Google Scholar
Platnauer, M. (1951). Latin Elegiac Verse. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Platter, C. L. (1995). ‘Officium in Catullus and Propertius: a Foucauldian reading’, CP 90.211–24Google Scholar
Pleitner, K. (1849). Des Q. Valerius Catullus Epigramme an und über C. Jul. Caesar und Mamurra. SpeyerGoogle Scholar
Polt, C. B. (2010). ‘Catullus and Roman dramatic literature.’ Diss. Chapel HillGoogle Scholar
Portuese, O. (2013). Il carme 67 di Catullo: introduzione, edizione critica, traduzione e commento. CesenaGoogle Scholar
Possanza, D. M. (2004). Translating the Heavens. Aratus, Germanicus, and the Poetics of Latin Translation. New YorkGoogle Scholar
Postgate, J. P. (1881). Select Elegies of Propertius. LondonGoogle Scholar
Postgate, J. P. (1889). Gai Valeri Catulli Carmina. LondonGoogle Scholar
Pound, E. (1970). The Translations of Ezra Pound. LondonGoogle Scholar
Powell, J. G. F. (1990). ‘Two notes on Catullus’, CQ 40.199206Google Scholar
Price, D. (1996). Janus Secundus. TempeGoogle Scholar
Pucci, P. (1961). ‘Il carme 50 di Catullo’, Maia 13.249–56Google Scholar
Putnam, M. C. J. (1960). ‘Catullus 66. 75–88’, CP 55.223–8Google Scholar
Putnam, M. C. J. (1961). ‘The art of Catullus 64’, HSCP 65.165205Google Scholar
Putnam, M. C. J. (1963). Review of Fordyce (1961), AJP 84.422–32Google Scholar
Putnam, M. C. J. (1982). ‘Catullus 11: the ironies of integrity’, in id., Essays on Latin Lyric, Elegy, and Epic 1329. PrincetonGoogle Scholar
Putnam, M. C. J. (1995–96). ‘The lyric genius of the Aeneid’, Arion 3.81101Google Scholar
Putnam, M. C. J. (2006). Poetic Interplay: Catullus and Horace. Princeton/OxfordGoogle Scholar
Putnam, M. C. J. (2016). ‘The sense of two endings: how Virgil and Statius conclude’, ICS 41.85149Google Scholar
Putnam, M. C. J. (2017). ‘Statius Siluae 3.2: reading travel’, ICS 42.83–139Google Scholar
Quinn, K. (1959/21969). The Catullan Revolution. Melbourne/LondonGoogle Scholar
Quinn, K. (1970/1973). Catullus: The Poems. (2nd edn. 1973.) LondonGoogle Scholar
Quinn, K. (1972). Catullus: An Interpretation. LondonGoogle Scholar
Raaflaub, K. A. and Ramsey, J. T. (2017). ‘Reconstructing the chronology of Caesar’s Gallic Wars’, Histos 11.174Google Scholar
Rabinowitz, N. S. (1993). Anxiety Veiled: Euripides and the Traffic in Women. IthacaGoogle Scholar
Rabinowitz, N. S. and Richlin, A. (eds.) (1992). Feminist Theory and the Classics. New YorkGoogle Scholar
Ramírez de Verger, A. (ed.) and Pérez Vega, A. (trans.) (2005). C. Valerii Catulli Carmina – Catulo, Poemas. HuelvaGoogle Scholar
Ramler, K. W. (1793). Kajus Valerius Katullus in einem Auszuge Lateinisch und Deutsch. LeipzigGoogle Scholar
Ramsey, J. T. and Raaflaub, K. A. (2017). ‘Chronological tables for Caesar’s wars (58–45 bce)’, Histos 11.162217Google Scholar
Randall, J. G. (1980). ‘Catullus 58.4-5’, LCM 5.21–2Google Scholar
Raven, D. S. (1965). Latin Metre. BristolGoogle Scholar
Rawson, E. (1978). ‘The identity problems of Q. Cornificius’, CQ 28.188201 (= (1991) 272–88)Google Scholar
Rawson, E. (1985). Intellectual Life in the Late Roman Republic. LondonGoogle Scholar
Rawson, E. (1991). Roman Culture and Society: Collected Papers. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Reeve, M. D. (1980). Review of Thomson (1978), Phoenix 34.179–84Google Scholar
Reeve, M. D. (2011). Manuscripts and Methods. RomeGoogle Scholar
Reeve, M. D. (2016). ‘Two manuscripts of “Ovid” and Grattius’, Hermes 144.194202Google Scholar
Reitz, B. (2013). Building in Words: Representations of the Process of Construction in Latin Literature. LeidenGoogle Scholar
Reynolds, L. D. (ed.) (1983). Texts and Transmission. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Reynolds, L. D., and Wilson, N. G. (2013). Scribes and Scholars. 4th edn. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Richlin, A. (1984). ‘Invective against women in Roman Satire’, Arethusa 17.6780Google Scholar
Richlin, A. (1991). ‘Zeus and Metis: Foucault, feminism, classics’, Helios 18.121Google Scholar
Richlin, A. (1992). The Garden of Priapus. New YorkGoogle Scholar
Richlin, A. (1993). ‘Not before homosexuality: the materiality of the Cinaedus and the Roman law against love between men’, Journal of the History of Sexuality 3.523–73Google Scholar
Ricottilli, L. (1982). ‘Tra filologia e semiotica: ripristino e interpretazione di una formula allocutiva (quid tu? quid uos?)’, MD 9.107–51Google Scholar
Ridenour, G. M. (1988). ‘Swinburne’s imitations of Catullus’, The Victorian Newsletter 74. 51–7Google Scholar
Riese, A. (1884). Die Gedichte des Catullus. LeipzigGoogle Scholar
Risselada, R. (1993). Imperatives and Other Directive Expressions in Latin. AmsterdamGoogle Scholar
Rizzo, S. (1983). Catalogo dei codici della Pro Cluentio ciceroniana. GenoaGoogle Scholar
Robert, C. (1900). ‘Archäologische Nachlese’, Hermes 35.650–68Google Scholar
Roberts, C. H., and Skeat, T. C. (1983). The Birth of the Codex. 2nd edn. LondonGoogle Scholar
Roberts, M. (1989). ‘The use of myth in Latin epithalamia from Statius to Venantius Fortunatus’, TAPA 119.321–48Google Scholar
Robinson, M. (2013). ‘Propertius 1.3: sleep, surprise, and Catullus 64’, BICS 56.89115Google Scholar
Roche, P. (2016). ‘Latin prose literature: author and authority in the prefaces of Pliny and Quintilian’, in Zissos, A. (ed.), A Companion to the Flavian Age of Imperial Rome 434–49. Chichester/Malden, Mass.Google Scholar
Roller, M. (1998). ‘Pliny’s Catullus: the politics of literary appropriation’, AJP 128.265304Google Scholar
Roman, L. (2001). ‘The representation of literary materiality in Martial’s Epigrams’, JRS 91.113–45Google Scholar
Roman, L. (2014). Poetic Autonomy in Ancient Rome. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Roman, L. (2015). ‘Statius and Martial: poetic self-fashioning in Flavian Rome’, in Dominik, , Newlands, and Gervais, (2015) 444–61Google Scholar
Rosati, G. (2011). ‘I tria corda di Stazio, poeta Greco, romano e napoletano’, in Bonadeo, A., Canobbio, A. and Gasti, F. (eds.), Filellenismo e identità romana in età flavia 1534. PaviaGoogle Scholar
Rosati, G. (2015). ‘The Silvae: poetics of impromptu and cultural consumption’, in Dominik, , Newlands, , and Gervais, (2015) 5472Google Scholar
Rosén, H. (2009). ‘Coherence, sentence modification, and sentence-part modification – the contribution of particles’, in Baldi, and Cuzzolin, (2009) 317442Google Scholar
Rosen, R. M. (2007). Making Mockery: The Poetics of Ancient Satire. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Rosenmeyer, P. A. (2006). ‘Sappho’s iambics’, Letras Clássicas 10.1136Google Scholar
Ross, D. O. (1969). Style and Tradition in Catullus. Cambridge, Mass.Google Scholar
Ross, D. O. (1975). Backgrounds to Augustan Poetry: Gallus, Elegy and Rome. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Ross, R. C. (1968–9). ‘Catullus 63 and the Galliambic metre’, CJ 64 .14552Google Scholar
Rossbach, A. (1854). Q. Valerii Catulli Veronensis Liber. LeipzigGoogle Scholar
Rostand, E. (trans.), Benoist, E. (ed., comm.), Thomas, E. (comm.) (1879–90). Les poésies de Catulle. ParisGoogle Scholar
Ruffell, I. A. (2003). ‘Beyond satire: Horace, popular invective and the segregation of literature’, JRS 93.3565Google Scholar
Rühl, M. (2006). Literatur gewordener Augenblick. Die Silven des Statius im Kontext literarischer und sozialer Bedingungen von Dichtung. Berlin/New YorkGoogle Scholar
Rüpke, J. (2008). Fasti Sacerdotum. A Prosopography of Pagan, Jewish and Christian Religious Officials in the City of Rome, 300 BC to AD 499. Trans. D. M. B. Richardson. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Ryan, F. X. (1996). ‘Two persons in Catullus’, GIF 48.8591Google Scholar
Sandy, G. N. (1971). ‘Catullus 63 and the theme of marriage’, AJP 92.185–95Google Scholar
Santen, L. van (1788). C. Valerii Catulli Elegia ad Manlium. LeidenGoogle Scholar
Scaliger, J. J. (1577a). Catulli, Tibulli, Propertii nova editio. ParisGoogle Scholar
Scaliger, J. J. (1577b). Castigationes in Catullum, Tibullum, Propertium. ParisGoogle Scholar
Scaliger, J. J. (1600a). Catulli, Tibulli, Propertii nova editio. HeidelbergGoogle Scholar
Scaliger, J. J. (1600b). Castigationes in Catullum, Tibullum, Propertium. HeidelbergGoogle Scholar
Schatzmann, A. (2012). Nikarchos II: Epigrammata. Einleitung, Texte, Kommentar. Hypomnemata 188. GöttingenGoogle Scholar
Scherf, J. (1996). Untersuchungen zur antiken Veröffentlichung der Catullgedichte. Spudasmata 61. Hildesheim/Zürich/New YorkGoogle Scholar
Schironi, F. (2018). The Best of the Grammarians: Aristarchus of Samothrace on the Iliad. Ann ArborGoogle Scholar
Schmale, M. (2004). Bilderreigen und Erzähllabyrinth. Catulls Carmen 64. MunichGoogle Scholar
Schoell, F. L. (1915). ‘George Chapman and the Italian Neo-Latinists of the Quattrocento’, Modern Philology 13.215238Google Scholar
Scholderer, V. (1924). ‘Printing at Venice to the end of 1481’, The Library ser. iv, 5. 129–52 = id. (1966). Fifty Essays in Fifteenth- and Sixteenth-Century Bibliography, ed. D. E. Rhodes, 74–89. AmsterdamGoogle Scholar
Schoolfield, G. C. (1980). Janus Secundus. BostonGoogle Scholar
Schulze, W. (1904). Zur Geschichte lateinischer Eigennamen. Reprinted 1991, with additional appendix by O. Salomies. ZurichGoogle Scholar
Schuster, M. (1949). Catulli Veronensis Liber. LeipzigGoogle Scholar
Schuster, M. (1958). Catulli Veronensis Liber, rev. W. Eisenhut. LeipzigGoogle Scholar
Schwabe, L. (1866). Catulli Veronensis Liber. GiessenGoogle Scholar
Schwabe, L. (1886). Catulli Veronensis Liber ad optimos codices denuo collatos. BerlinGoogle Scholar
Sedgwick, W. B. (1950). ‘Catullus’ Elegiacs’, Mnem. 3.64–9Google Scholar
Segal, C. P. (1968). ‘The order of Catullus, Poems 2–11’, Latomus 27.284301Google Scholar
Segal, C. P (1970). ‘Catullan otiosi: the lover and the poet’, G&R 17.2531Google Scholar
Segal, C. P (1973). ‘Felices ter et amplius: Horace, Odes, I. 13’, Latomus 32.3946Google Scholar
Seidensticker, B. (1994). ‘“Shakehands, Catull”. Catullus-Rezeption in der deutschsprachigen Lyrik der Gegenwart’, AU 2.3449Google Scholar
Selden, D. (1992). ‘Ceveat lector: Catullus and the rhetoric of performance’, in Hexter, R. and Selden, D. (eds.), Innovations of Antiquity 461512. New York/London (= Gaisser (2007a) 490–559)Google Scholar
Sellar, W. Y. (1889). The Roman Poets of the Republic. 3rd edn. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Seo, J. M. (2013). Exemplary Traits: Reading Characterization in Roman Poetry. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Shackleton Bailey, D. R. (1966). Cicero: Letters to Atticus. Vol. 5. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Shackleton Bailey, D. R. (1970). ‘The prosecution of Roman magistrates-elect’, Phoenix 24.162–5Google Scholar
Shackleton Bailey, D. R. (1977). Cicero: Epistulae ad Familiares. 2 vols. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Shackleton Bailey, D. R. (1980). Cicero: Epistulae ad Quintum fratrem et M. Brutum. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Shapiro, S. A. (2014). ‘Socration or Philodemus? Catullus 47 and prosopographical excess’, CJ 109.385405Google Scholar
Sharrock, A. R. (2000). ‘Constructing characters in Propertius’, Arethusa 33.263–84Google Scholar
Sheets, G. A. (2007). ‘Elements of style in Catullus’, in Skinner, (2007a) 190211Google Scholar
Sider, D. (1997). The Epigrams of Philodemos. New York/OxfordGoogle Scholar
Sider, D. (ed.) (2017). Hellenistic Poetry: A Selection. Ann ArborGoogle Scholar
Sillig, C. I. (1823). C. Valerii Catulli Carmina. GöttingenGoogle Scholar
Sillig, C. I. (1830). Review of Doering, rev. Naudet (1826), Lachmann (1829) and three other works in Neue Jahrbücher für Philologie und Pädagogik No. 5, Vol. 2.259–97Google Scholar
Singer, P. N. (2019). ‘New light and old texts: Galen and his own books’ in Petit, C. (ed.), Galen’s Treatise περὶ ἀλυπιìας (de indolentia) in Context: A Tale of Resilience. Leiden/BostonGoogle Scholar
Skinner, M. B. (1971). ‘Catullus 8: the comic amator as eiron’, CJ 66.298305Google Scholar
Skinner, M. B. (1972). ‘The unity of Catullus 68: the structure of 68a’, TAPA 103.495512Google Scholar
Skinner, M. B. (1978). ‘Ameana, puella defututa’, CJ 74.110–14Google Scholar
Skinner, M. B. (1979). ‘Parasites and strange bedfellows: a study in Catullus’ political imagery’, Ramus 8.137–52Google Scholar
Skinner, M. B. (1981). Catullus’ Passer: The Arrangement of the Book of Polymetric Poems. New YorkGoogle Scholar
Skinner, M. B. (1983). ‘Clodia Metelli’, TAPA 113.273–87Google Scholar
Skinner, M. B. (1987). ‘Disease imagery in Catullus 76. 17–26’, CP 82.230–3Google Scholar
Skinner, M. B. (1989). ‘Vt decuit cinaediorem: power, gender, and urbanity in Catullus 10’, Helios 16.723Google Scholar
Skinner, M. B. (1993). ‘Ego mulier: the construction of male sexuality in Catullus’, Helios 20.107–30 (= Hallett and Skinner (1997) 129–50)Google Scholar
Skinner, M. B. (2002). ‘Women’s voices and Catullus’ poetry’, CW 95.421–4Google Scholar
Skinner, M. B. (2003). Catullus in Verona: A Reading of the Elegiac Libellus, Poems 65–116. Columbus, OHGoogle Scholar
Skinner, M. B. (ed.) (2007a). A Companion to Catullus. Malden, Mass./OxfordGoogle Scholar
Skinner, M. B. (2007b). ‘Authorial arrangement of the collection: debate past and present’, in Skinner (2007a) 3553Google Scholar
Skinner, M. B. (2011). Clodia Metelli: The Tribune’s Sister. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Skinner, M. B. (2014a). Sexuality in Greek and Roman Culture. 2nd edn. ChichesterGoogle Scholar
Skinner, M. B. (2014b). ‘Feminist theory’, in Hubbard, (2014) 116Google Scholar
Skinner, M. B. (2015). ‘A review of scholarship on Catullus 1985-2015’, Lustrum 57.91360Google Scholar
Skutsch, F. (1912). ‘Helvius’ (12), RE 8.1. 226–8Google Scholar
Skutsch, O. (1968). Studia Enniana. LondonGoogle Scholar
Skutsch, O. (1969). ‘Metrical variations and some textual problems in Catullus’, BICS 16.3843 (= Gaisser (2007a) 45–55)Google Scholar
Snyder, J. M. (1997). Lesbian Desire in the Lyrics of Sappho. New YorkGoogle Scholar
Solodow, J. B. (1987). ‘On Catullus 95’, CP 82.141–5Google Scholar
Solodow, J. B. (1989). ‘Forms of literary criticism in Catullus: polymetrics vs epigram’, CP 89.312–19Google Scholar
Sommerstein, A. H. (2013). Menander Samia (The Woman from Samos). CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Soubiran, J. (1966). L’Élision dans la poesie latine. ParisGoogle Scholar
Spentzou, E. (2013). The Roman Poetry of Love: Elegy and Politics in a Time of Revolution. LondonGoogle Scholar
Spies, A. (1930). Militat omnis amans: Ein Beitrag zur Bildersprache der antiken Erotik. TübingenGoogle Scholar
Starr, R. J. (1987). ‘The circulation of literary texts in the Roman world’, CQ 37.213–23Google Scholar
Statius, A. (1566). Catullus cum commentario Achillis Stati Lusitani. VeniceGoogle Scholar
Stead, H. (2016). A Cockney Catullus: The Reception of Catullus in Romantic Britain 1795–1821. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Stehle(Stigers), E. (1997). ‘Retreat from the male: Catullus 62 and Sappho’s erotic flowers’, Ramus 6.83102Google Scholar
Stevens, B. E. (2013). Silence in Catullus. MadisonGoogle Scholar
Stroh, W. (1979). ‘Ovids Liebeskunst und die Ehegesetze des Augustus’, Gymnasium 86.323–52Google Scholar
Stroh, W. (2000). ‘Lesbia und Juventius: ein erotisches Liederbuch im Corpus Catullianum’, in id., Apocrypha. Entlegene Schriften 79–99. StuttgartGoogle Scholar
Stroup, S. C. (2010). Catullus, Cicero, and a Society of Patrons. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Super, R. H. (1976). ‘Landor and Catullus’, The Wordsworth Circle 7.31–7Google Scholar
Sutherland, E. H. (2005). ‘Writing (on) bodies: lyric discourse and the production of gender in Horace Odes 1.13’, CP 100.5282Google Scholar
Swann, B. W. (1994). Martial’s Catullus: The Reception of an Epigrammatic Rival. HildesheimGoogle Scholar
Syme, R. (1979). Roman Papers. Vols. 1–2. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Syndikus, H. P. (1984–1990). Catull: Eine Interpretation. 3 vols. DarmstadtGoogle Scholar
Syndikus, H. P. (1986). ‘Catull und die Politik’, Gymnasium 93.3447Google Scholar
Syndikus, H. P. (1990/2001). Catull. Eine Interpretation. Zweiter Teil. Die grossen Gedichte. DarmstadtGoogle Scholar
Tamás, Á. (2016). ‘Erroneous gazes: Lucretian poetics in Catullus 64’, JRS 106.120Google Scholar
Tarrant, R. J. (2006). ‘Propertian textual criticism and editing’, in Günther, H.-C. (ed.), Brill’s Companion to Propertius 4565. LeidenGoogle Scholar
Tatum, W. J. (1988). ‘Catullus’ criticism of Cicero in Poem 49’, TAPA 118.179–84Google Scholar
Tatum, W. J. (1993). ‘Catullus 79: personal invective or political discourse?’, PLLS 7.3145Google Scholar
Tatum, W. J. (1997). ‘Friendship, politics, and literature in Catullus: Poems 1, 65 and 66, 116’, CQ 47. 482500 (= Gaisser (2007a) 369–98)Google Scholar
Tatum, W. J. (1999). The Patrician Tribune: Publius Clodius Pulcher. Chapel HillGoogle Scholar
Tatum, W. J. (2007). ‘Social commentary and political invective’, in Skinner, (2007a) 333–54Google Scholar
Tatum, W. J. (2011). ‘Invective identities in Pro Caelio’, in Smith, C. J. and Corvino, R. (eds.), Praise and Blame in Roman Republican Rhetoric 165–79. SwanseaGoogle Scholar
Theodorakopoulos, E. (2013). ‘Catullus and Lesbia translated in women’s historical novels’, in Hardwick, L. and Harrison, S. (eds.), Classics in the Modern World: A Democratic Turn 275–86. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Thomas, R. F. (1981). ‘Cinna, Calvus, and the Ciris’, CQ 31.371–4Google Scholar
Thomas, R. F. (1982). ‘Catullus and the polemics of poetic reference (Poem 64.1–18)’, AJP 103.144–64 (= Thomas (1999) 12–32)Google Scholar
Thomas, R. F. (1983). ‘Callimachus, the Victoria Berenices, and Roman poetry’, CQ 33.92113 (= Thomas (1999) 68–100)Google Scholar
Thomas, R. F. (1984). ‘Menander and Catullus 8’, RhM 127.308–16 (= Thomas (1999) 44–52)Google Scholar
Thomas, R. F. (1986). ‘Virgil’s Georgics and the art of reference’, HSCP 90.171–98 (= Thomas (1999) 114–41)Google Scholar
Thomas, R. F. (1993). ‘Sparrows, hares, and doves: a Catullan metaphor and its tradition’, Helios 20.131–42 (= Thomas (1999) 52–67)Google Scholar
Thomas, R. F. (1999). Reading Virgil and his Texts: Studies in Intertextuality. Ann ArborGoogle Scholar
Thomsen, O. (1992). Ritual and Desire: Catullus 61 and 62 and Other Ancient Documents on Wedding and Marriage. AarhusGoogle Scholar
Thomson, D. F. S. (1970). ‘The codex Romanus of Catullus: a collation of the text’, RhM 113.97110Google Scholar
Thomson, D. F. S. (1973). ‘A new look at the manuscript tradition of Catullus’, YCS 23.113–29Google Scholar
Thomson, D. F. S. (1978). Catullus: A Critical Edition. Chapel Hill, NCGoogle Scholar
Thomson, D. F. S. (1997). Catullus Edited with a Textual and Interpretative Commentary. Phoenix Suppl. 34. TorontoGoogle Scholar
Thorsen, T. S. (ed.) (2013). The Cambridge Companion to Latin Love Elegy. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Timpanaro, S. (1978). Contributi di filologia e di storia della lingua latina. RomeGoogle Scholar
Timpanaro, S. (1994). Nuovi contributi di filologia e storia della lingua latina. BolognaGoogle Scholar
Timpanaro, S. (2005). The Genesis of Lachmann’s Method, ed. and trans. G. W. Most. ChicagoGoogle Scholar
Tosi, R. (2007). Dizionario delle sentenze latine e greche. 16th edn. MilanGoogle Scholar
Traina, A. (1975). ‘Orazio e Catullo’, in id., Poeti latini (e neolatini): note e saggi filologici 253–75. BolognaGoogle Scholar
Traina, A. (1998a). Poeti latini (e neolatini): note e saggi filologici. V serie. BolognaGoogle Scholar
Traina, A. (1998b). ‘Introduzione a Catullo: la poesia degli affetti’, in Traina, (1998a) 1950 (orig. publ. in Catullo, I canti, trans. E. Mandruzzato, Milan 1982, 5–38)Google Scholar
Traina, A. (1998c). ‘Compresenze strutturali in Catullo’, in Traina, (1998a) 5168 (orig. publ. in ΜΟΥΣΑ. Scritti in onore di G. Morelli, Bologna 1997, 283–96)Google Scholar
Tränkle, H. (1981). ‘Catullprobleme’, MH 38.245–58Google Scholar
Trappes-Lomax, J. M. (2007). Catullus: A Textual Reappraisal. SwanseaGoogle Scholar
Trimble, G. C. (2012). ‘Catullus and “comment in English”: the tradition of the expurgated commentary before Fordyce’, in Stray, C. and Harrison, S. (eds.), Expurgating the Classics: Editing Out in Greek and Latin 143–62. LondonGoogle Scholar
Trimble, G. C. (2013). ‘Catullus 64 and the prophetic voice in Virgil’s fourth Eclogue’, in Farrell, J. and Nelis, D. P. (eds.), Augustan Poetry and the Roman Republic 263–77. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Tsouna, V. (2007). The Ethics of Philodemus. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Tuplin, C. J. (1977). ‘Cantores Euphorionis’, PLLS 1.123Google Scholar
Tuplin, C. J. (1979). ‘Cantores Euphorionis again’, CQ 29.358–60Google Scholar
Tuplin, C. J. (1981). ‘Catullus 68’, CQ 31.113–39Google Scholar
Uden, J. (2006). ‘Embracing the young man in love: Catullus 75 and the comic adulescens’, Antichthon 40.1934Google Scholar
Ullman, B. L. (1908). ‘The Identification of the Manuscripts of Catullus Cited in Statius’ Edition of 1566’. Diss. ChicagoGoogle Scholar
Ullman, B. L. (1960a). ‘The transmission of the text of Catullus’, in Studi in Onore di Luigi Castiglioni 2.1025–57. FlorenceGoogle Scholar
Ullman, B. L. (1960b). The Origin and Development of Humanistic Script. RomeGoogle Scholar
Ullman, B. L. (1963). The Humanism of Coluccio Salutati. PaduaGoogle Scholar
Ullman, B. L. (1973). Studies in the Italian Renaissance. 2nd edn. RomeGoogle Scholar
Ulrich, R. (2007). Roman Woodworking. New HavenGoogle Scholar
Van Sickle, J. (1992). A Reading of Virgil’s Messianic Eclogue. New York/LondonGoogle Scholar
Vance, N. (1997). The Victorians and Ancient Rome. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Vance, N. and Wallace, J. (eds.) (2015). The Oxford History of Classical Reception in English Literature. Vol. 4: 1790–1880. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Vessey, D. (1972). ‘Aspects of Statius’ Epithalamion’, Mnem. 25.172–87Google Scholar
Veyne, P. (1988). Roman Erotic Elegy: Love, Poetry, and the West, transl. D. Pellauer. ChicagoGoogle Scholar
Vine, B. (1992). ‘On the “missing” fourth stanza of Catullus 51’, HSCP 94.251–8Google Scholar
Volpi, G. (1710). C. Valerius Catullus, Albius Tibullus E. R., Sex. Aurelius Propertius. PaduaGoogle Scholar
Volpi, G. (1737). C. Valerius Catullus, et in eum Jo. Antonii Vulpii … novus commentarius locupletissimus. PaduaGoogle Scholar
von Albrecht, M. (2003). Literatur als Brücke. Studien zur Rezeptionsgeschichte und Komparatistik. HildesheimGoogle Scholar
De Vos, M. (2014). ‘From Lesbos she took her honeycomb: Sappho and the “female tradition” in Hellenistic poetry’, in Pieper, C. and Ker, J. (eds.), Valuing the Past in the Greco-Roman World: Proceedings from the Penn-Leiden Colloquia on Ancient Values VII, 410–34. Leiden/BostonGoogle Scholar
Vossius, I. (1684). Cajus Valerius Catullus Et in eum Isaaci Vossii Observationes. LondonGoogle Scholar
Wagenvoort, H. (1956). Studies in Roman Literature, Culture and Religion. LeidenGoogle Scholar
Wallace, R. (1982). ‘A note on the phonostylistics of Latin: (s) in Plautus’, Glotta 60.120–4Google Scholar
Warden, J. (1998). ‘Catullus 64: structure and meaning’, CJ 93.397415Google Scholar
Watson, A. G. (1979). Catalogue of Dated and Datable Manuscripts c.700–1600 in the department of Manuscripts, The British Library. LondonGoogle Scholar
Watson, L. C. (1982). ‘Cinna and Euphorion’, SIFC 54.93110Google Scholar
Watson, L. C. (1991). Arae: The Curse Poetry of Antiquity. LeedsGoogle Scholar
Watson, L. C. (1995). ‘Horace’s Epodes: the impotence of iambos?’, in Harrison, S. J. (ed.), Homage to Horace: A Bimillenary Celebration 188202. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Watson, L. C. (2003). A Commentary on Horace’s Epodes. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Watson, L. C. (2007). ‘The Epodes: Horace’s Archilochus?’, in Harrison, S. J. (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to Horace 93104. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Watson, L. C. (2012). ‘Catullus, inurbanitas and the Transpadanes’ in Morelli, A. M. (2012) 151–69Google Scholar
Watson, L. and Watson, P. (2003). Martial. Select Epigrams. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Watson, L. and Watson, P. (2015). Martial. LondonGoogle Scholar
Weber, C. (1983). ‘Two chronological contradictions in Catullus 64’, TAPA 113.263–71Google Scholar
Weinstock, S. (1971). Divus Julius. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Weiss, M. (1996). ‘An Oscanism in Catullus 53’, CP 91.353–9Google Scholar
Welby, T. E. (ed.) (1930). The Works of Walter Savage Landor. Vol. 9. LondonGoogle Scholar
West, D. A. (1957). ‘The metre of Catullus’ elegiacs’, CQ 7.98102Google Scholar
West, D. A. (1967). Reading Horace. EdinburghGoogle Scholar
West, D. and Woodman, T. [=A. J.] (eds.) (1979). Creative Imitation and Latin Literature. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
West, M. L. (1982). Greek Metre. OxfordGoogle Scholar
West, M. L. (1987). Introduction to Greek Metre. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Westendorp-Boerma, R. E. H. (1958). ‘Vergil’s debt to Catullus’, AClass 1.5163Google Scholar
Wharton, D. (2009). ‘On the distribution of adnominal prepositional phrases in Latin prose’, CP 104.184207Google Scholar
Wharton, J. (1756). An Essay on the Writings and Genius of Pope. LondonGoogle Scholar
Wheeler, A. L. (1915). ‘Catullus as an elegist’, AJP 36.155–84Google Scholar
Wheeler, A. L. (1934). Catullus and the Traditions of Ancient Poetry. BerkeleyCrossRefGoogle Scholar
White, P. (1993). Promised Verse: Poets in the Society of Augustan Rome. Cambridge, MassCrossRefGoogle Scholar
White, P. (2010). Cicero in Letters: Epistolary Relations of the Late Republic. New YorkGoogle Scholar
Wilamowitz-Moellendorff, U. (1879). ‘Die Galliamben des Kallimachos und Catullus’, Hermes 14.194–9Google Scholar
Wilamowitz-Moellendorff, U. (1913). Sappho und Simonides. BerlinGoogle Scholar
Wilamowitz-Moellendorff, U. (1924). Hellenistische Dichtung in der Zeit des Kallimachos. Vols. 1–2. BerlinGoogle Scholar
Williams, C. A. (2010). Roman Homosexuality. 2nd edn. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Williams, G. (1962). ‘Poetry in the moral climate of Augustan Rome’, JRS 52. 2846Google Scholar
Williams, G. (1968). Tradition and Originality in Roman Poetry. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Wills, J. (1996). Repetition in Latin Poetry: Figures of Allusion. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Wills, J. (1998). ‘Divided allusion: Virgil and the Coma Berenices’, HSCP 98.277305Google Scholar
Wimmel, W. (1960). Kallimachos in Rom. Hermes Einzelschriften 16. WiesbadenGoogle Scholar
Winkler, J. (1990). The Constraints of Desire. New York/LondonGoogle Scholar
Winsbury, R. (2009). The Roman Book. LondonGoogle Scholar
Wiseman, T. P. (1969). Catullan Questions. LeicesterGoogle Scholar
Wiseman, T. P. (1974). Cinna the Poet. LeicesterGoogle Scholar
Wiseman, T. P. (1975). ‘Clodia: some imaginary lives’, Arion (new series) 2.96115Google Scholar
Wiseman, T. P. (1976). ‘Camerius’, BICS 23.1517 (= (1987) 219–21)Google Scholar
Wiseman, T. P. (1979). Clio’s Cosmetics. LeicesterGoogle Scholar
Wiseman, T. P. (1985). Catullus and his World. A Reappraisal. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Wiseman, T. P. (1987). Roman Studies: Literary and Historical. LiverpoolGoogle Scholar
Wiseman, T. P. (2007). ‘The Valerii Catulli of Verona’, in Skinner (2007a) 5771Google Scholar
Wiseman, T. P. (2015). The Roman Audience. Classical Literature as Social History. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Wong, A. (2017). The Poetry of Kissing in Early Modern Europe: From the Catullan Revival to Secundus, Shakespeare and the English Cavaliers. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Woodman, A. J. (1966). ‘Some implications of otium in Catullus 51.13–16’, Latomus 25.217–26Google Scholar
Woodman, A. J. (1970). ‘Sleepless poets: Catullus and Keats’, G&R 21.51–3Google Scholar
Woodman, A. J. (1977). Velleius Paterculus: The Tiberian Narrative. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Woodman, A. J. (1983). ‘A reading of Catullus 68a’, PCPS 29.100–6 (= (2012a) 27–34)Google Scholar
Woodman, A. J. (2000). Review of J. Godwin, Catullus: The Shorter Poems (Warminster 1999), BMCR 05.14Google Scholar
Woodman, A. J. (2002). ‘Biformis Vates: the Odes, Catullus, and Greek Lyric’, in T. [= A. J.] Woodman and Feeney, D. (eds.), Traditions and Contexts in the Poetry of Horace 5364. Cambridge (= (2012) 4158)Google Scholar
Woodman, A. J. (2003). ‘Poems to historians: Catullus 1 and Horace Odes 2.1’, in Braund and Gill (2003) 191216 (= (2012) 121–44)Google Scholar
Woodman, A. J. (2006). ‘Catullus 51: a suitable case for treatment?’, CQ 56.610–11 (= (2012) 24–6)Google Scholar
Woodman, A. J. (2012a). From Poetry to History. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Woodman, A. J. (2012b). ‘A covering letter: Poem 65’, in Du Quesnay and Woodman (2012) 130–52Google Scholar
Woodman, A. J. (2015a). Lost Histories: Selected Fragments of Roman Historical Writers. Histos Suppl. 2. Newcastle upon TyneGoogle Scholar
Woodman, A. J. (2015b). ‘Problems in Horace, Epode 11’, CQ 65.673–81Google Scholar
Woodman, T. [= A. J.] and Powell, J. (eds.) (1992). Author and Audience in Latin Literature. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Woodman, T. [= A. J.] and West, D. (eds.) (1974). Quality and Pleasure in Latin Poetry. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Wray, D. (2001). Catullus and the Poetics of Roman Manhood. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Wray, D. (2009). ‘Ovid’s Catullus and the neoteric moment in Roman poetry’, in Knox, P. E. (ed.), A Companion to Ovid 252–64. Malden, Mass./OxfordGoogle Scholar
Wray, D. (2012). ‘Catullus the Roman love elegist?’, in Gold, B. K. (ed.), A Companion to Roman Love Elegy 2538. Malden, Mass./OxfordCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wyke, M. (2002). The Roman Mistress: Ancient and Modern Representations. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Yatromanolakis, D. (1999). ‘Alexandrian Sappho revisited’, HSCP 99.179–95Google Scholar
Young, E. (2015). Translation as Muse: Poetic Translation in Catullus’ Rome. ChicagoGoogle Scholar
Zamponi, S. (2016). ‘Aspetti della tradizione gotica nella littera antiqua’, in Black, et al. (2016) 105–25Google Scholar
Zeiner, N. (2005). Nothing Ordinary Here: Statius as Creator of Distinction in the Silvae. New YorkGoogle Scholar
Zetzel, J. E. G. (1983/2007). ‘Catullus, Ennius, and the poetics of allusion’, ICS 8.251–66 (= Gaisser, (2007a) 198216)Google Scholar
Zetzel, J. E. G. (2018). Critics, Compilers and Commentators. An Introduction to Roman Philology 200 BCE–800 CE. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Zicàri, M. (1955). ‘Moribunda ab sede Pisauri’, Studia Oliveriana 3.5769 (= (1978) 187–99)Google Scholar
Zicàri, M. (1957). ‘Calfurnio editore di Catullo’, Atene e Roma 2.157–9 (= (1978) 105–8)Google Scholar
Zicàri, M. (1958). ‘Ricerche sulla tradizione manoscritta di Catullo’, Bollettino per l’edizione nazionale dei classici 6.7999 (= (1978) 79–104)Google Scholar
Zicàri, M. (1964). ‘Some metrical and prosodical features of Catullus’ poetry’, Phoenix 18.193205Google Scholar
Zicàri, M. (1978). Scritti catulliani, ed. Parroni, P.. UrbinoGoogle Scholar
Ziolkowski, J. (2004). ‘Between text and music: the reception of Virgilian speeches in early Virgilian manuscripts’, MD 52.107–26Google Scholar
Ziolkowski, T. (2007). ‘Anglo-American Catullus since the mid-twentieth century’, IJCT 13.409–30Google Scholar
Zukofsky, L. and Zukofsky, C. (1969). Catullus (Gai Valeri Catulli Veronensis liber). LondonGoogle Scholar
Acosta-Hughes, B. (2010). Arion’s Lyre: Archaic Poetry into Hellenistic Poetry. PrincetonGoogle Scholar
Adams, J. N. (1978). ‘Conventions of naming in Cicero’, CQ 28.145–66Google Scholar
Adams, J. N. (1981). ‘Culus, clunes and their synonyms in Latin’, Glotta 59.231–64Google Scholar
Adams, J. N. (1982). The Latin Sexual Vocabulary. LondonGoogle Scholar
Adams, J. N. (1983). ‘Words for “prostitute” in Latin’, RhM 126.321–58Google Scholar
Adams, J. N. (1992). ‘British Latin: the text, interpretation and language of the Bath curse tablets’, Britannia 23.126Google Scholar
Adams, J. N. (1995). ‘The language of the Vindolanda writing tablets: an interim report’, JRS 85.86134Google Scholar
Adams, J. N. (1999). ‘Nominative personal pronouns and some patterns of speech in Republican and Augustan poetry’, in Adams, and Mayer, (1999) 97133Google Scholar
Adams, J. N. (2003). ‘The new Vindolanda tablets’, CQ 53.530–75CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Adams, J. N. (2007). The Regional Diversification of Latin 200 BC – AD 600. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Adams, J. N. (2013). Social Variation and the Latin Language. CambridgeCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Adams, J. N. (2016). An Anthology of Informal Latin 200 BC – AD 900. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Adams, J. N. (forthcoming). Asyndeton and Latin Literature. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Adams, J. N. and Mayer, R. (eds.) (1999). Aspects of the Language of Latin Poetry. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Adams, J. N. and Vincent, N. (eds.) (2016). Early and Late Latin: Continuity or Change? CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Adler, E. (1981). Catullan Self-Revelation. New YorkGoogle Scholar
Agnesini, A. (2004). Plauto in Catullo. Edizioni e saggi universitari di filologia classica 63. BolognaGoogle Scholar
Agnesini, A. (2007). Il carme 62 di Catullo: edizione critica e commento. CesenaGoogle Scholar
Agnesini, A. (2009). ‘Catull. 67.1s.: incipit della ianua o explicit della Coma?’, Paideia 66.521–40Google Scholar
Agnesini, A. (2011). ‘Una rilettura di Catull. 1.8s.: lo snodo tra dedica a Nepote e invocazione alla Musa’, in Biondi, (2011) 121Google Scholar
Agnesini, A. (2012). ‘Lepos, mores, pathos, furor, risus … Per una “ri-sistemazione” di alcuni carmina catulliani’, in Morelli, (2012) 171202Google Scholar
Albertini, A. (1953). ‘Calfurnio bresciano: la sua edizione di Catullo (1481)’, Commentari dell’Ateneo di Brescia 29–79. BresciaGoogle Scholar
Alexander, M. C. (1990). Trials in the Late Roman Republic, 149 BC to 50 BC. Phoenix Suppl. 26. TorontoGoogle Scholar
Allen, K. (1915). ‘Doctus Catullus’, CP 10.222–3Google Scholar
Allen, W. S. (1965). Vox Latina: The Pronunciation of Classical Latin. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Allenspach, J. and Frasso, G. (1980). ‘Vicende, cultura e scritti di Gerolamo Squarzafico, Alessandrino’, IMU 23.233–92Google Scholar
Ancona, R. (2002). ‘The untouched self: Sapphic and Catullan Muses in Horace, Odes 1.22’, in Spentzou, E. and Fowler, D. P. (eds.), Cultivating the Muse: Struggles for Power and Inspiration in Classical Literature 161–86. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Anon. (1874). ‘Santen, Laurens or Louw van’, in van der Aa, A. J. (ed.), Biographisch woordenboek der Nederlanden (Haarlem, 1852–1878, 21 vols.). Vol. 17.101–4Google Scholar
Aranjo, D. (2005). ‘Catulle au début du XXe siècle: une anthologie’, Babel: Littératures plurielles 12.145–76Google Scholar
Arena, V. and Mac Góráin, F. (eds.) (2017). Varronian moments. BICS Suppl. 60.2Google Scholar
Arkins, B. D. (1979). ‘Glubit in Catullus 58.5’, LCM 4.85–6Google Scholar
Arkins, B. D. (2007). ‘The modern reception of Catullus’, in Skinner, (2007a) 461–78Google Scholar
Armstrong, R. (2013). ‘Journeys and nostalgia in Catullus’, CJ 109.4371Google Scholar
Atkinson, T. (2011). Catulla et al. TarsetGoogle Scholar
Auhagen, U. (2003). ‘Lusus und Gloria – Plinius’ Hendecasyllabi (Epist. 4, 14; 5, 3 und 7, 4)’, in Castagna, L. and Lefèvre, E. (eds.), Plinius der Jüngere und seine Zeit 313. Munich/LeipzigCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Austin, R. G. (1960). M. Tulli Ciceronis Pro M. Caelio Oratio. 3rd edn. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Avanzi, G. (ed.) [1535]. Catullus, Tibullus, Propertius, Gallus. [Venice]Google Scholar
Avanzi, G., and Manuzio, A. (1502). Catullus, Tibullus, Propertius. VeniceGoogle Scholar
Avanzi, G., and Manuzio, A. (1515). Catullus, Tibullus, Propertius. 2nd edn. VeniceGoogle Scholar
Axelson, B. (1945). Unpoetische Wörter. LundGoogle Scholar
Baehrens, E. (1874). Analecta Catulliana. JenaGoogle Scholar
Baehrens, E. (1876, 1885). Catulli Veronensis Liber. Vols. 1–2. LeipzigGoogle Scholar
Bain, D. (1979). ‘PLAVTVS VORTIT BARBARE. Plautus, Bacchides 526–61 and Menander Dis Exapaton 102–12’, in West, and Woodman, (1979) 1734Google Scholar
Baker, R. J. (1975). ‘Domina at Catullus 68, 68: mistress or chatelaine?’, RhM 118.124–9Google Scholar
Baldi, P. and Cuzzolin, P. (eds.) (2009). New Perspectives on Historical Latin Syntax 1: Syntax of the Sentence. Berlin and New YorkGoogle Scholar
Balmer, J. (2004a). Catullus: Poems of Love and Hate. TarsetGoogle Scholar
Balmer, J. (2004b). Chasing after Catullus. TarsetGoogle Scholar
Balmer, J. (2013). Piecing Together the Fragments: Translating Classical Verse, Creating Contemporary Poetry. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Balsamo, J. and Galand-Hallyn, P. (eds.) (2000). La Poétique de Jean Second et son influence au XVIe siècle. Les Cahiers de l’humanisme 1. ParisGoogle Scholar
Barbaud, T. (2008). ‘Catulle versus Horace: révolte et sagesse poétiques’, REL 86.8096Google Scholar
Barchiesi, A. (1993). ‘Future reflexive: two modes of allusion and Ovid’s Heroides’, HSCP 95.333–65Google Scholar
Barchiesi, A. (2001). ‘Horace and iambos: the poet as literary historian’, in Cavarzere, Aloni and Barchiesi, (2001) 141–64Google Scholar
Barchiesi, A. (2005). ‘The search for the perfect book: a PS to the New Posidippus’, in Gutzwiller, K. (ed.), The New Posidippus: A Hellenistic Poetry Book 320–42. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Barchiesi, A. and Scheidel, W. (eds.) (2010). The Oxford Handbook of Roman Studies. OxfordCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bardon, H. (1970). Propositions sur Catulle. BrusselsGoogle Scholar
Bardon, H. (1973). Catulli Veronensis Carmina. StuttgartGoogle Scholar
Barrett, A. A. (1972). ‘Catullus 52 and the consulship of Vatinius’, TAPA 103.2338Google Scholar
Bauer, B. L. M. (2010). ‘Forerunners of Romance -mente adverbs in Latin prose and poetry’, in Dickey, andChahoud, (2010) 339–53Google Scholar
Baumbach, M. and Bär, S. (eds.) (2012). Brill’s Companion to Greek and Latin Epyllion and its Reception. Leiden/BostonGoogle Scholar
Bausi, F., Campanelli, M., Gentile, S., Hankins, J. (eds.) (2013). Autografi dei letterati italiani. Il Quattrocento. Tomo I. RomeGoogle Scholar
Beard, M. (1994). ‘The Roman and the foreign: the cult of the “Great Mother” in Imperial Rome’, in Thomas, N. and Humphrey, C. (eds.), Shamanism, History and the State 164–89. Ann ArborGoogle Scholar
Bellandi, F. (2007). Lepos e Pathos: Studi su Catullo. BolognaGoogle Scholar
Bellandi, F. (2012). ‘Catullo e la politica romana’, in Citroni, M. (ed.), Letteratura e ciuitas: Transizioni dalla Reppublica all’Impero, in ricordo di Emanuele Narducci 4771. PisaGoogle Scholar
Benferhat, Y. (2005). ‘Catulle et les affrontements politico-littéraires à Rome à la fin de la république’, in Poignault, R. (ed.), Présence de Catulle et des élégiaques latins (Actes du colloque tenu à Tours 28–30 novembre 2002) 131–48. Clermont-FerrandGoogle Scholar
Berry, D. H. (1996). Cicero: Pro P. Sulla Oratio. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Bertone, S. (2018). ‘Innovazione e continuità tra le edizioni aldine di Catullo curate dall’Avanzi (Ald. 1502 – Ald. 1515)’, Paideia 73.2071–84Google Scholar
Bessone, F. (2013). ‘Latin precursors’, in Thorsen, (2013) 3956Google Scholar
Bessone, F. (2014). ‘Polis, court, empire: Greek culture, Roman society, and the system of genres’, in Augoustakis, A. (ed.), Flavian Poetry and its Greek Past 215–33. LeidenGoogle Scholar
Bessone, F. and Fucecchi, M. (eds.) (2017). The Literary Genres in the Flavian Age. Berlin/BostonGoogle Scholar
Billanovich, G. (1959). ‘Dal Livio di Raterio (Laur. 63, 19) al Livio del Petrarca (B. M., Harl. 2493’, Italia Medioevale e Umanistica 2.103–78Google Scholar
Billanovich, G. (1988). ‘Il Catullo della Cattedrale di Verona’, in Krämer, S. and Bernhard, M. (eds.), Scire litteras. Forschungen zum mittelalterlichen Geistesleben (Bayerische Akademie der Wissenschaften, Philosophisch-Historische Klasse Abhandlungen, nf 99) 3557. MunichGoogle Scholar
Bing, P. (2009). The Scroll and the Marble. Studies in Reading and Reception in Hellenistic Poetry. Ann ArborGoogle Scholar
Biondi, G. G. (2011). Il Liber di Catullo: tradizione, modelli e Fortleben, Quaderni di Paideia 14. CesenaGoogle Scholar
Biondi, G. G. (2015). ‘Catullus, Sabellico (& Co.) and … Giorgio Pasquali’, in Kiss, (2015a) 2952Google Scholar
Black, R., Kraye, J., and Nuvoloni, L. (eds.) (2016). Palaeography, Manuscript Illumination and Humanism in Renaissance Italy: Studies in Memory of A. C. de la Mare. Warburg Institute Colloquia 28. LondonGoogle Scholar
Bleisch, P. (1999). ‘The empty tomb at Rhoeteum: Deiphobus and the problem of the past in Aeneid 6.494-547’, CA 18.187226Google Scholar
Bonadeo, A. (2017) ‘Scattered remarks about the ‘non-genre’ of Statius’ Siluae’, in Bessone, and Fucecchi, (2017) 157–66Google Scholar
Bonnet, M. (1877). Review of Baehrens’s Teubner edition of Catullus, Revue Critique d’Histoire et de Littérature 4.5865Google Scholar
Bonvicini, M. (2012). Il novus libellus di Catullo: trasmissione del testo, problematicità della grafia e dell’interpunzione. Quaderni di Paideia 15. CesenaGoogle Scholar
Bottari, G. (2010). Fili della cultura veronese del Trecento. VeronaGoogle Scholar
Boulet, J. (2009). ‘“Will he rise and recover[?]”: Catullus, castration, and censorship in Swinburne’s “Dolores”’, Victorian Poetry 47.747–58Google Scholar
Braden, G. (1979). ‘Vivamus, mea Lesbia in the English Renaissance’, English Literary Renaissance 9.199224Google Scholar
Braga, D. (1950). Catullo e i poeti Greci. Messina/FlorenceGoogle Scholar
Bramble, J. C. (1974). Persius and the Programmatic Satire. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Braund, D. (1996). ‘The politics of Catullus 10: Memmius, Caesar and the Bithynians’, Hermathena 160.4557Google Scholar
Braund, D. and Gill, C. (eds.) (2003). Myth, History and Culture in Republican Rome. ExeterGoogle Scholar
Brink, C. O. (1971, 1982). Horace on Poetry. Vol. 2 The Ars Poetica and Vol. 3 Epistles Book II. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Broughton, T. R. S. (1955, 1968, 1986). The Magistrates of the Roman Republic. 3 vols. Cleveland/AtlantaGoogle Scholar
Bunting, B. (2000). Collected Poems. NewcastleGoogle Scholar
Burrus, V. (2007). ‘Mapping as metamorphosis: initial reflections on gender and ancient religious discourses’, in Penner, T. and Vander Stichele, C. (eds.), Mapping Gender in Ancient Religious Discourses 110. AtlantaGoogle Scholar
Butler, J. (1990). Gender Trouble: Feminism and the Subversion of Identity. New YorkGoogle Scholar
Butler, J. (2004). Undoing Gender. New YorkGoogle Scholar
Butrica, J. L. (1984). The Manuscript Tradition of Propertius. Phoenix Suppl. 17. TorontoGoogle Scholar
Butrica, J. L. (2002). ‘Catullus 107.7–8’, CQ 52.608–9Google Scholar
Butrica, J. L. (2006). ‘The Fabella of Sulpicia (“Epigrammata Bobiensia” 37)’, Phoenix 60.70121Google Scholar
Butrica, J. L. (2007). ‘History and transmission of the text’, in Skinner, (2007a) 1334Google Scholar
Butterfield, D. (2008a). ‘The poetic treatment of atque from Catullus to Juvenal’, Mnem. 61.386413Google Scholar
Butterfield, D. (2008b). ‘On the avoidance of eius in Latin poetry’, RhM 151.151–67Google Scholar
Butterfield, D. (2008c). ‘Sigmatic ecthlipsis in Lucretius’, Hermes 136.182205Google Scholar
Butterfield, D. (2015a). ‘cui uideberis bella: the influence of Baehrens and Housman on the text of Catullus’, in Kiss, (2015a) 107–28Google Scholar
Butterfield, D. (ed.) (2015b). Varro Varius: The Polymath of the Roman World. Cambridge Classical Journal Suppl. 39. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Cairns, F. (1969). ‘Catullus 1’, Mnemosyne 22. 153–8 (= (2012a) 1–5)Google Scholar
Cairns, F. (1972). Generic Composition in Greek and Roman Poetry. EdinburghGoogle Scholar
Cairns, F. (1973). ‘Catullus’ “basia” poems (5, 7, 48)’, Mnemosyne 26.1522 (= (2012a) 6–12)CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cairns, F. (1974). ‘Venusta Sirmio: Catullus 31’, in Woodman and West (1974) 116 (= (2012a) 18–35)Google Scholar
Cairns, F. (2003). ‘Catullus in and about Bithynia: Poems 68, 10, 28 and 47’, in Braund and Gill (2003) 163–90 (= (2012a) 99–121)Google Scholar
Cairns, F. (2005). ‘Catullus 45: text and interpretation’, CQ 55.534–41 (= (2012a) 36–46)Google Scholar
Cairns, F. (2008). ‘The Hellenistic epigramma longum’, in Morelli (2008) 5580Google Scholar
Cairns, F. (2010). ‘The genre Oarystys’, Wiener Studien 123.101–29 (= (2012a) 4776)Google Scholar
Cairns, F. (2012a). Roman Lyric. Berlin/BostonGoogle Scholar
Cairns, F. (2012b). ‘Poem 45: the wooing of Acme and Septimius’, in Du Quesnay and Woodman (2012) 112–29Google Scholar
Cairns, F. (2016). Hellenistic Epigram: Contexts of Exploration. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Calboli, G. (2009). ‘Latin syntax and Greek’, in Baldi and Cuzzolin (2009) 65193Google Scholar
Cameron, A. (1980). ‘Poetae Novelli’, HSCP 84.127–75Google Scholar
Cameron, A. (1995). Callimachus and his Critics. PrincetonGoogle Scholar
Campana, P. (2012). Il ciclo di Gellio nel liber catulliano: Per una nuova lettura di Catull. 74, 80, 88, 89, 90, 91, 116. PisaGoogle Scholar
Campbell, D. A. (1960). ‘Galliambic poems of the 15th and 16th centuries: sources of the Bacchic Odes of the Pléiade School’, Bibliothèque d’Humanisme et Renaissance 22.490510Google Scholar
Canobbio, A. (2017). ‘Bi-partition and non-distinction of poetical genres in Martial’, in Bessone, and Fucecchi, (2017) 103116Google Scholar
Carson, A. (2000). Men in the Off Hours. New YorkGoogle Scholar
Carson, A. (2010). Nox. New YorkGoogle Scholar
Casson, L. (1971). Ships and Seamanship of the Ancient World. PrincetonGoogle Scholar
Cavarzere, A., Aloni, A. and Barchiesi, A. (eds.) (2001). Iambic Ideas: Essays on a Poetic Tradition from Archaic Greece to the Late Roman Empire. Lanham, Md.Google Scholar
Cavazza, S. (2013). ‘Negri, Palladio (Palladius FUSCUS)’, online at www.treccani.it, cf. DBI 78.157Google Scholar
Cazzaniga, E. (1944). Catulli Veronensis Liber. TurinGoogle Scholar
Celentano, M. S. (1991). ‘Il fiore reciso dall’ aratro: ambiguità di una similitudine (Catull. 11, 22–24)’, QUCC 37.83100Google Scholar
Cenerini, F. (1989). ‘O colonia quae cupis ponte ludere longo (Cat. 17): Cultura e politica’, Athenaeum 67.4155Google Scholar
Cerroni, M. (2003). ‘Guarini (Guarino), Alessandro, il Vecchio’, DBI 60.333–4Google Scholar
Chahoud, A. (2010). ‘Idiom(s) and literariness in classical literary criticism’, in Dickey, and Chahoud, (2010) 4264Google Scholar
Chahoud, A. (2016). ‘Varro’s Latin and Varro on Latin’, in Ferri, and Zago, (2016) 1532Google Scholar
Chahoud, A. (2018). ‘Verbal mosaics: speech patterns and generic stylization in Lucilius’, in Breed, B. W., Keitel, E. and Wallace, R. (eds.), Lucilius and Satire in Second-Century Rome 132161. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Cheney, P. and Hardie, P. (eds.) (2015). The Oxford History of Classical Reception in English Literature. Vol. 2 1558–1660. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Chevallier, R. (1977). ‘La géographie de Catulle’, Bulletin de l’Association Guillaume Budé 187–193Google Scholar
Christenson, D. (2000). Plautus: Amphitruo. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Cignolo, C. (2002). Terentiani Mauri de litteris, de syllabis, de metris. 1 Introduzione, testo critico e traduzione italiana. 2 Commento, appendici e indici. Bibliotheca Weidmanniana, Collectanea grammatica Latina, 2.1 and 2. Hildesheim/Zurich/New YorkGoogle Scholar
Citroni, M. (1975). M. Valerii Martialis Epigrammaton Liber Primus. FlorenceGoogle Scholar
Clare, R. J. (1997). ‘Catullus 64 and the Argonautica of Apollonius Rhodius: allusion and exemplarity’, PCPS 42.6088Google Scholar
Clark, C. (2008). ‘The poetics of manhood? Nonverbal behavior in Catullus 51’, CP 103.257–81Google Scholar
Clausen, W. V. (1964). ‘Callimachus and Latin poetry’, GRBS 5.181–96Google Scholar
Clausen, W. V. (1970). ‘Catullus and Callimachus’, CP 74.8594Google Scholar
Clausen, W. V. (1986). ‘Cicero and the new poetry’, HSCP 90.159–70Google Scholar
Clausen, W. V. (1987). Virgil’s Aeneid and the Tradition of Hellenistic Poetry. Berkeley/Los Angeles/LondonGoogle Scholar
Clausen, W. V. (1994). A Commentary on Virgil: Eclogues. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Clédat, L. (1890). Catulle. Manuscrit de St-Germain-des-Prés. ParisGoogle Scholar
Clemens, R. and Graham, T. (2007). Introduction to Manuscript Studies. Ithaca/LondonGoogle Scholar
Coleman, R. (1975). ‘Greek influence on Latin syntax’, Trans. Philol. Soc. 74.101–56Google Scholar
Coleman, R. (1977). Vergil: Eclogues. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Coleman, R. (1999). ‘Poetic diction, poetic discourse, and the poetic register’, in Adams and Mayer (1999) 2193Google Scholar
Commager, S. (1962). The Odes of Horace: A Critical Study. New HavenGoogle Scholar
Connolly, J. (2007). ‘Virile tongues: rhetoric and masculinity’, in Dominik, W. and Hall, J. (eds.), A Companion to Roman Rhetoric 8396. Chichester/Malden, Mass.Google Scholar
Connor, P. J. (1974). ‘Catullus 8: the lover’s conflict’, Antichthon 8.93–6Google Scholar
Contarino, R. (1986). ‘Dal Pozzo, Francesco (detto il Puteolano)’, DBI 32.213–16Google Scholar
Conte, G. B. (1986). The Rhetoric of Imitation. Genre and Poetic Memory in Virgil and Other Latin Poets. IthacaGoogle Scholar
Copley, F. C. (1957). Catullus: The Complete Poetry. Ann ArborGoogle Scholar
Corbeill, A. (1996). Controlling Laughter: Political Humor in the Late Roman Republic. PrincetonGoogle Scholar
Corbeill, A. (2004). Nature Embodied: Gesture in Ancient Rome. PrincetonGoogle Scholar
Corbeill, A. (2010). ‘Gender studies’, in Barchiesi, and Scheidel, (2010) 220–33Google Scholar
Corbeill, A. (2015). Sexing the World: Grammatical Gender and Biological Sex in Ancient Rome. PrincetonGoogle Scholar
Cornell, T. J. (ed.) (2013). The Fragments of the Roman Historians. Vols. 1–3. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Corradino dall’Aglio, G. F. (1738). Cajus Valerius Catullus in integrum restitutus. VeniceGoogle Scholar
Courtney, E. (1985). ‘Three poems of Catullus’, BICS 32.85100Google Scholar
Courtney, E. (1995). Musa Lapidaria. A Selection of Latin Verse Inscriptions. AtlantaGoogle Scholar
Courtney, E. (1996–97). ‘Catullus’ yacht (or was it?)’, CJ 92.113–22Google Scholar
Courtney, E. (2003). The Fragmentary Latin Poets. (Revision of 1st edn., 1993.) OxfordGoogle Scholar
Cowan, R. (2015). ‘On not being Archilochus properly: Cato, Catullus and the idea of iambos’, MD 74.952Google Scholar
Crabbe, A. (1977). ‘ignoscenda quidem … Catullus 64 and the fourth Georgic’, CQ 27.342–51Google Scholar
Crawford, M. H. (1996). Roman Statutes. 2 vols. BICS Supplement 64. LondonGoogle Scholar
Cremona, V. (1958). ‘Problemi di ortografia catulliana’, Aevum 32.401–33Google Scholar
Crowther, N. B. (1970). ‘ΟΙ ΝΕΩΤΕΡΟΙ, poetae novi, and cantores Euphorionis’, CQ 20.322–7Google Scholar
Crowther, N. B. (1979). ‘Cantores Euphorionis: a reassessment’, LCM 4.123–5Google Scholar
Csapodi, C., and Csapodi-Gárdonyi, K. (1969). Biblioteca Corviniana. The Library of King Matthias Corvinus of Hungary. Translated from German by Z. Horn. ShannonGoogle Scholar
Cugusi, P. (1996). Aspetti letterari dei ‘Carmina Latina Epigraphica’. BolognaGoogle Scholar
Cunningham, I. C. (1983). ‘An Italian Catullus. Edinburgh, Nat. Lib. of Scotland, Adv. MS. 18.5.2’, Scriptorium 37.122–5Google Scholar
Curran, L. C. (1966). ‘Vision and reality in Propertius 1.3’, YCS 19.189207Google Scholar
Damon, C. (1992). ‘Statius Silvae 4.9: libertas Decembris?’, ICS 17.301–8Google Scholar
D’Angour, A. (2000). ‘Catullus 107: a Callimachean rendering’, CQ 50.615–18Google Scholar
D’Angour, A. (2006). ‘Conquering love: Sappho 31 and Catullus 51’, CQ 56.297300Google Scholar
David-de Palacio, M.-F. (2005). Reviviscences romaines. La latinité au miroir de l’esprit fin-de-siècle. BernGoogle Scholar
Davies, M. (1995). Aldus Manutius: Printer and Publisher of Renaissance Venice. LondonGoogle Scholar
de Hamel, C. (2018). Making Medieval Manuscripts. OxfordGoogle Scholar
de la Mare, A. C. (1973). The Handwriting of Italian Humanists. Vol. 1. OxfordGoogle Scholar
de la Mare, A. C. (1976). ‘The return of Petronius to Italy’, in Alexander, J. J. G. and Gibson, M. T. (eds.), Medieval Learning and Literature. Essays Presented to Richard William Hunt 220–51. OxfordGoogle Scholar
de la Mare, A. C. (1985). ‘New research on humanistic scribes in Florence’, in Garzelli, A., Miniatura fiorentina del rinascimento 1440–1525: un primo censimento (Inventari e Cataloghi Toscani 18 and 19) 1.393600Google Scholar
de la Mare, A. C. (1996). ‘Vespasiano da Bisticci as producer of classical manuscripts in fifteenth-century Florence’, in Chavannes-Mazal, C. A. and Smith, M. M. (eds.), Medieval Manuscripts of the Latin Classics: Production and Use 166207. Los Altos Hills/LondonGoogle Scholar
de la Mare, A. C., and Thomson, D. F. S. (1973). ‘Poggio’s earliest manuscript?’, Italia Medioevo e Umanistica 16.179–95Google Scholar
de la Mare, A. C., and Nuvoloni, L. (2009). The Handwriting of the Italian Humanists. Vol. 2: Bartolomeo Sanvito: The Life and Work of a Renaissance Scribe. ParisGoogle Scholar
Delattre, D. (ed.) (2007). Philodème de Gadara sur la musique livre IV. ParisGoogle Scholar
Della Corte, F. (1976). Personaggi catulliani. 2nd edn. FirenzeGoogle Scholar
Della Corte, F. (1989). ‘Tre poeti traducono Catullo’, Aufidus 7.159–67Google Scholar
Dench, E. (2005). Romulus’ Asylum: Roman Identities from the Age of Alexander to the Age of Hadrian. OxfordGoogle Scholar
De Robertis, T. (2016). ‘I primi anni della scrittura umanistica’, in Black, et al. (2016) 5585Google Scholar
De Robertis, T., Tanturli, G., and Zamponi, S. (2008). Coluccio Salutati e l’invenzione dell’umanesimo. FlorenceGoogle Scholar
Deuling, J. K. (1999). ‘Catullus and Mamurra’, Mnemosyne 52.188–94Google Scholar
De Vaan, M. (2008). Etymological Dictionary of Latin and the Other Italic Languages. Leiden Indo-European etymological dictionary series, 7. Leiden/BostonGoogle Scholar
Devine, A. M. and Stephens, L. D. (2006). Latin Word Order: Structured Meaning and Information. OxfordGoogle Scholar
De Vries, [S. G.] (1911). ‘Vossius (Isaac)’, Nieuw Nederlandsch Biografisch Woordenboek 1.1519–25Google Scholar
Dewar, M. (1991). Statius Thebaid IX. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Dewar, M. (2014). Leisured Resistance: Villas, Literature and Politics in the Roman World. LondonGoogle Scholar
Dibdin, T. F. (1827). An Introduction to the Knowledge of Rare and Valuable Editions of the Greek and Latin Classics. Vols. 1–2. LondonGoogle Scholar
Dickey, E. (2000). ‘O dee ree PIE: the vocative problems of Latin words ending in –eus’, Glotta 76.3249Google Scholar
Dickey, E. (2002). Latin Forms of Address from Plautus to Apuleius. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Dickey, E. (2012). ‘How to say “please” in Classical Latin’, CQ 62.731–48Google Scholar
Dickey, E. and Chahoud, A. (eds.) (2010). Colloquial and Literary Latin. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Dixon, S. (2001). Reading Roman Women: Sources, Genres and Real Life. LondonGoogle Scholar
Doering, F. W. (1788–92). C. Valerii Catulli carmina varietate lectionis et perpetua adnotatione illustrata. 2 vols. LeipzigGoogle Scholar
Doering, F. W. (1826). C. Valerius Catullus ex editione Frid. Guil. Doeringi, rev. J. Naudet. ParisGoogle Scholar
Doering, F. W. (1834). C. Valerii Catulli Veronensis Carmina. AltonaGoogle Scholar
Dominik, W. J. (1994) Speech and Rhetoric in Statius’ Thebaid. HildesheimGoogle Scholar
Dominik, W. J., Newlands, C. E. and Gervais, K. (eds.) (2015). The Brill Companion to Statius. LeidenGoogle Scholar
Döpp, S. (2005). ‘Munera et Musarum et Veneris: Catull c. 68 in der Entwicklungsgeschichte der römischen Elegie’, in Tar, I. and Meyer, P. (eds.), Studia Catulliana in memoriam Stephani Caroli Horváth (1931–1966), Acta Universitatis Szegediensis Acta Antiqua et Archaeologica xxix 519. SzegedGoogle Scholar
Douglas, A. E. (1966). Cicero: Brutus. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Dousa, J. the Elder (1581). Praecidanea pro Q. Valerio Catullo. AntwerpGoogle Scholar
Dousa, J. the Younger (1592a). Catullus, Tibullus, Propertius. LeidenGoogle Scholar
Dousa, J. (1592b). In Catullum, Tibullum, Propertium Coniectanea et Notae. LeidenGoogle Scholar
Drinkwater, M. O. (2013). ‘Militia amoris: fighting in love’s army’, in Thorsen (2013) 194206Google Scholar
Duckett, E. S. (1925). Catullus in English Poetry. Northampton, Mass.Google Scholar
Duhigg, J. (1967). ‘The elegiac metre of Catullus’, Antichthon 5.5767Google Scholar
Dunn, D. (2016a). The Poems of Catullus. LondonGoogle Scholar
Dunn, D. (2016b). Catullus’ Bedspread: The Life of Rome’s Most Erotic Poet. LondonGoogle Scholar
Du Quesnay, I. M. Le M. (1976). ‘Virgil’s Fifth Eclogue’, PVS 16.1841Google Scholar
Du Quesnay, I. M. Le (1977). ‘Vergil’s Fourth Eclogue’, PLLS 1.2599Google Scholar
Du Quesnay, I. M. Le (2012). ‘Three problems in Poem 66’, in Du Quesnay, and Woodman, (2012) 153–83Google Scholar
Du Quesnay, I. M. Le (2017). ‘Contextualising Catullus: a re-examination of 66.1–14’, in Woodman, A. J. and Wisse, J. (eds.), Word and Context in Latin Poetry. Studies in Memory of David West (PCPS/CCJ Suppl. 40) 1342. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Du Quesnay, I. and Woodman, T. [= A. J.] (eds.) (2012). Catullus: Poems, Books, Readers. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Dyck, A. R. (2013). Cicero Pro Marco Caelio. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Dyson[= Dyson Hejduk], J. (2007). ‘The Lesbia Poems’, in Skinner, (2007a) 254–75Google Scholar
Dyson[= Dyson Hejduk], J. (2008). Clodia: A Sourcebook. Norman, Okla.Google Scholar
Dyson, S. L. (1985). ‘The Transpadane frontier’, in The Creation of the Roman Frontier 4286. PrincetonGoogle Scholar
Eckstein, F. A. (1877). ‘Doering, F. W.’, ADB 5.289–91Google Scholar
Edmunds, L. (2001). Intertextuality and the Reading of Latin Poetry. Baltimore/LondonGoogle Scholar
Edwards, C. (1993). The Politics of Immorality in Ancient Rome. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Edwards, M. (1989). ‘Greek into Latin: a note on Catullus and Sappho’, Latomus 48.590600Google Scholar
Edwards, M. (1992). ‘Apples, blood and flowers: Sapphic bridal imagery in Catullus’, in Deroux, C. (ed.), Studies in Latin Literature 6.181203. BrusselsGoogle Scholar
Eisenhut, W. (1983). Catulli Veronensis Liber. LeipzigGoogle Scholar
Elder, J. P. (1963). Review of Fordyce (1961), CP 58.199203Google Scholar
Eliot, T. S. (1928). The Sacred Wood: Essays on Poetry and Criticism. 2nd edn. LondonGoogle Scholar
Ellis, R. (1867). Catulli Veronensis Liber. (1st edn.) OxfordGoogle Scholar
Ellis, R. (1871). The Poems and Fragments of Catullus. LondonGoogle Scholar
Ellis, R. (1876). A Commentary on Catullus. (1st edn.) OxfordGoogle Scholar
Ellis, R. (1878). Catulli Veronensis Liber. (2nd edn.) OxfordGoogle Scholar
Ellis, R. (1889). A Commentary on Catullus. (2nd edn.) OxfordGoogle Scholar
Ellis, R. (1904). Catulli Carmina. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Evrard, E. (2005). ‘Polymètres et épigrammes de Catulle. Analyse quantitative du vocabulaire et de la syntaxe des propositions’, in Poignault, R. (ed.), Présence de Catulle et des elégiaques latins (Actes du colloque tenu à Tours, 2830 novembre 2002) 6583. Clermont-FerrandGoogle Scholar
Evrard-Gillis, J. (1976). La récurrence lexicale dans l’oeuvre de Catulle. Etude linguistique. ParisGoogle Scholar
Facchini Tosi, C. (1983). La ripetizione lessicale nei poeti latini: Venti anni di studi (1960–1980). BolognaGoogle Scholar
Fain, G. L. (2008). Writing Epigrams: The Art of Composition in Catullus, Callimachus and Martial. (Collection Latomus 312.) BrusselsGoogle Scholar
Fantuzzi, M. and Hunter, R. (2004). Tradition and Innovation in Hellenistic Poetry. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Farrell, J. (1991). Vergil’s Georgics and the Traditions of Ancient Epic. New York/OxfordGoogle Scholar
Farron, S. (1993). Vergil’s Aeneid: A Poem of Grief and Love. Mnemosyne Suppl. 122. Leiden/New York/CologneGoogle Scholar
Fedeli, P. (1983). Catullus’ Carmen 61. (Orig. Italian 1972.) AmsterdamGoogle Scholar
Fedeli, P. (1994). Sexti Properti elegiarum libri IV. (2nd edn.) Stuttgart/LeipzigGoogle Scholar
Feeney, D. (1992).‘“Shall I compare thee … ?”: Catullus 68b and the limits of analogy’, in T. [=A. J.] Woodman andPowell, J. (eds.), Author and Audience in Latin Literature 3344. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Feeney, D. (2007). Caesar’s Calendar: Ancient Time and the Beginnings of History. Berkeley/Los Angeles/LondonGoogle Scholar
Feeney, D. (2010). ‘Fathers and sons: the Manlii Torquati and family continuity in Catullus and Horace’, in Kraus, C. S., Marincola, J., Pelling, C. (eds.), Ancient Historiography and its Contexts: Studies in Honour of A. J. Woodman 205–23. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Feeney, D. (2012). ‘Representation and the materiality of the book in the polymetrics’, in Du Quesnay, and Woodman, (2012) 2947Google Scholar
Feeney, D. (2013). ‘Catullus 61: epithalamium and comparison’, CCJ [PCPS] 59.7097Google Scholar
Feldherr, A. (2000). ‘Non inter nota sepulchra: Catullus 101 and Roman funerary ritual’, CA 19.209–31 (= Gaisser (2007a) 399–426)Google Scholar
Feldherr, A. (2007). ‘The intellectual climate’, in Skinner (2007a) 92110Google Scholar
Ferguson, J. (1956). ‘Catullus and Horace’, AJP 77.118Google Scholar
Ferguson, J. (1960). ‘Catullus and Ovid’, AJP 81.337–57Google Scholar
Ferguson, J. (1971–2). ‘Catullus and Virgil’, PVS 11.25–47Google Scholar
Fernandelli, M. (2015). Chartae laboriosae: Autore e lettore nei carmi maggiori di Catullo (c. 64 & 65). ParmaGoogle Scholar
Fernandes Pereira, B. (1991). As Orações de Obediência de Aquiles Estaço. CoimbraGoogle Scholar
Ferri, R. (2011). ‘The language of Latin epic and lyric poetry’, in Clackson, J. (ed.), A Companion to the Latin Language 344–66. Malden, Mass./OxfordGoogle Scholar
Ferri, R. and Zago, A. (eds.) (2016). The Latin of the Grammarians: Reflections about Language in the Roman World. TurnhoutGoogle Scholar
Fiesoli, G. (2000). La genesi del lachmannismo. TavarnuzzeGoogle Scholar
Fiesoli, G. (2006). ‘Giovannantonio Volpi lettore di Catullo: i modelli, il metodo, la fortuna’, Seicento e Settecento 1.144Google Scholar
Fitzgerald, W. (1988). ‘Power and impotence in Horace’s Epodes’, Ramus 17.176–91 (= Lowrie, M. (ed.) (2009), Horace: Odes and Epodes 141–59. Oxford)Google Scholar
Fitzgerald, W. (1995). Catullan Provocations: Lyric Poetry and the Drama of Position. Berkeley/Los Angeles/LondonGoogle Scholar
Fitzgerald, W. (2007). Martial: The World of the Epigram. ChicagoGoogle Scholar
Flemming, R. (2010). ‘Sexuality’, in Barchiesi and Scheidel (2010) 797814Google Scholar
Fletcher, G. B. A. (1968). ‘Lucretiana’, Latomus 27.884–93Google Scholar
Fletcher, H. G., III. (1988). New Aldine Studies: Documentary Essays on the Life and Work of Aldus Manutius. San FranciscoGoogle Scholar
Flores, E. (2000). Quinto Ennio Annali (libri I–VIII): Introduzione, testo critico con apparato, traduzione. Vol. 1. NaplesGoogle Scholar
Flores, E. et al. (2002). Quinto Ennio Annali (libri I–VIII): Commentari (Book 7: Tomasco, D.). Vol. 2. NaplesGoogle Scholar
Floridi, L. (2007). Stratone di Sardi. Epigrammi. AlessandriaGoogle Scholar
Floridi, L. (2014). Lucillio. Epigrammi. Berlin/BostonGoogle Scholar
Flynn, L. (2011). Profit and Loss. London.Google Scholar
Flynn, L. (2017). The Radio. London.Google Scholar
Fo, A. (2002). ‘Ancora sulla presenza dei classici nella poesia italiana contemporanea’, Semicerchio: rivista di poesia comparata 26–27.2452Google Scholar
Fo, A. (ed.) (2018). Gaio Valerio Catullo: Le poesie. Turin.Google Scholar
Foley, H. P. (1978). ‘“Reverse similes” and sex roles in the Odyssey’, Arethusa 11.726Google Scholar
Fontaine, M. (2010). Funny Words in Plautine Comedy. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Ford, P. (1978). ‘Leonora and Neaera: a consideration of George Buchanan’s erotic poetry’, Bibliothèque d’humanisme et renaissance 40.513–24. GenevaGoogle Scholar
Ford, P. (1980). ‘George Buchanan’s court poetry and the Pléiade’, French Studies 34.137–52Google Scholar
Ford, P. (1982). George Buchanan: Prince of Poets. AberdeenGoogle Scholar
Ford, P. (1997). ‘Jean Salmon Macrin’s Epithalamiorum liber and the joys of conjugal love’, in Ford, P. and De Smet, I. (eds.), Eros et Priapus: érotisme et obscénité dans la littérature néo-latine 6584. GenevaGoogle Scholar
Ford, P. (2011). ‘Obscenity and the Lex Catulliana: uses and abuses of Catullus 16 in French Renaissance poetry’, in Roberts, H., Peureux, G. and Wajeman, L. (eds.), Obscénités Renaissantes 4860. GenevaGoogle Scholar
Ford, P. (2013). The Judgment of Palaemon. LeidenGoogle Scholar
Ford, P., Bloemendal, J. and Fantazzi, C. (eds.) (2014). Brill’s Encyclopedia of the Neo-Latin World. LeidenGoogle Scholar
Fordyce, C. J. (1961). Catullus. A Commentary. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Fordyce, C. J. (1973). Catullus: A Commentary. (2nd edn.) OxfordGoogle Scholar
Forster, L. (1969). The Icy Fire: Five Studies in European Petrarchism. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Forsyth, P. Y. (1991). ‘The thematic unity of Catullus 11’, CW 84.457–64Google Scholar
Foucault, M. (1990). History of Sexuality. Vol. 1. Repr. New YorkGoogle Scholar
Fowler, D. P. (1987). ‘Vergil on killing virgins’, in Whitby, M., Hardie, P. and Whitby, M. (eds.), Homo viator: Classical Essays for John Bramble 185–98. Bristol/Oak Park, Ill.Google Scholar
Fowler, D. P. (1989). ‘First thoughts on closure: problems and prospects’, MD 22.75122 (= (2000) 239–83)Google Scholar
Fowler, D. P. (2000). Roman Constructions. Readings in Postmodern Latin. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Fowler, D. P. (2002a). Lucretius on Atomic Motion. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Fowler, D. P. (2002b). ‘Masculinity under threat? The poetics and politics of inspiration in Latin poetry’, in Spentzou, E. and Fowler, D. P. (eds.), Cultivating the Muse: Struggles for Power and Inspiration in Classical Literature 141–59. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Fox, M. (2015). ‘The bisexuality of Orpheus’, in Masterson, Sorkin and Robson, (2015) 335–51Google Scholar
Fraenkel, E. (1955). ‘Vesper adest (Catullus LXII)’, JRS 45.18Google Scholar
Fraenkel, E. (1956). ‘Catulls Trostgedicht für Calvus’, WS 69.278–88Google Scholar
Fraenkel, E. (1962). Review of Fordyce (1961), Gnomon 34.253–63Google Scholar
Francese, C. (2001). Parthenius of Nicaea and Roman Poetry. Frankfurt/New YorkGoogle Scholar
Franck, J. (1881). ‘Johann von Speyer’, ADB 14.472–5Google Scholar
Fredricksmeyer, E. A. (1985). ‘Catullus to Caecilius on good poetry (c. 35)’, AJP 106.213–21Google Scholar
Frenz, B. and Stelte, I. (2012). ‘Catullus’, in Walde, C. (ed.), The Reception of Classical Literature (Brill New Pauly Supplement 5) 92102. Leiden/BostonGoogle Scholar
Friedrich, G. (1908). Catulli Veronensis liber. Leipzig/BerlinGoogle Scholar
Fuhrer, T. (1994). ‘The question of genre and metre in Catullus’ polymetrics’, QUCC 46.95108Google Scholar
Fulkerson, L. (2013). ‘Seruitium amoris: the interplay of dominance, gender and poetry’, in Thorsen (2013) 180–93Google Scholar
Gaca, K. L. (2008). ‘Reinterpreting the Homeric simile of Iliad 16.7–11: the girl and her mother in ancient Greek warfare’, AJP 129.145–71Google Scholar
Gaisser, J. H. (1977). ‘Mythological exempla in Propertius 1.2 and 1.15’, AJP 98.381–91Google Scholar
Gaisser, J. H. (1992). ‘Catullus’, in Brown, V. (ed. in chief), Catalogus Translationum et Commentariorum: Mediaeval and Renaissance Latin Translations and Commentaries vii.197292. Washington, DCGoogle Scholar
Gaisser, J. H. (1993). Catullus and his Renaissance Readers. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Gaisser, J. H. (1995). ‘Threads in the labyrinth: competing views and voices in Catullus 64’, AJP 116.579616Google Scholar
Gaisser, J. H. (ed.) (2001). Catullus in English. BasingstokeGoogle Scholar
Gaisser, J. H. (ed.) (2007a) Oxford Readings in Classical Studies: Catullus. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Gaisser, J. H. (2007b). ‘Catullus in the Renaissance’, in Skinner (2007a) 439–60Google Scholar
Gaisser, J. H. (2009). Catullus . Blackwell Introductions to the Classical World. ChichesterGoogle Scholar
Gaisser, J. H. (2015). ‘From Giovanni Pontano to Pierio Valeriano: five Renaissance commentators on Latin erotic poetry’, in Kraus, C. S., Stray, C. (eds.), Classical Commentaries: Explorations in a Scholarly Genre 275–98. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Gale, M. R. (2005). Review of Nappa (2001) and Skinner (2003), CR 55.511–14Google Scholar
Gale, M. R. (2007). ‘Lucretius and previous poetic traditions’, in Gillespie, S. and Hardie, P. (eds.), The Cambridge Companion to Lucretius 5975. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Gale, M. R. (2012). ‘Putting on the yoke of necessity: myth, intertextuality and moral agency in Catullus 68’, in Du Quesnay, and Woodman, (2012) 184211Google Scholar
Gale, M. R. (2018). ‘Between pastoral and elegy: the discourse of desire in Catullus 45’, Paideia 73.15891604Google Scholar
Gamberini, F. (1983). Stylistic Theory and Practice in the Younger Pliny. New YorkGoogle Scholar
Garcea, A. (2012). Caesar’s De Analogia. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Gardner, H. H. (2007). ‘Ariadne’s lament: the semiotic impulse of Catullus 64’, TAPA 137.147–79Google Scholar
Gärtner, T. (2007). ‘Kritisch-exegetische Überlegungen zu Catullgedichten’, Acta Ant. Hung. 47.141Google Scholar
Gebhardus, I. (1621). Cai Valeri Catulli, Albi Tibulli, Sexti Aureli Properti Quae exstant. Frankfurt am MainGoogle Scholar
Geldner, F. (1974). ‘Johann von Speyer’, NDB 10.567–8Google Scholar
Ghiselli, A. (2005). Catullo: il passer di Lesbia e altri scritti catulliani. BolognaGoogle Scholar
Giardina, G. (2011). ‘Per il testo e la interpretazione di Catullo 1.9-10’, Prometheus 37.5660Google Scholar
Gibson, B. (2006). Statius, Silvae 5. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Gibson, R. K. and Morello, R. (2012). Reading the Letters of Pliny the Younger: An Introduction. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Gibson, R. K. and Steel, C. (2010). ‘The indistinct literary careers of Cicero and Pliny the Younger’, in Hardie, P. and Moore, H. (eds.), Classical Literary Careers and their Reception 118–37. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Giesecke, A. L. (2000). Atoms, Ataraxy, and Allusion. Cross-generic Imitation of the De Rerum Natura in Early Augustan Poetry. Zurich/New YorkGoogle Scholar
Ginguené, P.-L. (1813). ‘Corradino dall’Aglio (Jean-François)’, in Michaud, L.-G. (ed.), Biographie universelle ancienne et moderne (Paris, 1811–1828, 54 vols.). Vol. 9.647–8Google Scholar
Girot, J.-E. (2012). Marc-Antoine Muret: Des Isles Fortunées au rivage romain. GenevaGoogle Scholar
Gleason, M. (1995). Making Men: Sophists and Self-presentation in Ancient Rome. PrincetonGoogle Scholar
Godwin, J. (1995). Catullus: Poems 61–68. WarminsterGoogle Scholar
Godwin, J. (2008). Reading Catullus. BristolGoogle Scholar
Goldberg, C. (1992). Carmina Priapea: Einleitung, Übersetzung, Interpretation und Kommentar. HeidelbergGoogle Scholar
Goldberg, S. M. (2005). Constructing Literature in the Roman Republic. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Goldberg, S. M. (2011). ‘Roman comedy gets back to basics’, JRS 101.206–21Google Scholar
Goldhill, S. (2001). ‘The erotic eye: visual stimulation and cultural conflict’, in Goldhill, S. (ed.), Being Greek Under Rome 154–94. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Goldsmith, N. (2013). Shaggy Crowns: Ennius’ Annales and Virgil’s Aeneid. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Goold, G. P. (1958). ‘A new text of Catullus’, Phoenix 12.93116Google Scholar
Goold, G. P. (1973). C. Valerii Carmina. Groton, Mass.Google Scholar
Goold, G. P. (1974). ‘O patrona virgo’, in Evans, J. A. S. (ed.), Polis and Imperium 253–64. TorontoGoogle Scholar
Goold, G. P. (1983/1989). Catullus. (Rev. edn. 1989). LondonGoogle Scholar
Gow, A. S. F. and Page, D. L. (1965). The Greek Anthology: Hellenistic Epigrams. 2 vols. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Gow, A. S. F (1968). The Greek Anthology: The Garland of Philip and Some Contemporary Epigrams. 2 vols. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Gowers, E. (2012). Horace: Satires Book I. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Gowers, E. (2016). ‘Girls will be boys and boys will be girls, or, what is the gender of Horace’s Epodes?’, in Bather, P. and Stocks, C. (eds.), Horace’s Epodes: Context, Intertexts, and Reception 103–30. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Grafton, A. (1983). Joseph Scaliger: A Study in the History of Classical Scholarship. Vol. 1 Textual Criticism and Exegesis. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Granarolo, J. (1971). D’Ennius à Catulle. Recherches sur les antécédents romains de la ‘poésie nouvelle’. ParisGoogle Scholar
Grant, J. N. ed. trans. (2017). Aldus Manutius: Humanism and the Latin Classics, The I Tatti Renaissance Library 78. Cambridge, Mass./LondonGoogle Scholar
Gratwick, A. S. (1991). ‘Catullus XXXII’, CQ 41.547–51Google Scholar
Gratwick, A. S. (2002). ‘Vale, Patrona Virgo: the text of Catullus 1.9’, CQ 52.305–20Google Scholar
Graver, M. R. (1998). ‘The manhandling of Maecenas; Senecan abstractions of masculinity’, AJP 119 .60732Google Scholar
Grazzini, S. (2005). ‘La subscriptio del codice G di Catullo (Paris. lat. 14137)’, MD 55.163–71Google Scholar
Green, P. (2005). The Poems of Catullus: A Bilingual Edition Translated with Commentary. Berkeley/Los Angeles/LondonGoogle Scholar
Greene, E. (1995). ‘The Catullan ego: fragmentation and the erotic self’, AJP 116. 7793Google Scholar
Greene, E. (1997). ‘Journey to the remotest meadow: a reading of Catullus 11’, Intertexts 1.147–55Google Scholar
Greene, E. (1998). The Erotics of Domination: Male Desire and the Mistress in Latin Love Poetry. Baltimore/LondonGoogle Scholar
Greene, E. (1999). ‘Refiguring the female voice: Catullus translating Sappho’, Arethusa 32.118Google Scholar
Greene, E. (2006). ‘Catullus, Caesar and Roman masculine identity’, Antichthon 40.4964Google Scholar
Greene, E. (2007).‘Catullus and Sappho’, in Skinner (2007a) 131–50Google Scholar
Griffin, J. (1985). ‘The creation of characters in the Aeneid’, in id., Latin Poets and Roman Life 183–97. LondonGoogle Scholar
Griffith, J. G. (1983). ‘Catullus, Poem 4: a neglected interpretation revived’, Phoenix 37.123–8Google Scholar
Griffith, R. D. (1985). ‘Literary allusion in Virgil, Aeneid 9.435ff.’, Vergilius 31.40–4Google Scholar
Griffith, R. D. (1995). ‘Catullus’ Coma Berenices and Aeneas’ farewell to Dido’, TAPA 125.4759Google Scholar
Grillo, L. and Krebs, C. B. (eds.) (2017). The Cambridge Companion to the Writings of Julius Caesar. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Grossi Turchetti, M. L. (2004). Manoscritti datati della Biblioteca nazionale Braidense di Milano. FlorenceGoogle Scholar
Gruen, E. S. (1967). ‘Cicero and Licinius Calvus’, HSCP 71.215–33Google Scholar
Gruen, E. S. (1974). The Last Generation of the Roman Republic. Berkeley/Los Angeles/LondonGoogle Scholar
Guarini, A. (1521). Alexandri Guarini Ferrariensis in C. V. Catullum Veronensem per Baptistam Patrem Emendatum Expositiones. VeniceGoogle Scholar
Guépin, J. P. (1991). De Kunst van Janus Secundus. AmsterdamGoogle Scholar
Gutzwiller, K. (1998). Poetic Garlands. Hellenistic Garlands in Context. Berkeley/Los Angeles/LondonGoogle Scholar
Gutzwiller, K. (ed.) (2005). The New Posidippus: A Hellenistic Poetry Book. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Gutzwiller, K. (2012). ‘Catullus and the Garland of Meleager’, in Du Quesnay and Woodman (2012) 79111Google Scholar
Hale, W. G. (1896). ‘A new MS. of Catullus’, CR 10.314Google Scholar
Hale, W. G. (1897). ‘First annual report of the managing committee of the American School of Classical Studies in Rome’, AJA 1.568Google Scholar
Hale, W. G. (1898). ‘The “codex Romanus” of Catullus’, CR 12.447–9Google Scholar
Hale, W. G. (1899). ‘Der codex Romanus des Catullus’, Hermes 34.133–44Google Scholar
Hale, W. G. (1906). ‘Catullus once more’, CR 20.160–4Google Scholar
Hale, W. G. (1908). ‘The manuscripts of Catullus’, CP 3.233–56Google Scholar
Hale, W. G. (1910). ‘Benzo of Alexandria and Catullus’, CP 5.5665Google Scholar
Hale, W. G. (1922). ‘Stampini and Pascal on the Catullus manuscripts’, TAPA 53.103–12Google Scholar
Hallett, J. P. (1973). ‘The role of women in Roman Elegy: counter-cultural feminism’, Arethusa 6.103–24Google Scholar
Hallett, J. P. (1996). ‘Nec castrare velis meos libellos: sexual and poetic lusus in Catullus, Martial and the Carmina Priapea’, in Klodt, C. (ed.), Satura lanx: Festschrift für Werner A. Krenkel zum 70. Geburtstag 321–44. HildesheimGoogle Scholar
Hallett, J. P. and Skinner, M. B. (eds.) (1997). Roman Sexualities. PrincetonGoogle Scholar
Harder, A. (2012). Callimachus: Aetia. Vols. 1–2. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Hardie, A. (1983). Statius and the Silvae: Poets, Patrons, and Epideixis in the Graeco-Roman World. LiverpoolGoogle Scholar
Hardie, P. R. (1992). ‘Augustan poets and the mutability of Rome’, in Powell, A. (ed.), Roman Poetry and Propaganda in the Age of Augustus 5982. LondonGoogle Scholar
Hardie, P. R. (1994). Virgil: Aeneid, Book IX. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Hardie, P. R. (2012). ‘Virgil’s Catullan plots’, in Du Quesnay and Woodman (2012) 212–38Google Scholar
Harless, T. C. (1764). ‘Ioannes Franciscus Conradinus de Allio (d’Aglio)’, in id., De Vitis Philologorum Nostra Aetate Clarissimorum, 4 vols. (Bremen, 1764–72). Vol. 1.107–11Google Scholar
Harrington, K. P. (1923). Catullus and his Influence. LondonGoogle Scholar
Harris, B. F. (1980). ‘Bithynia: Roman sovereignty and the survival of Hellenism’, Aufstieg und Niedergang der römischen Welt 2.7.2.857901Google Scholar
Harrison, S. J. (2000). ‘The need for a new text of Catullus’, in Reitz, C. (ed.), Vom Text zum Buch 6379. St. KatharinenGoogle Scholar
Harrison, S. J. (2001). ‘Some generic problems in Horace’s Epodes: or, on (not) being Archilochus’, in Cavarzere, Aloni and Barchiesi (2001) 165–86Google Scholar
Harrison, S. J. (2003). ‘Sparrows and apples: the unity of Catullus 2’, SCI 22.8592Google Scholar
Harrison, S. J. (2004). ‘Altering Attis: ethnicity, gender and genre in Catullus 63’, Mnemosyne 57.520–33 (= Nauta and Harder (2005) 11–24)Google Scholar
Harrison, S. J. (2009). ‘Catullus in New Zealand’, in Harrison, S. J. (ed.), Living Classics: Greece and Rome in Contemporary Poetry in English 295323. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Harrison, S. J. (2015). ‘Menander’s Thais and Catullus’ Lesbia’, CQ 65.887–8Google Scholar
Harrison, S. J. (forthcoming). ‘Roman traces: Michael Longley and Latin poetry’, in Tyler, M. (ed.), The Imaginary Oarsman: Essays on the Poetry of Michael Longley. Syracuse, NYGoogle Scholar
Haupt, M. (1837). Quaestiones Catullianae. LeipzigGoogle Scholar
Havelock, E. A. (1939). The Lyric Genius of Catullus. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Hawkins, S. (2011). ‘Catullus’ Furius’, CP 106.254–60Google Scholar
Hawkins, S. (2012). ‘On the Oscanism salaputium in Catullus 53’, TAPA 142.329–53Google Scholar
Heath, J. R. (1989). ‘Catullus 11: along for the ride’, in Deroux, C. (ed.), Studies in Latin Literature and Roman History 5.98116. BrusselsGoogle Scholar
Heine, R. (1975). ‘Zu Catull c. 35’, in Heine, R. (ed.), Catull 6284. DarmstadtGoogle Scholar
Henderson, J. (1989). ‘Satire writes “Woman”: gendersong’, PCPS 35.5080Google Scholar
Henderson, J. (1999). ‘Suck it and see: Horace, Epode 8’, in id., Writing Down Rome: Satire, Comedy, and Other Offences in Latin Poetry 93113. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Henderson, J. (2006). ‘Oxford Reds’: Classic Commentaries on Latin Classics: R. G. Austin on Cicero and Virgil, C. J. Fordyce on Catullus, R. G. and R. G. M. Nisbet on Cicero. LondonGoogle Scholar
Herrmann, L. (1957). Les deux livres de Catulle. BrusselsGoogle Scholar
Hersch, K. K. (2007). ‘Violentilla victa’, Arethusa 40.197205Google Scholar
Heusch, H. (1954). Das Archaische in der Sprache Catulls. BonnGoogle Scholar
Heyse, T. (1855). Catull’s Buch der Lieder in deutscher Nachbildung. BerlinGoogle Scholar
Heyworth, S. J. (1995). ‘Dividing poems’, in Pecere, O. and Reeve, M. D. (eds.), Formative Stages of Classical Traditions: Latin Texts from Antiquity to the Renaissance 117–48. SpoletoGoogle Scholar
Heyworth, S. J. (2001). ‘Catullian iambics, Catullian iambi’, in Carvarzere, Aloni and Barchiesi, (2001) 117–40Google Scholar
Heyworth, S. J. (2007). Sexti Properti Elegos. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Heyworth, S. J. (2008). Review of Trappes-Lomax (2007), BMCR 2008.09.32Google Scholar
Heyworth, S. J. (2015). ‘Catullus 62, 67 and other Catullan dialogues’, in Kiss, (2015a) 129–51Google Scholar
Hinds, S. (1998). Allusion and Intertext. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Hinds, S. (2007). ‘Ovid’s Martial, Martial’s Ovid’, JRS 97.113–54Google Scholar
Hofmann, J. B. and Ricottilli, L. (2003). La lingua d’uso latina. Augmented translation of J. B. Hofmann, Lateinische Umgangssprache (3rd edn., Heidelberg 1951) by L. Ricottilli. 3rd edn. (1st edn. 1980). BolognaGoogle Scholar
Hofmann, J. B. and Santyr, A. (1965). Lateinische Syntax und Stilistik (Handbuch der Altertumswissennschaft 2.2.2). MunichGoogle Scholar
Hollis, A. S. (1992). ‘The nuptial rite in Catullus 66 and Callimachus’ poetry for Berenice’, ZPE 91.21–8Google Scholar
Hollis, A. S. (2007). Fragments of Roman Poetry c. 60 BC–AD 20. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Holmes, B. (2012). Gender: Antiquity and its Legacy. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Holoka, J. P. (1985). Gaius Valerius Catullus: A Select Bibliography. New York/LondonGoogle Scholar
Holzberg, N. (2000). ‘Lesbia, the poet, and the two faces of Sappho: “womanufacture” in Catullus’, PCPS 46.2844Google Scholar
Holzberg, N. (2002a). Catull. Der Dichter und sein erotisches Werk. MunichGoogle Scholar
Holzberg, N. (2002b). Martial und das antike Epigramm. DarmstadtGoogle Scholar
Holzberg, N. (2006). ‘Staging the reader response: Ovid and his “contemporary audience” in Ars and Remedia’, in Gibson, R., Green, S. and Sharrock, A. (eds.), The Art of Love. Bimillenial Essays on Ovid’s Ars Amatoria and Remedia Amoris 4053. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Holzberg, N. (2019). ‘Catullus as epigrammatist’, in Henriksén, C. (ed.), A Companion to Ancient Epigram 441–57. HobokenGoogle Scholar
Hopkins, D. and Martindale, C. (eds.) (2012). The Oxford History of Classical Reception in English Literature. Vol. 3: 1660–1790. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Horsfall, N. (2003). Virgil, Aeneid 11: A Commentary. Leiden/BostonGoogle Scholar
Howell, P. (1980). A Commentary on Book 1 of the Epigrams of Martial. LondonGoogle Scholar
Hubbard, T. K. (1983). ‘The Catullan libellus’, Philologus 127.218–37Google Scholar
Hubbard, T. K. (1998). The Pipes of Pan: Intertextuality and Literary Filiation in the Pastoral Tradition from Theocritus to Milton. Ann ArborGoogle Scholar
Hubbard, T. K. (2000). ‘Horace and Catullus: the case of the suppressed precursor in Odes 1.22 and 1.32’, CW 94.2537Google Scholar
Hubbard, T. K. (2005). ‘The Catullan libelli revisited’, Philologus 149.253–77Google Scholar
Hubbard, T. K. (ed.) (2014). A Companion to Greek and Roman Sexualities. ChichesterGoogle Scholar
Hunter, R. (1996). Theocritus and the Archaeology of Greek Poetry. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Hunter, R. (2006). The Shadow of Callimachus. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Hutchinson, B. (2016). Lateness and Modern European Literature. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Hutchinson, G. O. (1998). Cicero’s Correspondence: A Literary Study. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Hutchinson, G. O. (2001). ‘The date of De Rerum Natura’, CQ 51.150–62Google Scholar
Hutchinson, G. O. (2003). ‘The Catullan corpus, Greek epigrams, and the poetry of objects’, CQ 53.206–21 (= (2008) 109–30)Google Scholar
Hutchinson, G. O. (2008). Talking Books: Readings in Hellenistic and Roman Books of Poetry. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Hutchinson, G. O. (2012). ‘Booking lovers: desire and design in Catullus’, in Du Quesnay, and Woodman, (2012) 4878Google Scholar
Infelise, M. (2007). ‘Manuzio, Aldo, il Vecchio’, DBI 69.236–45Google Scholar
Ingleheart, J. (2003). ‘Catullus 2 and 3: a programmatic pair of Sapphic epigrams’, Mnemosyne 56.551–65Google Scholar
Ingleheart, J. (2014). ‘Play on the proper names of individuals in the Catullan corpus: wordplay, the iambic tradition, and the late Republican culture of public abuse’, JRS 104.5172Google Scholar
Jackson, A. (2003). catullus for children. AucklandGoogle Scholar
Jackson, A. (2009). ‘Catullus in the playground’, in Harrison, S. J. (ed.), Living Classics: Greece and Rome in Contemporary Poetry in English 8296. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Jackson, A. (2014). I, Clodia and Other Portraits. AucklandGoogle Scholar
Jackson, G. and Tomasco, D. (eds.) (2009). Quinto Ennio, Annali (Frammenti di collocazione incerta): Commentari. Con un’avvertenza di E. Flores. NaplesGoogle Scholar
Jakobson, R. (1959). ‘On linguistic aspects of translation’, in Brower, R. A. (ed.), On Translation 232–9. Cambridge, Mass.Google Scholar
James, S. L. (1998). ‘Introduction: constructions of gender and genre in Roman comedy and elegy’, Helios 25.316Google Scholar
James, S. L. (2003). Learned Girls and Male Persuasion: Gender and Reading in Roman Love Elegy. Berkeley/Los Angeles/LondonGoogle Scholar
James, S. L. (2012). ‘Elegy and New Comedy’, in Gold, B. K. (ed.), A Companion to Roman Love Elegy 253–68. Malden, Mass./OxfordGoogle Scholar
Janan, M. (1994). ‘When the Lamp is Shattered’: Desire and Narrative in Catullus. Carbondale/ EdwardsvilleGoogle Scholar
Janko, R. (2000). Philodemus ‘On Poems’ Book 1. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Jenkyns, R. (1998). Virgil’s Experience. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Jocelyn, H. D. (1967). The Tragedies of Ennius. Cambridge Classical Texts and Commentaries 10. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Jocelyn, H. D. (1979). ‘Catullus 58 and Ausonius, Ep. 71’, LCM 4.8791Google Scholar
Jocelyn, H. D. (1995). ‘Two features of the style of Catullus’ Phalaecian epigrams’, Sileno 21.6382Google Scholar
Jocelyn, H. D. (1996a). ‘The language of Catullus 17 and that of its immediate neighbours in the transmitted collection’, Sileno 22.137–63Google Scholar
Jocelyn, H. D. (1996b). ‘C. Licinius Macer Calvus fr. 18 Büchner’, Eikasmos 7.243–54Google Scholar
Jocelyn, H. D. (1999). ‘The arrangement and the language of Catullus’ so-called polymetra with special reference to the sequence 10–11–12’, in Adams, and Mayer, (1999) 335–75Google Scholar
Johannsen, N. (2006). Dichter über ihre Gedichte: die Prosavorreden in den Epigrammaton Libri Martialis und in den Silvae des Statius. GöttingenGoogle Scholar
Johnson, T. S. (2012). Horace’s Iambic Criticism: Casting Blame (Iambikē Poiēsis). Mnemosyne Suppl. 334. Leiden/BostonGoogle Scholar
Johnson, W. A. (2004). Bookrolls and Scribes in Oxyrhyncus. TorontoGoogle Scholar
Johnson, W. A. (2009) ‘The ancient book’, in Bagnall, R. S. (ed.), The Oxford Handbook of Papyrology 256–81. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Jones, F. (2008). ‘Catullus’ libellus, the mixing of genres, and the evidence of Carm. 1, 50, and 46’, Mnem. 61 .13037Google Scholar
Jorink, E., and Van Miert, D. (eds.) (2012). Isaac Vossius (1618–1689). Between Science and Scholarship. LeidenGoogle Scholar
Kahane, A. (2017). ‘Virgil’s epitaph, Donatus’ Life, biography and the structure of time’, PVS 29.161–85Google Scholar
Kaster, R. (2005). Emotion, Restraint, and Community in Ancient Rome. Oxford/New YorkGoogle Scholar
Kay, N.M. (1985). Martial Book XI. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Kay, N.M. (2010). ‘Colloquial Latin in Martial’s epigrams’, in Dickey, and Chahoud, (2010) 318–30Google Scholar
Keith, A. (2008). Propertius: Poet of Love and Leisure. LondonGoogle Scholar
Keith, A. (2016). ‘Naming the elegiac mistress: elegiac onomastics in Roman inscriptions’, in Keith, A. and Edmonson, J. (eds.), Roman Literary Cultures: Domestic Politics, Revolutionary Poetics, Civic Spectacle 5988. Phoenix Suppl. 55. Toronto/Buffalo/LondonGoogle Scholar
Kennedy, D. F. (1993). The Arts of Love: Five Studies in the Discourse of Roman Love Elegy. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Kennedy, D. F. (1995). ‘Roman literature’, G&R 42.83–8Google Scholar
Kennedy, D. F. (1999). ‘“Cf.”: analogies, relationships and Catullus 68’, in Braund, S. and Mayer, R. (eds.), amor : roma. Love and Latin Literature 3043. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Kenney, E. J. (1970). ‘Doctus Lucretius’, Mnem. 23.366–92Google Scholar
Kenney, E. J. (1973). Review of Quinn (1970) and Bardon (1970), CR 23.165–7Google Scholar
Kenney, E. J. (1974). The Classical Text: Aspects of Editing in the Age of the Printed Book. Berkeley/Los Angeles/LondonGoogle Scholar
Kenney, E. J. (1977). Lucretius. Greece & Rome New Surveys in the Classics 11. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Kenney, E. J. (2002). ‘Ovid’s language and style’, in Weiden Boyd, B. (ed.), Brill’s Companion to Ovid 2789. Leiden/Boston/CologneGoogle Scholar
Kidwell, C. (1991). Pontano: Poet and Prime Minister. LondonGoogle Scholar
King, J. K. (1988). ‘Catullus’ Callimachean Carmina: cc. 65-116’, CW 81 .38392Google Scholar
Kiss, D. (2009). ‘Catullus 68. Edited with an introduction and detailed commentary.’ Diss. Scuola Normale Superiore di Pisa.Google Scholar
Kiss, D. (2011). Review of D. S. McKie, Essays in the Interpretation of Roman Poetry (Cambridge 2009), Exemplaria Classica 15.257–71Google Scholar
Kiss, D. (2012a). ‘A correction and more on Girolamo Avanzi’s last edition of Catullus (ca. 1535)’, Exemplaria Classica 16.7580Google Scholar
Kiss, D. (2012b). ‘A Renaissance manuscript of Catullus, Tibullus and Propertius. Budapest, Országos Széchényi Könyvtár, Codex Latinus Medii Aevi 137 and Cologny, Bibliotheca Bodmeriana, MS. Bodmer 141’, Acta Antiqua Academiae Scientiarum Hungaricae 52.249–71Google Scholar
Kiss, D. (2012c). ‘Towards a catalogue of the surviving manuscripts of Catullus’, Paideia 67.607–19Google Scholar
Kiss, D. (2013a). Catullus Online: An Online Repertory of Conjectures for Catullus. www.catullusonline.orgGoogle Scholar
Kiss, D. (2013b). ‘Two humanistic conjectures in Catullus: 55.17 papillae and 61.140 soli’, Exemplaria Classica 17.6370Google Scholar
Kiss, D. (2014). Review of Bonvicini (2012), Gnomon 86.746–8Google Scholar
Kiss, D. (ed.) (2015a). What Catullus Wrote: Problems in Textual Criticism, Editing and the Manuscript Tradition. SwanseaGoogle Scholar
Kiss, D. (2015b). ‘Introduction: a sketch of the textual tradition’, in Kiss, (2015a) xiiixxxGoogle Scholar
Kiss, D. (2015c). ‘The lost Codex Veronensis and its descendants: three problems in Catullus’s manuscript tradition’, in Kiss, (2015a) 127Google Scholar
Kiss, D. (2015d). ‘Isaac Vossius, Catullus and the Codex Thuaneus’, CQ 65.344–54Google Scholar
Kiss, D. (2016). ‘The protohistory of the text of Catullus’ in Velaza, J. (ed.), From the Protohistory to the History of the Text (Studien zur klassischen Philologie 173) 125–40. Frankfurt am MainGoogle Scholar
Kiss, D. (2018). ‘The transmission of the poems of Catullus: the role of the incunabula’, Paideia 73.2151–74Google Scholar
Kiss, D. (2020). ‘Catullus Online: a digital critical edition of the poems of Catullus with a repertory of conjectures’, in Chronopoulos, S., Maier, F., Novokhatko, A. (eds.), Digitale Altertumswissenschaften: Thesen und Debatten zu Methoden und Anwendungen, 99114. Heidelberg.Google Scholar
Kiss, D. (forthcoming). ‘Giovanni Francesco Corradino dall’Aglio and a manuscript of Catullus that he did not invent’Google Scholar
Kleiner, D. E. E. and Matheson, S. B. (eds.) (1996). I, Claudia: Women in Ancient Rome. AustinGoogle Scholar
Kleiner, D. E. E. and Matheson, S. B. (eds.) (2000). I, Claudia II: Women in Roman Art and Society. AustinGoogle Scholar
Klooster, J. (2011). Poetry as Window and Mirror: Positioning the Poet in Hellenistic Poetry. LeidenGoogle Scholar
Kloss, G. (1998). ‘Catulls Brückengedicht (c. 17)’, Hermes 126.5879Google Scholar
Klotz, A. (1931). ‘Zu Katull’, RhM 80 .34256Google Scholar
Knight, S. and Tilg, S. (eds.) (2015). Oxford Handbook to Neo-Latin. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Knobles, C. (1971). ‘A significant elision (Cat. 63. 37)’, CP 66.35–6Google Scholar
Knox, P. E. (2007). ‘Catullus and Callimachus’, in Skinner (2007a) 151–71Google Scholar
Knox, P. E. (2011). ‘Cicero as a Hellenistic poet’, CQ 61.192204Google Scholar
Konrad, C. F. (1982). ‘Quaestiones Tappulae’, ZPE 48.219–34Google Scholar
Konstan, D. (1977). Catullus’ Indictment of Rome: The Meaning of Catullus 64. AmsterdamGoogle Scholar
Konstan, D. (2000). ‘Self, sex, and empire in Catullus: the construction of a decentered identity’, in Bécares Botas, V., et al. (eds.), Intertextualidad en las literaturas griega y latina 213231. MadridGoogle Scholar
Konstan, D. (2007). ‘The contemporary political context’, in Skinner, (2007a) 7291Google Scholar
Korenjak, M. (2012). ‘Short mythological epic in Neo-Latin literature’, in Baumbach, M. and Bär, S. (eds.), Brill’s Companion to Greek and Latin Epyllion and its Reception 519–36. Leiden/BostonGoogle Scholar
Koster, S. (1981). ‘Catull beim Wort genommen (Zu c. 8; 83; 93)’, WJA 7.125–34Google Scholar
Krebs, C. (2008). ‘Magni viri: Caesar, Alexander, and Pompey in Cat. 11’, Philologus 152.223–29Google Scholar
Krebs, C. (2013). ‘Caesar, Lucretius and the dates of De Rerum Natura and the Commentarii’, CQ 63.772–79Google Scholar
Kroll, W. (1923). Catull. (1st edn.) LeipzigGoogle Scholar
Kroll, W. (1924). Studien zum Verständnis der römischen Literatur. Reprinted 1964. StuttgartGoogle Scholar
Kroll, W. (1959). Catull. (5th edn.) StuttgartGoogle Scholar
Kronenberg, L. (2014). ‘Me, myself, and I: multiple (literary) personalities in Catullus 35’, CW 107.367–81Google Scholar
Krostenko, B. (2001a). Cicero, Catullus, and the Language of Social Performance. ChicagoGoogle Scholar
Krostenko, B. (2001b). ‘Arbitria urbanitatis: language, style, and characterization in Catullus cc. 39 and 37’, CA 20.239–72Google Scholar
Krostenko, B. (2007). ‘Catullus and elite republican social discourse’, in Skinner, (2007a) 212–32Google Scholar
Kruschwitz, P. (2012). ‘How to avoid profanity in Latin: an exploratory study’, MD 68.938Google Scholar
Kubiak, D. (1981). ‘The Orion episode of Cicero’s Aratea’, CJ 77.1222Google Scholar
Kühnel, J. (1982). ‘Lachmann, Karl’, NDB 13.371–4Google Scholar
Kühner, R. and Stegmann, C. (1976). Ausführliche Grammatik der lateinischen Sprache. 3rd edn. 2 vols. HanoverGoogle Scholar
Lachmann, K. (1829). Q. Valerii Catulli Veronensis liber. LeipzigGoogle Scholar
Lachmann, K. (1850). In T. Lucretii De rerum natura libros commentarius. BerlinGoogle Scholar
Lafaye, G. (1922). Catulle: Poésies. ParisGoogle Scholar
Laguna, G. (1992). Estacio, Silvas III. SevilleGoogle Scholar
Laird, A. (1993). ‘Sounding out ecphrasis: art and text in Catullus 64’, JRS 83.1830Google Scholar
Laird, A. (1997). ‘Approaching characterisation in Virgil’, in Martindale, C. (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to Virgil 282–93. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Laird, A. (2009). ‘Virgil: reception and the myth of biography’, CentoPagine 3.19Google Scholar
Lamb, W. (1821). Poems of Caius Valerius Catullus Translated. LondonGoogle Scholar
Landels, J. G. (1999). Music in Ancient Greece and Rome. London/New YorkGoogle Scholar
Landolfi, L. (1996). ‘Multas per gentes et multa per aequora uectus (Cat. c. 101), Catullo fra Omero ed Apollonio Rodio’, Emerita 64.255–60Google Scholar
Landor, W. S. (1795). The Poems of Walter Savage Landor. LondonGoogle Scholar
Langlands, R. (2006). Sexual Morality in Ancient Rome. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Langslow, D. (2000). Medical Latin in the Roman Empire. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Leary, T. J. (1996). Martial Book XIV: The Apophoreta. LondonGoogle Scholar
Lee, M. O. (1975). ‘Catullus in the Odes of Horace’, Ramus 4.3348Google Scholar
Leigh, M. (2015). ‘Illa domus, illa mihi sedes: on the interpretation of Catullus 68’, in Hunter, R. and Oakley, S. P. (eds.), Latin Literature and its Transmission: Papers in Honour of Michael Reeve 194224. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Leroux, V. (ed.) (2009). Marc-Antoine Muret: Juvenilia. GenevaGoogle Scholar
Levy, H. L. (1968). ‘Catullus and Cangrande della Scala’, TAPA 99.249–53Google Scholar
Lightfoot, J. L. (1999). Parthenius of Nicaea. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Lightfoot, J. L. (2009). Hellenistic Collection: Philitas, Alexander of Aetolia, Hermesianax, Euphorion, Parthenius. Cambridge, Mass./LondonGoogle Scholar
Longley, M. (2008). Wavelengths. LondonGoogle Scholar
Loomis, J. W. (1972). Studies in Catullan Verse: An Analysis of Word Types and Patterns in the Polymetra. LeidenGoogle Scholar
Lorenz, S. (2007). ‘Catullus and Martial’, in Skinner, (2007a) 418–37Google Scholar
Louis, N. (2010). Commentaire historique et traduction du Diuus Augustus de Suétone. BrusselsGoogle Scholar
Lowrie, M. (2006). ‘Hic and absence in Catullus 68’, CP 101.115–32Google Scholar
Lowry, M. (1979). The World of Aldus Manutius: Business and Scholarship in Renaissance Venice. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Luck, G. (1969). The Latin Love Elegy. 2nd edn. LondonGoogle Scholar
Ludwig, W. (1990). ‘The origin and development of the Catullan style in Neo-Latin poetry’, in Godman, P. and Murray, O. (eds.), Latin Poetry and the Classical Tradition 183–97. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Lyles, K. (2004). Vietnam ANZACs: Australian & New Zealand Troops in Vietnam 1962–72. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Lyne, R. O. A. M. (1978a). ‘The Neoteric poets’, CQ 28.167–87 (= (2007) 60–84)Google Scholar
Lyne, R. O. A. M. (1978b). Ciris: A poem attributed to Vergil. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Lyne, R. O. A. M. (1979). ‘Seruitium amoris’, CQ 29. 117–30 (= (2007) 85–100)Google Scholar
Lyne, R. O. A. M. (1980). The Latin Love Poets from Catullus to Horace. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Lyne, R. O. A. M. (1994). ‘Vergil’s Aeneid: subversion by intertextuality: Catullus 66.39–40 and other examples’, G&R 41.187204 (= (2007) 167–83)Google Scholar
Lyne, R. O. A. M. (1998). ‘Love and death: Laodamia and Protesilaus in Catullus, Propertius, and others’, CQ 48.200–12 (= (2007) 211–26)Google Scholar
Lyne, R. O. A. M. (2002). ‘Notes on Catullus’, CQ 52.600–8 (= (2007) 283–92)Google Scholar
Lyne, R. O. A. M. (2007). Collected Papers on Latin Poetry. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Maas, P. (1958). Textual Criticism, trans. B. Flower. OxfordGoogle Scholar
McCarren, V. P. (1977). A Critical Concordance to Catullus. LeidenGoogle Scholar
McClure, L. (2002). Sexuality and Gender in the Classical World. OxfordGoogle Scholar
McDermott, W. C. (1983). ‘Mamurra eques Formianus’, RhM 126.292307Google Scholar
McFarlane, I. D. (1981). Buchanan. LondonGoogle Scholar
McKie, D. S. (1976). Lesbia damnose bibens interpretatur’, Latomus 35.143Google Scholar
McKie, D. S. (1977). ‘The Manuscripts of Catullus: recension in a closed tradition’. Diss. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
McKie, D. S. (1986). ‘Salutati, Poggio, and Codex M of Catullus’, in Diggle, J., Hall, J. B., and Jocelyn, H. D. (eds.), Studies in Latin Literature and its Tradition in Honour of C. O. Brink (PCPS Suppl. 15) 6686. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
McKie, D. S. (2009). Essays in the Interpretation of Roman Poetry. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Macleod, C. W. (1973). ‘Catullus 116’, CQ 23.304–9 (= (1983) 181–6; = Gaisser (2007a) 35–45)Google Scholar
Macleod, C. W. (1974). ‘A use of myth in ancient poetry’, CQ 24.8293 (= (1983) 159–70)Google Scholar
Macleod, C. W. (1983). Collected Essays. OxfordGoogle Scholar
McPeek, J. A. S. (1939). Catullus in Strange and Distant Britain. Cambridge, Mass.Google Scholar
Maggiali, G. (2008). Il carme 68 di Catullo: edizione critica e commento. CesenaGoogle Scholar
Maltby, R. (1991). A Lexicon of Ancient Latin Etymologies. LeedsGoogle Scholar
Maltby, R. (2016). ‘Analytic and synthetic forms of the comparative and superlative from early to late Latin’, in Adams, and Vincent, (2016) 340–66Google Scholar
Manuzio, A. (2017). Humanism and the Latin Classics, ed. and trans. by J. N. Grant. Cambridge, Mass.Google Scholar
Manwell, E. (2007). ‘Gender and masculinity’, in Skinner, (2007a) 111–28Google Scholar
Marchesi, I. (2008). The Art of Pliny’s Letters: A Poetics of Allusion in the Private Correspondence. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Marchesi, I. (2015). ‘Uncluttered spaces, unlittered texts: Pliny’s villas as editorial places’, in Marchesi, I. (ed.), Pliny the Bookmaker 223–51. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Marinone, N. (1997). Berenice da Callimaco a Catullo. BolognaGoogle Scholar
Markley, A. A. (2004). Stateliest Measures: Tennyson and the Literature of Greece and Rome. TorontoGoogle Scholar
Martin, T. (1861). The Poems of Catullus, Translated into English Verse. LondonGoogle Scholar
Martindale, C. (1992). ‘Horace, Ovid and others’, in Jenkyns, R. (ed.), The Legacy of Rome: A New Appraisal 177214. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Maselli, G. (1994). Affari di Catullo: Rapporti di proprietà nell’immaginario dei Carmi. BariGoogle Scholar
Massaro, M. (2010). ‘Il phaselus di Catullo e la nave Argo di Apollonio’, MD 64.942Google Scholar
Mastandrea, P., Perrelli, R., Biondi, G. G., Zurli, R. and Viparelli, V. (eds.) (2007). Musisque Deoque: A Digital Archive of Latin Poetry. www.mqdq.itGoogle Scholar
Masterson, M., Sorkin, N. and Robson, J. (eds.) (2015). Sex in Antiquity: Exploring Gender and Sexuality in the Ancient World. London/New YorkGoogle Scholar
May, J. M. (ed.) (2002). Brill’s Companion to Cicero: Oratory and Rhetoric. LeidenGoogle Scholar
Mendell, C. W. (1935). ‘Catullan echoes in the Odes of Horace’, CP 30.289301Google Scholar
Merli, E. (2017). ‘The festinatio in Flavian poetry: a clarification’, in Bessone, and Fucecchi, (2017) 139–55Google Scholar
Methven, J. (2009). Precious Asses. BridgendGoogle Scholar
Meyer, E. A. (2001). ‘Wooden wit: tabellae in Latin poetry’, in Tylawsky, E. and Weiss, C. (eds.), Essays in Honor of Gordon Williams: Twenty-five years at Yale 201–12. New HavenGoogle Scholar
Meyers, T. L. (ed.) (2004). Uncollected Letters of Algernon Charles Swinburne. Vol. 3. 1890–1909. LondonGoogle Scholar
Miller, P. A. (1994). Lyric Texts and Lyric Consciousness: The Birth of a Genre from Archaic Greece to Augustan Rome. London/New YorkGoogle Scholar
Miller, P. A. (1998). ‘Catullan consciousness, the “care of the self” and the force of the negative in history’, in Larmour, D. H. J., Miller, P. A. and Platter, C. (eds.), Rethinking Sexuality: Foucault and Classical Antiquity 171203. PrincetonGoogle Scholar
Miller, P. A. (2002). Latin Erotic Elegy: An Anthology and Reader. London/New YorkGoogle Scholar
Miller, P. A. (2004). Subjecting Verses: Latin Love Elegy and the Emergence of the Real. Princeton/OxfordGoogle Scholar
Milnor, K. (2014). Graffiti and the Literary Landscape in Roman Pompeii. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Monella, P. (2005). Procne e Filomela: dal mito al simbolo letterario. BolognaGoogle Scholar
Morelli, A. M. (2005). ‘Il Liber Catulli di Terenziano Mauro: l’ Attis e le convenzioni del libro latino’, Segno e Testo 3.7191Google Scholar
Morelli, A. M. (ed.) (2008). Epigramma longum. Da Marziale alla tarda antichità / From Martial to late antiquity. Atti del convegno internazionale, Cassino, 29–31 maggio 2006. CassinoGoogle Scholar
Morelli, A. M. (ed.) (2012). Lepos e mores. Una giornata su Catullo. Atti del convegno internazionale, Cassino, 27 maggio 2010. CassinoGoogle Scholar
Morelli, A. M. (2014). ‘La legge di Postumia. Una lettura di Catull. 27’, Rationes Rerum: Rivista di filologia e storia 4.103–26Google Scholar
Morelli, A. M. (2017). ‘Catullus 23 and Martial. An epigrammatic model and its ‘refraction’ throughout Martial’s libri’, in Bessone, and Fucecchi, (2017) 116–35Google Scholar
Morelli, G. M. (2011–12). Caesii Bassi de metris, Atilii Fortunatiani de metris Horatianis. Collectanea Grammatica Latina. 2 vols. HildesheimGoogle Scholar
Morgan, J. D. (2007 [Unpublished]). ‘Who was “Mentula”?’, American Philological Association, 138th Annual Meeting (San Diego, Calif., January 4–7, 2007), Abstracts, p. 221Google Scholar
Morgan, J. D. (2008). ‘The addressee of Catullus’ Poem 68a’, The Classical Outlook 85.141–50Google Scholar
Morgan, Ll. (2010). Musa Pedestris. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Morgan, Ll. and Taylor, B. (2017). ‘Memmius the Epicurean’, CQ 67.528–41Google Scholar
Morgan, M. G. (1977). ‘Nescio quid febriculosi scorti: a note on Catullus 6’, CQ 27.338–41Google Scholar
Morisi, L. (1999). Gaio Valerio Catullo, Attis (carmen LXIII). BolognaGoogle Scholar
Morrison, M. (1955). ‘Catullus in the Neo-Latin poetry of France before 1550’, Bibliothèque d’humanisme et renaissance 17.36594Google Scholar
Morrison, M. (1963). ‘Catullus and the poetry of the Renaissance in France’, Bibliothèque d’humanisme et renaissance 25.2556Google Scholar
Moul, V. (ed.) (2017). A Guide to Neo-Latin Literature. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Munday, J. (2008). Introducing Translation Studies. Theories and Applications. 2nd edn. London/New YorkGoogle Scholar
Muret, M. A. (1554). Catullus et in eum commentarius M. Antonii Mureti. VeniceGoogle Scholar
Murgatroyd, P. (1975). ‘Militia amoris and the Roman elegists’, Latomus 34.5979Google Scholar
Murgatroyd, P. (1981). ‘Seruitium amoris and the Roman elegists’, Latomus 40.589606Google Scholar
Murley, C. (1943). ‘Life, logic, and language’, CJ 38.280–8Google Scholar
Murphy, T. (1998). ‘Cicero’s first readers: epistolary evidence for the dissemination of his works’, CQ 48.492505Google Scholar
Muse, K. (2009). ‘Fleecing Remus’ magnanimous playboys: wordplay in Catullus 58.5’, Hermes 137.302–13Google Scholar
Muzzioli, G. (1959). ‘Due nuovi codici autografi di Pomponio Leto’, Italia Medioevale e Umanistica 2.337–51Google Scholar
Myers, K. S. (2012). ‘Catullan contexts in Ovid’s Metamorphoses’, in Du Quesnay, and Woodman, (2012) 239254Google Scholar
Mynors, R. A. B. (1958). C. Valerii Catulli carmina. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Mynors, R. A. B. (1966). Catullus. Carmina. Codex Oxoniensis bibliothecae Bodleianae Canonicianus class. lat. 30. LeidenGoogle Scholar
Nappa, C. (1999). ‘The goat, the gout, and the girl: Catullus 69, 71, and 77’, Mnemosyne 52.266–76Google Scholar
Nappa, C. (2001). Aspects of Catullus’ Social Fiction. FrankfurtGoogle Scholar
Nappa, C. (2018). ‘Camerius: Catullus cc. 55 and 58b’, Mnemosyne 71.336–45Google Scholar
Nauta, R. R. (2002). Poetry for Patrons. Literary Communication in the Age of Domitian. Mnem. Suppl. 206. Leiden/Boston/CologneGoogle Scholar
Nauta, R. R. (2004). ‘Catullus 63 in a Roman context’, Mnemosyne 57.596–628 (= Nauta and Harder (2005) 87119)Google Scholar
Nauta, R. R. (2005). ‘Hephaestion and Catullus 63 again’, in Nauta and Harder (2005) 143–8Google Scholar
Nauta, R. R. and Harder, A. (2005). Catullus’ Poem on Attis. Leiden/BostonGoogle Scholar
Navarro Anatolín, F. (1996). Lygdamus. Corpus Tibullianum III.1–6: Lygdami Elegiarum Liber. Trans. J. J. Zoltowski. Mnem. Suppl. 154. Leiden/New York/CologneGoogle Scholar
Nelis, D. (2012). ‘Callimachus in Verona’, in Du Quesnay, and Woodman, (2012) 128Google Scholar
Nethercut, J. S. (2020). ‘How Ennian was Latin epic between the Annals and Lucretius?’, in Damon, C. and Farrell, J. (eds.), Ennius’ Annals: Poetry and History 188–210. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Neudling, C. L. (1955). A Prosopography to Catullus. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Newlands, C. (2011). Statius Silvae Book II. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Newlands, C. (2013a). ‘Architectural ecphrasis in Roman poetry’, in Papanghelis, T. D., Harrison, S. J. and Frangoulidis, S. (eds.), Generic Interfaces in Latin Literature 5780. BerlinGoogle Scholar
Newlands, C. (2013b). ‘Impersonating Hypsipyle: Statius’ Thebaid and Medieval lament’, Dictynna 10.218Google Scholar
Newman, J. K. (1990). Roman Catullus and the Modification of the Alexandrian Sensibility. HildesheimGoogle Scholar
Nicholls, M. C. (2010). ‘Parchment codices in a new text of Galen’, Greece & Rome 57.378–86Google Scholar
Nicholls, M. C. (2011). ‘Galen and libraries in the Peri Alupias’, JRS 101.123–42Google Scholar
Nielsen, I. (1993). ‘Castor, aedes, templum’, in LTUR 1.242–5Google Scholar
Nielsen, R. M. (1987). ‘Catullus and sal (Poem 10)’, AC 56.148–61Google Scholar
Nisbet, R. G. M. (1961). Cicero: In Pisonem. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Nisbet, R. G. M. (1995). Collected Papers on Latin Literature. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Nisbet, R. G. M. and Hubbard, M. (1970, 1978). A Commentary on Horace Odes: Book I and Book II. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Nisbet, R. G. M. and Rudd, N. (2004). A Commentary on Horace Odes: Book III. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Noonan, J. D. (1986). ‘Myth, humor and the sequence of thought in Catullus 95’, CJ 81.299304Google Scholar
Norden, E. (1957). P. Vergilius Maro: Aeneis Buch VI. 4th edn, repr. StuttgartGoogle Scholar
Nott, J. (1795). The Poems of Caius Valerius Catullus, in English Verse. LondonGoogle Scholar
Novati, F. (1891–1911). Epistolario di Coluccio Salutati. RomeGoogle Scholar
Oakley, S. P. (2005). A Commentary on Livy Books VI–X. Vol. 4. OxfordGoogle Scholar
O’Brien, J. (1995). Anacreon Redivivus: A Study of Anacreontic Translation in Mid-Sixteenth-Century France. Ann ArborGoogle Scholar
O’Bryhim, S. (2007). ‘Catullus 23 as Roman comedy’, TAPA 137.133–45Google Scholar
O’Bryhim, S. (2018). ‘Egnatius as dux gregis: Catullus 37 and 39’, CP 113.352–60Google Scholar
O’Hara, J. J. (1990). Death and the Optimistic Prophecy in Vergil’s Aeneid. PrincetonGoogle Scholar
O’Hara, J. J. (1994). ‘“They might be giants”: inconsistency and indeterminacy in Vergil’s war in Italy’, Colby Quarterly 30.206–26Google Scholar
O’Hara, J. J. (1996). ‘Sostratus Suppl. Hell. 733: a lost, possibly Catullan-era elegy on the six sex changes of Tiresias’, TAPA 126.173210Google Scholar
O’Hara, J. J. (2007). Inconsistency in Roman Epic: Studies in Catullus, Lucretius, Vergil, Ovid and Lucan. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Oksala, P. (1964). Vom Gebrauch geographischer Namen bei den römischen Lyrikern der Blütezeit: Catull, Vergil, Horaz. HelsinkiGoogle Scholar
Oldfather, W. A. (1943). ‘The most extreme case of elision in the Latin language?’, CJ 38.478–9Google Scholar
Oliensis, E. (1991). ‘Canidia, canicula, and the decorum of Horace’s Epodes’, Arethusa 24.107–38Google Scholar
Oliensis, E. (1998). Horace and the Rhetoric of Authority. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Oliensis, E. (2009). Freud’s Rome. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Opelt, I. (1965). Die lateinischen Schimpfwörter und verwandte sprachliche Erscheinungen. Eine Typologie. HeidelbergGoogle Scholar
Ormand, K. (2009). Controlling Desires: Sexuality in Ancient Greece and Rome. Westport, Conn.Google Scholar
Osgood, J. (2008). ‘Caesar and Nicomedes’, CQ 58.687–91Google Scholar
Otto, A. (1890). Die Sprichwörter der Römer. LeipzigGoogle Scholar
Owen, S. G. (1893). Catullus with the Pervigilium Veneris. LondonGoogle Scholar
Owen Lee, M. (1962). ‘Illustrative elisions in Catullus’, TAPA 93.144–53Google Scholar
Pächt, O. and Alexander, J. J. G. (1966–73). Illuminated Manuscripts in the Bodleian Library Oxford. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Pagán, V. E. (2010). ‘The power of the epistolary preface from Statius to Pliny’, CQ 60.194201Google Scholar
Page, D. (1955). Sappho and Alcaeus. An Introduction to the Study of Ancient Lesbian Poetry. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Palmer, A. (1879). ‘Ellis’s Catullus’, Hermathena 3.293363Google Scholar
Palmer, A. (1896). Catulli Veronensis Liber. LondonGoogle Scholar
Palmer, A. and Ellis, R. (1875). ‘Scaliger’s Liber Cujacianus of Propertius, Catullus, &c.’, Hermathena 2.124–58Google Scholar
Panayotakis, C. (2010). Decimus Laberius: The Fragments. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Paratore, E. (1963). ‘Osservazioni sui rapporti fra Catullo e gli epigrammisti dell’ Antologia’, in Miscellanea di studi alessandrini in memoria di Augusto Rostagni 562–87. TurinGoogle Scholar
Panoussi, V. (2003). ‘Ego maenas: Maenadism, marriage, and the construction of female identity in Catullus 63 and 64’, Helios 30.101–26Google Scholar
Panoussi, V. (2007). ‘Sexuality and ritual: Catullus’ wedding poems’, in Skinner, (2007a) 276–92Google Scholar
Pasquali, G. (1968). ‘Arte allusiva’, in Pagine stravaganti di un filologo 2.275–82. Florence (= Stravaganze quarte e supreme (Venice 1951) 111–20 = Terze pagine stravaganti (Florence 1942) 185–7)Google Scholar
Passerat, J. (1608). Commentarii in C. Val. Catullum, Albium Tibullum et Sex. Aur. Propertium. ParisGoogle Scholar
Pavlock, B. R. (1979). ‘Frater Ave atque Vale”: Tennyson and Catullus’, Victorian Poetry 17.365–76Google Scholar
Pelliccia, H. (2011). ‘Unlocking Aeneid 6.460: Plautus’ Amphitryon, Euripides’ Protesilaus and the referents of Callimachus’ Coma’, CJ 106 .149219Google Scholar
Peruzzi, M. (ed.) (2008). Ornatissimo codice. La biblioteca di Federico di Montefeltro. Vatican CityGoogle Scholar
Petoletti, M. (2004). ‘Catullo, Properzio e Tibullo nella biblioteca di Francesco Petrarca’, in Ballarani, M., Frasso, G., Monti, C. M. (eds.), Manoscritti e libri a stampa nella Biblioteca Ambrosiana 102–5. MilanGoogle Scholar
Petrini, M. (1997). The Child and the Hero: Coming of Age in Catullus and Vergil. Ann ArborGoogle Scholar
Pfeiffer, R. (1968). History of Classical Scholarship. From the Beginning to the End of the Hellenistic Age. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Phillimore, J. S. (1901). Sexti Properti carmina. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Pighi, J. B. (1950). Catulli codex Bononiensis 2621. BolognaGoogle Scholar
Pistilli, G. (2003). ‘Guarini, Battista’, DBI 60.339–45Google Scholar
Platnauer, M. (1951). Latin Elegiac Verse. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Platter, C. L. (1995). ‘Officium in Catullus and Propertius: a Foucauldian reading’, CP 90.211–24Google Scholar
Pleitner, K. (1849). Des Q. Valerius Catullus Epigramme an und über C. Jul. Caesar und Mamurra. SpeyerGoogle Scholar
Polt, C. B. (2010). ‘Catullus and Roman dramatic literature.’ Diss. Chapel HillGoogle Scholar
Portuese, O. (2013). Il carme 67 di Catullo: introduzione, edizione critica, traduzione e commento. CesenaGoogle Scholar
Possanza, D. M. (2004). Translating the Heavens. Aratus, Germanicus, and the Poetics of Latin Translation. New YorkGoogle Scholar
Postgate, J. P. (1881). Select Elegies of Propertius. LondonGoogle Scholar
Postgate, J. P. (1889). Gai Valeri Catulli Carmina. LondonGoogle Scholar
Pound, E. (1970). The Translations of Ezra Pound. LondonGoogle Scholar
Powell, J. G. F. (1990). ‘Two notes on Catullus’, CQ 40.199206Google Scholar
Price, D. (1996). Janus Secundus. TempeGoogle Scholar
Pucci, P. (1961). ‘Il carme 50 di Catullo’, Maia 13.249–56Google Scholar
Putnam, M. C. J. (1960). ‘Catullus 66. 75–88’, CP 55.223–8Google Scholar
Putnam, M. C. J. (1961). ‘The art of Catullus 64’, HSCP 65.165205Google Scholar
Putnam, M. C. J. (1963). Review of Fordyce (1961), AJP 84.422–32Google Scholar
Putnam, M. C. J. (1982). ‘Catullus 11: the ironies of integrity’, in id., Essays on Latin Lyric, Elegy, and Epic 1329. PrincetonGoogle Scholar
Putnam, M. C. J. (1995–96). ‘The lyric genius of the Aeneid’, Arion 3.81101Google Scholar
Putnam, M. C. J. (2006). Poetic Interplay: Catullus and Horace. Princeton/OxfordGoogle Scholar
Putnam, M. C. J. (2016). ‘The sense of two endings: how Virgil and Statius conclude’, ICS 41.85149Google Scholar
Putnam, M. C. J. (2017). ‘Statius Siluae 3.2: reading travel’, ICS 42.83–139Google Scholar
Quinn, K. (1959/21969). The Catullan Revolution. Melbourne/LondonGoogle Scholar
Quinn, K. (1970/1973). Catullus: The Poems. (2nd edn. 1973.) LondonGoogle Scholar
Quinn, K. (1972). Catullus: An Interpretation. LondonGoogle Scholar
Raaflaub, K. A. and Ramsey, J. T. (2017). ‘Reconstructing the chronology of Caesar’s Gallic Wars’, Histos 11.174Google Scholar
Rabinowitz, N. S. (1993). Anxiety Veiled: Euripides and the Traffic in Women. IthacaGoogle Scholar
Rabinowitz, N. S. and Richlin, A. (eds.) (1992). Feminist Theory and the Classics. New YorkGoogle Scholar
Ramírez de Verger, A. (ed.) and Pérez Vega, A. (trans.) (2005). C. Valerii Catulli Carmina – Catulo, Poemas. HuelvaGoogle Scholar
Ramler, K. W. (1793). Kajus Valerius Katullus in einem Auszuge Lateinisch und Deutsch. LeipzigGoogle Scholar
Ramsey, J. T. and Raaflaub, K. A. (2017). ‘Chronological tables for Caesar’s wars (58–45 bce)’, Histos 11.162217Google Scholar
Randall, J. G. (1980). ‘Catullus 58.4-5’, LCM 5.21–2Google Scholar
Raven, D. S. (1965). Latin Metre. BristolGoogle Scholar
Rawson, E. (1978). ‘The identity problems of Q. Cornificius’, CQ 28.188201 (= (1991) 272–88)Google Scholar
Rawson, E. (1985). Intellectual Life in the Late Roman Republic. LondonGoogle Scholar
Rawson, E. (1991). Roman Culture and Society: Collected Papers. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Reeve, M. D. (1980). Review of Thomson (1978), Phoenix 34.179–84Google Scholar
Reeve, M. D. (2011). Manuscripts and Methods. RomeGoogle Scholar
Reeve, M. D. (2016). ‘Two manuscripts of “Ovid” and Grattius’, Hermes 144.194202Google Scholar
Reitz, B. (2013). Building in Words: Representations of the Process of Construction in Latin Literature. LeidenGoogle Scholar
Reynolds, L. D. (ed.) (1983). Texts and Transmission. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Reynolds, L. D., and Wilson, N. G. (2013). Scribes and Scholars. 4th edn. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Richlin, A. (1984). ‘Invective against women in Roman Satire’, Arethusa 17.6780Google Scholar
Richlin, A. (1991). ‘Zeus and Metis: Foucault, feminism, classics’, Helios 18.121Google Scholar
Richlin, A. (1992). The Garden of Priapus. New YorkGoogle Scholar
Richlin, A. (1993). ‘Not before homosexuality: the materiality of the Cinaedus and the Roman law against love between men’, Journal of the History of Sexuality 3.523–73Google Scholar
Ricottilli, L. (1982). ‘Tra filologia e semiotica: ripristino e interpretazione di una formula allocutiva (quid tu? quid uos?)’, MD 9.107–51Google Scholar
Ridenour, G. M. (1988). ‘Swinburne’s imitations of Catullus’, The Victorian Newsletter 74. 51–7Google Scholar
Riese, A. (1884). Die Gedichte des Catullus. LeipzigGoogle Scholar
Risselada, R. (1993). Imperatives and Other Directive Expressions in Latin. AmsterdamGoogle Scholar
Rizzo, S. (1983). Catalogo dei codici della Pro Cluentio ciceroniana. GenoaGoogle Scholar
Robert, C. (1900). ‘Archäologische Nachlese’, Hermes 35.650–68Google Scholar
Roberts, C. H., and Skeat, T. C. (1983). The Birth of the Codex. 2nd edn. LondonGoogle Scholar
Roberts, M. (1989). ‘The use of myth in Latin epithalamia from Statius to Venantius Fortunatus’, TAPA 119.321–48Google Scholar
Robinson, M. (2013). ‘Propertius 1.3: sleep, surprise, and Catullus 64’, BICS 56.89115Google Scholar
Roche, P. (2016). ‘Latin prose literature: author and authority in the prefaces of Pliny and Quintilian’, in Zissos, A. (ed.), A Companion to the Flavian Age of Imperial Rome 434–49. Chichester/Malden, Mass.Google Scholar
Roller, M. (1998). ‘Pliny’s Catullus: the politics of literary appropriation’, AJP 128.265304Google Scholar
Roman, L. (2001). ‘The representation of literary materiality in Martial’s Epigrams’, JRS 91.113–45Google Scholar
Roman, L. (2014). Poetic Autonomy in Ancient Rome. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Roman, L. (2015). ‘Statius and Martial: poetic self-fashioning in Flavian Rome’, in Dominik, , Newlands, and Gervais, (2015) 444–61Google Scholar
Rosati, G. (2011). ‘I tria corda di Stazio, poeta Greco, romano e napoletano’, in Bonadeo, A., Canobbio, A. and Gasti, F. (eds.), Filellenismo e identità romana in età flavia 1534. PaviaGoogle Scholar
Rosati, G. (2015). ‘The Silvae: poetics of impromptu and cultural consumption’, in Dominik, , Newlands, , and Gervais, (2015) 5472Google Scholar
Rosén, H. (2009). ‘Coherence, sentence modification, and sentence-part modification – the contribution of particles’, in Baldi, and Cuzzolin, (2009) 317442Google Scholar
Rosen, R. M. (2007). Making Mockery: The Poetics of Ancient Satire. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Rosenmeyer, P. A. (2006). ‘Sappho’s iambics’, Letras Clássicas 10.1136Google Scholar
Ross, D. O. (1969). Style and Tradition in Catullus. Cambridge, Mass.Google Scholar
Ross, D. O. (1975). Backgrounds to Augustan Poetry: Gallus, Elegy and Rome. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Ross, R. C. (1968–9). ‘Catullus 63 and the Galliambic metre’, CJ 64 .14552Google Scholar
Rossbach, A. (1854). Q. Valerii Catulli Veronensis Liber. LeipzigGoogle Scholar
Rostand, E. (trans.), Benoist, E. (ed., comm.), Thomas, E. (comm.) (1879–90). Les poésies de Catulle. ParisGoogle Scholar
Ruffell, I. A. (2003). ‘Beyond satire: Horace, popular invective and the segregation of literature’, JRS 93.3565Google Scholar
Rühl, M. (2006). Literatur gewordener Augenblick. Die Silven des Statius im Kontext literarischer und sozialer Bedingungen von Dichtung. Berlin/New YorkGoogle Scholar
Rüpke, J. (2008). Fasti Sacerdotum. A Prosopography of Pagan, Jewish and Christian Religious Officials in the City of Rome, 300 BC to AD 499. Trans. D. M. B. Richardson. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Ryan, F. X. (1996). ‘Two persons in Catullus’, GIF 48.8591Google Scholar
Sandy, G. N. (1971). ‘Catullus 63 and the theme of marriage’, AJP 92.185–95Google Scholar
Santen, L. van (1788). C. Valerii Catulli Elegia ad Manlium. LeidenGoogle Scholar
Scaliger, J. J. (1577a). Catulli, Tibulli, Propertii nova editio. ParisGoogle Scholar
Scaliger, J. J. (1577b). Castigationes in Catullum, Tibullum, Propertium. ParisGoogle Scholar
Scaliger, J. J. (1600a). Catulli, Tibulli, Propertii nova editio. HeidelbergGoogle Scholar
Scaliger, J. J. (1600b). Castigationes in Catullum, Tibullum, Propertium. HeidelbergGoogle Scholar
Schatzmann, A. (2012). Nikarchos II: Epigrammata. Einleitung, Texte, Kommentar. Hypomnemata 188. GöttingenGoogle Scholar
Scherf, J. (1996). Untersuchungen zur antiken Veröffentlichung der Catullgedichte. Spudasmata 61. Hildesheim/Zürich/New YorkGoogle Scholar
Schironi, F. (2018). The Best of the Grammarians: Aristarchus of Samothrace on the Iliad. Ann ArborGoogle Scholar
Schmale, M. (2004). Bilderreigen und Erzähllabyrinth. Catulls Carmen 64. MunichGoogle Scholar
Schoell, F. L. (1915). ‘George Chapman and the Italian Neo-Latinists of the Quattrocento’, Modern Philology 13.215238Google Scholar
Scholderer, V. (1924). ‘Printing at Venice to the end of 1481’, The Library ser. iv, 5. 129–52 = id. (1966). Fifty Essays in Fifteenth- and Sixteenth-Century Bibliography, ed. D. E. Rhodes, 74–89. AmsterdamGoogle Scholar
Schoolfield, G. C. (1980). Janus Secundus. BostonGoogle Scholar
Schulze, W. (1904). Zur Geschichte lateinischer Eigennamen. Reprinted 1991, with additional appendix by O. Salomies. ZurichGoogle Scholar
Schuster, M. (1949). Catulli Veronensis Liber. LeipzigGoogle Scholar
Schuster, M. (1958). Catulli Veronensis Liber, rev. W. Eisenhut. LeipzigGoogle Scholar
Schwabe, L. (1866). Catulli Veronensis Liber. GiessenGoogle Scholar
Schwabe, L. (1886). Catulli Veronensis Liber ad optimos codices denuo collatos. BerlinGoogle Scholar
Sedgwick, W. B. (1950). ‘Catullus’ Elegiacs’, Mnem. 3.64–9Google Scholar
Segal, C. P. (1968). ‘The order of Catullus, Poems 2–11’, Latomus 27.284301Google Scholar
Segal, C. P (1970). ‘Catullan otiosi: the lover and the poet’, G&R 17.2531Google Scholar
Segal, C. P (1973). ‘Felices ter et amplius: Horace, Odes, I. 13’, Latomus 32.3946Google Scholar
Seidensticker, B. (1994). ‘“Shakehands, Catull”. Catullus-Rezeption in der deutschsprachigen Lyrik der Gegenwart’, AU 2.3449Google Scholar
Selden, D. (1992). ‘Ceveat lector: Catullus and the rhetoric of performance’, in Hexter, R. and Selden, D. (eds.), Innovations of Antiquity 461512. New York/London (= Gaisser (2007a) 490–559)Google Scholar
Sellar, W. Y. (1889). The Roman Poets of the Republic. 3rd edn. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Seo, J. M. (2013). Exemplary Traits: Reading Characterization in Roman Poetry. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Shackleton Bailey, D. R. (1966). Cicero: Letters to Atticus. Vol. 5. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Shackleton Bailey, D. R. (1970). ‘The prosecution of Roman magistrates-elect’, Phoenix 24.162–5Google Scholar
Shackleton Bailey, D. R. (1977). Cicero: Epistulae ad Familiares. 2 vols. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Shackleton Bailey, D. R. (1980). Cicero: Epistulae ad Quintum fratrem et M. Brutum. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Shapiro, S. A. (2014). ‘Socration or Philodemus? Catullus 47 and prosopographical excess’, CJ 109.385405Google Scholar
Sharrock, A. R. (2000). ‘Constructing characters in Propertius’, Arethusa 33.263–84Google Scholar
Sheets, G. A. (2007). ‘Elements of style in Catullus’, in Skinner, (2007a) 190211Google Scholar
Sider, D. (1997). The Epigrams of Philodemos. New York/OxfordGoogle Scholar
Sider, D. (ed.) (2017). Hellenistic Poetry: A Selection. Ann ArborGoogle Scholar
Sillig, C. I. (1823). C. Valerii Catulli Carmina. GöttingenGoogle Scholar
Sillig, C. I. (1830). Review of Doering, rev. Naudet (1826), Lachmann (1829) and three other works in Neue Jahrbücher für Philologie und Pädagogik No. 5, Vol. 2.259–97Google Scholar
Singer, P. N. (2019). ‘New light and old texts: Galen and his own books’ in Petit, C. (ed.), Galen’s Treatise περὶ ἀλυπιìας (de indolentia) in Context: A Tale of Resilience. Leiden/BostonGoogle Scholar
Skinner, M. B. (1971). ‘Catullus 8: the comic amator as eiron’, CJ 66.298305Google Scholar
Skinner, M. B. (1972). ‘The unity of Catullus 68: the structure of 68a’, TAPA 103.495512Google Scholar
Skinner, M. B. (1978). ‘Ameana, puella defututa’, CJ 74.110–14Google Scholar
Skinner, M. B. (1979). ‘Parasites and strange bedfellows: a study in Catullus’ political imagery’, Ramus 8.137–52Google Scholar
Skinner, M. B. (1981). Catullus’ Passer: The Arrangement of the Book of Polymetric Poems. New YorkGoogle Scholar
Skinner, M. B. (1983). ‘Clodia Metelli’, TAPA 113.273–87Google Scholar
Skinner, M. B. (1987). ‘Disease imagery in Catullus 76. 17–26’, CP 82.230–3Google Scholar
Skinner, M. B. (1989). ‘Vt decuit cinaediorem: power, gender, and urbanity in Catullus 10’, Helios 16.723Google Scholar
Skinner, M. B. (1993). ‘Ego mulier: the construction of male sexuality in Catullus’, Helios 20.107–30 (= Hallett and Skinner (1997) 129–50)Google Scholar
Skinner, M. B. (2002). ‘Women’s voices and Catullus’ poetry’, CW 95.421–4Google Scholar
Skinner, M. B. (2003). Catullus in Verona: A Reading of the Elegiac Libellus, Poems 65–116. Columbus, OHGoogle Scholar
Skinner, M. B. (ed.) (2007a). A Companion to Catullus. Malden, Mass./OxfordGoogle Scholar
Skinner, M. B. (2007b). ‘Authorial arrangement of the collection: debate past and present’, in Skinner (2007a) 3553Google Scholar
Skinner, M. B. (2011). Clodia Metelli: The Tribune’s Sister. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Skinner, M. B. (2014a). Sexuality in Greek and Roman Culture. 2nd edn. ChichesterGoogle Scholar
Skinner, M. B. (2014b). ‘Feminist theory’, in Hubbard, (2014) 116Google Scholar
Skinner, M. B. (2015). ‘A review of scholarship on Catullus 1985-2015’, Lustrum 57.91360Google Scholar
Skutsch, F. (1912). ‘Helvius’ (12), RE 8.1. 226–8Google Scholar
Skutsch, O. (1968). Studia Enniana. LondonGoogle Scholar
Skutsch, O. (1969). ‘Metrical variations and some textual problems in Catullus’, BICS 16.3843 (= Gaisser (2007a) 45–55)Google Scholar
Snyder, J. M. (1997). Lesbian Desire in the Lyrics of Sappho. New YorkGoogle Scholar
Solodow, J. B. (1987). ‘On Catullus 95’, CP 82.141–5Google Scholar
Solodow, J. B. (1989). ‘Forms of literary criticism in Catullus: polymetrics vs epigram’, CP 89.312–19Google Scholar
Sommerstein, A. H. (2013). Menander Samia (The Woman from Samos). CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Soubiran, J. (1966). L’Élision dans la poesie latine. ParisGoogle Scholar
Spentzou, E. (2013). The Roman Poetry of Love: Elegy and Politics in a Time of Revolution. LondonGoogle Scholar
Spies, A. (1930). Militat omnis amans: Ein Beitrag zur Bildersprache der antiken Erotik. TübingenGoogle Scholar
Starr, R. J. (1987). ‘The circulation of literary texts in the Roman world’, CQ 37.213–23Google Scholar
Statius, A. (1566). Catullus cum commentario Achillis Stati Lusitani. VeniceGoogle Scholar
Stead, H. (2016). A Cockney Catullus: The Reception of Catullus in Romantic Britain 1795–1821. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Stehle(Stigers), E. (1997). ‘Retreat from the male: Catullus 62 and Sappho’s erotic flowers’, Ramus 6.83102Google Scholar
Stevens, B. E. (2013). Silence in Catullus. MadisonGoogle Scholar
Stroh, W. (1979). ‘Ovids Liebeskunst und die Ehegesetze des Augustus’, Gymnasium 86.323–52Google Scholar
Stroh, W. (2000). ‘Lesbia und Juventius: ein erotisches Liederbuch im Corpus Catullianum’, in id., Apocrypha. Entlegene Schriften 79–99. StuttgartGoogle Scholar
Stroup, S. C. (2010). Catullus, Cicero, and a Society of Patrons. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Super, R. H. (1976). ‘Landor and Catullus’, The Wordsworth Circle 7.31–7Google Scholar
Sutherland, E. H. (2005). ‘Writing (on) bodies: lyric discourse and the production of gender in Horace Odes 1.13’, CP 100.5282Google Scholar
Swann, B. W. (1994). Martial’s Catullus: The Reception of an Epigrammatic Rival. HildesheimGoogle Scholar
Syme, R. (1979). Roman Papers. Vols. 1–2. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Syndikus, H. P. (1984–1990). Catull: Eine Interpretation. 3 vols. DarmstadtGoogle Scholar
Syndikus, H. P. (1986). ‘Catull und die Politik’, Gymnasium 93.3447Google Scholar
Syndikus, H. P. (1990/2001). Catull. Eine Interpretation. Zweiter Teil. Die grossen Gedichte. DarmstadtGoogle Scholar
Tamás, Á. (2016). ‘Erroneous gazes: Lucretian poetics in Catullus 64’, JRS 106.120Google Scholar
Tarrant, R. J. (2006). ‘Propertian textual criticism and editing’, in Günther, H.-C. (ed.), Brill’s Companion to Propertius 4565. LeidenGoogle Scholar
Tatum, W. J. (1988). ‘Catullus’ criticism of Cicero in Poem 49’, TAPA 118.179–84Google Scholar
Tatum, W. J. (1993). ‘Catullus 79: personal invective or political discourse?’, PLLS 7.3145Google Scholar
Tatum, W. J. (1997). ‘Friendship, politics, and literature in Catullus: Poems 1, 65 and 66, 116’, CQ 47. 482500 (= Gaisser (2007a) 369–98)Google Scholar
Tatum, W. J. (1999). The Patrician Tribune: Publius Clodius Pulcher. Chapel HillGoogle Scholar
Tatum, W. J. (2007). ‘Social commentary and political invective’, in Skinner, (2007a) 333–54Google Scholar
Tatum, W. J. (2011). ‘Invective identities in Pro Caelio’, in Smith, C. J. and Corvino, R. (eds.), Praise and Blame in Roman Republican Rhetoric 165–79. SwanseaGoogle Scholar
Theodorakopoulos, E. (2013). ‘Catullus and Lesbia translated in women’s historical novels’, in Hardwick, L. and Harrison, S. (eds.), Classics in the Modern World: A Democratic Turn 275–86. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Thomas, R. F. (1981). ‘Cinna, Calvus, and the Ciris’, CQ 31.371–4Google Scholar
Thomas, R. F. (1982). ‘Catullus and the polemics of poetic reference (Poem 64.1–18)’, AJP 103.144–64 (= Thomas (1999) 12–32)Google Scholar
Thomas, R. F. (1983). ‘Callimachus, the Victoria Berenices, and Roman poetry’, CQ 33.92113 (= Thomas (1999) 68–100)Google Scholar
Thomas, R. F. (1984). ‘Menander and Catullus 8’, RhM 127.308–16 (= Thomas (1999) 44–52)Google Scholar
Thomas, R. F. (1986). ‘Virgil’s Georgics and the art of reference’, HSCP 90.171–98 (= Thomas (1999) 114–41)Google Scholar
Thomas, R. F. (1993). ‘Sparrows, hares, and doves: a Catullan metaphor and its tradition’, Helios 20.131–42 (= Thomas (1999) 52–67)Google Scholar
Thomas, R. F. (1999). Reading Virgil and his Texts: Studies in Intertextuality. Ann ArborGoogle Scholar
Thomsen, O. (1992). Ritual and Desire: Catullus 61 and 62 and Other Ancient Documents on Wedding and Marriage. AarhusGoogle Scholar
Thomson, D. F. S. (1970). ‘The codex Romanus of Catullus: a collation of the text’, RhM 113.97110Google Scholar
Thomson, D. F. S. (1973). ‘A new look at the manuscript tradition of Catullus’, YCS 23.113–29Google Scholar
Thomson, D. F. S. (1978). Catullus: A Critical Edition. Chapel Hill, NCGoogle Scholar
Thomson, D. F. S. (1997). Catullus Edited with a Textual and Interpretative Commentary. Phoenix Suppl. 34. TorontoGoogle Scholar
Thorsen, T. S. (ed.) (2013). The Cambridge Companion to Latin Love Elegy. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Timpanaro, S. (1978). Contributi di filologia e di storia della lingua latina. RomeGoogle Scholar
Timpanaro, S. (1994). Nuovi contributi di filologia e storia della lingua latina. BolognaGoogle Scholar
Timpanaro, S. (2005). The Genesis of Lachmann’s Method, ed. and trans. G. W. Most. ChicagoGoogle Scholar
Tosi, R. (2007). Dizionario delle sentenze latine e greche. 16th edn. MilanGoogle Scholar
Traina, A. (1975). ‘Orazio e Catullo’, in id., Poeti latini (e neolatini): note e saggi filologici 253–75. BolognaGoogle Scholar
Traina, A. (1998a). Poeti latini (e neolatini): note e saggi filologici. V serie. BolognaGoogle Scholar
Traina, A. (1998b). ‘Introduzione a Catullo: la poesia degli affetti’, in Traina, (1998a) 1950 (orig. publ. in Catullo, I canti, trans. E. Mandruzzato, Milan 1982, 5–38)Google Scholar
Traina, A. (1998c). ‘Compresenze strutturali in Catullo’, in Traina, (1998a) 5168 (orig. publ. in ΜΟΥΣΑ. Scritti in onore di G. Morelli, Bologna 1997, 283–96)Google Scholar
Tränkle, H. (1981). ‘Catullprobleme’, MH 38.245–58Google Scholar
Trappes-Lomax, J. M. (2007). Catullus: A Textual Reappraisal. SwanseaGoogle Scholar
Trimble, G. C. (2012). ‘Catullus and “comment in English”: the tradition of the expurgated commentary before Fordyce’, in Stray, C. and Harrison, S. (eds.), Expurgating the Classics: Editing Out in Greek and Latin 143–62. LondonGoogle Scholar
Trimble, G. C. (2013). ‘Catullus 64 and the prophetic voice in Virgil’s fourth Eclogue’, in Farrell, J. and Nelis, D. P. (eds.), Augustan Poetry and the Roman Republic 263–77. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Tsouna, V. (2007). The Ethics of Philodemus. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Tuplin, C. J. (1977). ‘Cantores Euphorionis’, PLLS 1.123Google Scholar
Tuplin, C. J. (1979). ‘Cantores Euphorionis again’, CQ 29.358–60Google Scholar
Tuplin, C. J. (1981). ‘Catullus 68’, CQ 31.113–39Google Scholar
Uden, J. (2006). ‘Embracing the young man in love: Catullus 75 and the comic adulescens’, Antichthon 40.1934Google Scholar
Ullman, B. L. (1908). ‘The Identification of the Manuscripts of Catullus Cited in Statius’ Edition of 1566’. Diss. ChicagoGoogle Scholar
Ullman, B. L. (1960a). ‘The transmission of the text of Catullus’, in Studi in Onore di Luigi Castiglioni 2.1025–57. FlorenceGoogle Scholar
Ullman, B. L. (1960b). The Origin and Development of Humanistic Script. RomeGoogle Scholar
Ullman, B. L. (1963). The Humanism of Coluccio Salutati. PaduaGoogle Scholar
Ullman, B. L. (1973). Studies in the Italian Renaissance. 2nd edn. RomeGoogle Scholar
Ulrich, R. (2007). Roman Woodworking. New HavenGoogle Scholar
Van Sickle, J. (1992). A Reading of Virgil’s Messianic Eclogue. New York/LondonGoogle Scholar
Vance, N. (1997). The Victorians and Ancient Rome. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Vance, N. and Wallace, J. (eds.) (2015). The Oxford History of Classical Reception in English Literature. Vol. 4: 1790–1880. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Vessey, D. (1972). ‘Aspects of Statius’ Epithalamion’, Mnem. 25.172–87Google Scholar
Veyne, P. (1988). Roman Erotic Elegy: Love, Poetry, and the West, transl. D. Pellauer. ChicagoGoogle Scholar
Vine, B. (1992). ‘On the “missing” fourth stanza of Catullus 51’, HSCP 94.251–8Google Scholar
Volpi, G. (1710). C. Valerius Catullus, Albius Tibullus E. R., Sex. Aurelius Propertius. PaduaGoogle Scholar
Volpi, G. (1737). C. Valerius Catullus, et in eum Jo. Antonii Vulpii … novus commentarius locupletissimus. PaduaGoogle Scholar
von Albrecht, M. (2003). Literatur als Brücke. Studien zur Rezeptionsgeschichte und Komparatistik. HildesheimGoogle Scholar
De Vos, M. (2014). ‘From Lesbos she took her honeycomb: Sappho and the “female tradition” in Hellenistic poetry’, in Pieper, C. and Ker, J. (eds.), Valuing the Past in the Greco-Roman World: Proceedings from the Penn-Leiden Colloquia on Ancient Values VII, 410–34. Leiden/BostonGoogle Scholar
Vossius, I. (1684). Cajus Valerius Catullus Et in eum Isaaci Vossii Observationes. LondonGoogle Scholar
Wagenvoort, H. (1956). Studies in Roman Literature, Culture and Religion. LeidenGoogle Scholar
Wallace, R. (1982). ‘A note on the phonostylistics of Latin: (s) in Plautus’, Glotta 60.120–4Google Scholar
Warden, J. (1998). ‘Catullus 64: structure and meaning’, CJ 93.397415Google Scholar
Watson, A. G. (1979). Catalogue of Dated and Datable Manuscripts c.700–1600 in the department of Manuscripts, The British Library. LondonGoogle Scholar
Watson, L. C. (1982). ‘Cinna and Euphorion’, SIFC 54.93110Google Scholar
Watson, L. C. (1991). Arae: The Curse Poetry of Antiquity. LeedsGoogle Scholar
Watson, L. C. (1995). ‘Horace’s Epodes: the impotence of iambos?’, in Harrison, S. J. (ed.), Homage to Horace: A Bimillenary Celebration 188202. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Watson, L. C. (2003). A Commentary on Horace’s Epodes. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Watson, L. C. (2007). ‘The Epodes: Horace’s Archilochus?’, in Harrison, S. J. (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to Horace 93104. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Watson, L. C. (2012). ‘Catullus, inurbanitas and the Transpadanes’ in Morelli, A. M. (2012) 151–69Google Scholar
Watson, L. and Watson, P. (2003). Martial. Select Epigrams. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Watson, L. and Watson, P. (2015). Martial. LondonGoogle Scholar
Weber, C. (1983). ‘Two chronological contradictions in Catullus 64’, TAPA 113.263–71Google Scholar
Weinstock, S. (1971). Divus Julius. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Weiss, M. (1996). ‘An Oscanism in Catullus 53’, CP 91.353–9Google Scholar
Welby, T. E. (ed.) (1930). The Works of Walter Savage Landor. Vol. 9. LondonGoogle Scholar
West, D. A. (1957). ‘The metre of Catullus’ elegiacs’, CQ 7.98102Google Scholar
West, D. A. (1967). Reading Horace. EdinburghGoogle Scholar
West, D. and Woodman, T. [=A. J.] (eds.) (1979). Creative Imitation and Latin Literature. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
West, M. L. (1982). Greek Metre. OxfordGoogle Scholar
West, M. L. (1987). Introduction to Greek Metre. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Westendorp-Boerma, R. E. H. (1958). ‘Vergil’s debt to Catullus’, AClass 1.5163Google Scholar
Wharton, D. (2009). ‘On the distribution of adnominal prepositional phrases in Latin prose’, CP 104.184207Google Scholar
Wharton, J. (1756). An Essay on the Writings and Genius of Pope. LondonGoogle Scholar
Wheeler, A. L. (1915). ‘Catullus as an elegist’, AJP 36.155–84Google Scholar
Wheeler, A. L. (1934). Catullus and the Traditions of Ancient Poetry. BerkeleyCrossRefGoogle Scholar
White, P. (1993). Promised Verse: Poets in the Society of Augustan Rome. Cambridge, MassCrossRefGoogle Scholar
White, P. (2010). Cicero in Letters: Epistolary Relations of the Late Republic. New YorkGoogle Scholar
Wilamowitz-Moellendorff, U. (1879). ‘Die Galliamben des Kallimachos und Catullus’, Hermes 14.194–9Google Scholar
Wilamowitz-Moellendorff, U. (1913). Sappho und Simonides. BerlinGoogle Scholar
Wilamowitz-Moellendorff, U. (1924). Hellenistische Dichtung in der Zeit des Kallimachos. Vols. 1–2. BerlinGoogle Scholar
Williams, C. A. (2010). Roman Homosexuality. 2nd edn. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Williams, G. (1962). ‘Poetry in the moral climate of Augustan Rome’, JRS 52. 2846Google Scholar
Williams, G. (1968). Tradition and Originality in Roman Poetry. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Wills, J. (1996). Repetition in Latin Poetry: Figures of Allusion. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Wills, J. (1998). ‘Divided allusion: Virgil and the Coma Berenices’, HSCP 98.277305Google Scholar
Wimmel, W. (1960). Kallimachos in Rom. Hermes Einzelschriften 16. WiesbadenGoogle Scholar
Winkler, J. (1990). The Constraints of Desire. New York/LondonGoogle Scholar
Winsbury, R. (2009). The Roman Book. LondonGoogle Scholar
Wiseman, T. P. (1969). Catullan Questions. LeicesterGoogle Scholar
Wiseman, T. P. (1974). Cinna the Poet. LeicesterGoogle Scholar
Wiseman, T. P. (1975). ‘Clodia: some imaginary lives’, Arion (new series) 2.96115Google Scholar
Wiseman, T. P. (1976). ‘Camerius’, BICS 23.1517 (= (1987) 219–21)Google Scholar
Wiseman, T. P. (1979). Clio’s Cosmetics. LeicesterGoogle Scholar
Wiseman, T. P. (1985). Catullus and his World. A Reappraisal. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Wiseman, T. P. (1987). Roman Studies: Literary and Historical. LiverpoolGoogle Scholar
Wiseman, T. P. (2007). ‘The Valerii Catulli of Verona’, in Skinner (2007a) 5771Google Scholar
Wiseman, T. P. (2015). The Roman Audience. Classical Literature as Social History. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Wong, A. (2017). The Poetry of Kissing in Early Modern Europe: From the Catullan Revival to Secundus, Shakespeare and the English Cavaliers. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Woodman, A. J. (1966). ‘Some implications of otium in Catullus 51.13–16’, Latomus 25.217–26Google Scholar
Woodman, A. J. (1970). ‘Sleepless poets: Catullus and Keats’, G&R 21.51–3Google Scholar
Woodman, A. J. (1977). Velleius Paterculus: The Tiberian Narrative. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Woodman, A. J. (1983). ‘A reading of Catullus 68a’, PCPS 29.100–6 (= (2012a) 27–34)Google Scholar
Woodman, A. J. (2000). Review of J. Godwin, Catullus: The Shorter Poems (Warminster 1999), BMCR 05.14Google Scholar
Woodman, A. J. (2002). ‘Biformis Vates: the Odes, Catullus, and Greek Lyric’, in T. [= A. J.] Woodman and Feeney, D. (eds.), Traditions and Contexts in the Poetry of Horace 5364. Cambridge (= (2012) 4158)Google Scholar
Woodman, A. J. (2003). ‘Poems to historians: Catullus 1 and Horace Odes 2.1’, in Braund and Gill (2003) 191216 (= (2012) 121–44)Google Scholar
Woodman, A. J. (2006). ‘Catullus 51: a suitable case for treatment?’, CQ 56.610–11 (= (2012) 24–6)Google Scholar
Woodman, A. J. (2012a). From Poetry to History. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Woodman, A. J. (2012b). ‘A covering letter: Poem 65’, in Du Quesnay and Woodman (2012) 130–52Google Scholar
Woodman, A. J. (2015a). Lost Histories: Selected Fragments of Roman Historical Writers. Histos Suppl. 2. Newcastle upon TyneGoogle Scholar
Woodman, A. J. (2015b). ‘Problems in Horace, Epode 11’, CQ 65.673–81Google Scholar
Woodman, T. [= A. J.] and Powell, J. (eds.) (1992). Author and Audience in Latin Literature. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Woodman, T. [= A. J.] and West, D. (eds.) (1974). Quality and Pleasure in Latin Poetry. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Wray, D. (2001). Catullus and the Poetics of Roman Manhood. CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Wray, D. (2009). ‘Ovid’s Catullus and the neoteric moment in Roman poetry’, in Knox, P. E. (ed.), A Companion to Ovid 252–64. Malden, Mass./OxfordGoogle Scholar
Wray, D. (2012). ‘Catullus the Roman love elegist?’, in Gold, B. K. (ed.), A Companion to Roman Love Elegy 2538. Malden, Mass./OxfordCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wyke, M. (2002). The Roman Mistress: Ancient and Modern Representations. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Yatromanolakis, D. (1999). ‘Alexandrian Sappho revisited’, HSCP 99.179–95Google Scholar
Young, E. (2015). Translation as Muse: Poetic Translation in Catullus’ Rome. ChicagoGoogle Scholar
Zamponi, S. (2016). ‘Aspetti della tradizione gotica nella littera antiqua’, in Black, et al. (2016) 105–25Google Scholar
Zeiner, N. (2005). Nothing Ordinary Here: Statius as Creator of Distinction in the Silvae. New YorkGoogle Scholar
Zetzel, J. E. G. (1983/2007). ‘Catullus, Ennius, and the poetics of allusion’, ICS 8.251–66 (= Gaisser, (2007a) 198216)Google Scholar
Zetzel, J. E. G. (2018). Critics, Compilers and Commentators. An Introduction to Roman Philology 200 BCE–800 CE. OxfordGoogle Scholar
Zicàri, M. (1955). ‘Moribunda ab sede Pisauri’, Studia Oliveriana 3.5769 (= (1978) 187–99)Google Scholar
Zicàri, M. (1957). ‘Calfurnio editore di Catullo’, Atene e Roma 2.157–9 (= (1978) 105–8)Google Scholar
Zicàri, M. (1958). ‘Ricerche sulla tradizione manoscritta di Catullo’, Bollettino per l’edizione nazionale dei classici 6.7999 (= (1978) 79–104)Google Scholar
Zicàri, M. (1964). ‘Some metrical and prosodical features of Catullus’ poetry’, Phoenix 18.193205Google Scholar
Zicàri, M. (1978). Scritti catulliani, ed. Parroni, P.. UrbinoGoogle Scholar
Ziolkowski, J. (2004). ‘Between text and music: the reception of Virgilian speeches in early Virgilian manuscripts’, MD 52.107–26Google Scholar
Ziolkowski, T. (2007). ‘Anglo-American Catullus since the mid-twentieth century’, IJCT 13.409–30Google Scholar
Zukofsky, L. and Zukofsky, C. (1969). Catullus (Gai Valeri Catulli Veronensis liber). LondonGoogle Scholar

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure [email protected] is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

Available formats
×