Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-t7fkt Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-22T20:27:22.874Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Bibliography

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 March 2023

Polly Low
Affiliation:
University of Durham
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: 2023

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

Primary Sources

Leiden, University Library, BPL 917: autograph manuscript of Hugo Grotius, ‘De Iure praedae Commentarius’, c. 1604–8.Google Scholar
Paris, Bibliothèque nationale de France, Département des manuscrits, Français 17211: Claude de Seyssel’s translation of Thucydides, c. 1512–14.Google Scholar

Secondary Sources

Adkins, A. W. H. (1960) Merit and Responsibility: A Study in Greek Values. London.Google Scholar
Adkins, A. W. H. (1975) ‘The arete of Nicias: Thucydides 7.86’, GRBS 16: 379–92.Google Scholar
Adler, W. and Tuffin, P. (trans.) (2002) The Chronography of George Synkellos. Oxford.Google Scholar
Agacinski, S. (2003) Time Passing: Modernity and Nostalgia. New York.Google Scholar
Alberti, G. B. (1972–2000) Thucydidis Historiae (3 vols.). Rome.Google Scholar
Allison, G. (2017) Destined for War: Can America and China Escape Thucydides’s Trap? Boston, MA.Google Scholar
Allison, J. (1984) ‘Sthenelaidas’ speech: Thucydides 1.86’, Hermes 112: 916.Google Scholar
Alty, J. (1982) ‘Dorians and Ionians’, JHS 102: 114.Google Scholar
Aly, W. (1969) Volksmärchen, Sage und Novelle bei Herodot und seinen Zeitgenossen, 2nd edition. Göttingen.Google Scholar
Anderson, B. (1991) Imagined Communities: Reflections on the Origins and Spread of Nationalism, revised edition. London.Google Scholar
Anderson, J. K. (1991) ‘Hoplite weapons and offensive arms’, in Hoplites: The Classical Greek Battle Experience, ed. Hanson, V. D.. London: 1537.Google Scholar
Andreski, S. (1968) Military Organization and Society, 2nd edition. London.Google Scholar
Andrewes, A. (1962) ‘The Mytilene Debate: Thucydides 3.36–49’, Phoenix 16: 6485.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Andrewes, A. (1974) The Greek Tyrants. London.Google Scholar
Arendt, H. (1970) On Violence. New York.Google Scholar
Argyriou, A. and Lagarrigue, G. (1987) ‘Georges Amiroutzes et son « Dialogue sur la foi au Christ tenu avec le Sultan des Turcs »’, Byzantinische Forschungen 11: 29221.Google Scholar
Armstrong, R. H. (2005) A Compulsion for Antiquity: Freud and the Ancient World. Ithaca, NY.Google Scholar
Arnold, J. H. (2000) History. A Very Short Introduction. Oxford.Google Scholar
Arnold, T. (1835) The Life and Correspondence of Thomas Arnold (2 vols.), ed. Stanley, A. P.. London.Google Scholar
Arnold, T. (1845) Introductory Lectures on Modern History, 3rd edition. London.Google Scholar
Ashcroft, B., Griffiths, G. and Tiffin, H. (2013) Post-Colonial Studies: The Key Concepts, 2nd edition. New York.Google Scholar
Avery, H. C. (1973) ‘Themes in Thucydides’ account of the Sicilian Expedition’, Hermes 101: 113.Google Scholar
Azoulay, V. (2014) Pericles of Athens, trans. Lloyd, J.. Princeton, NJ.Google Scholar
Bacon, F. (1629) ‘Considerations touching a warre with Spaine’, in Certaine Miscellany Works of the Right Honovrable, Francis Lo. Verulam, Viscount S. Alban, ed. Rawley, W.. London, 124.Google Scholar
Badian, E. (1971) ‘Archons and strategoi’, Antichthon 5: 134.Google Scholar
Bagby, L. M. J. (1994) ‘The use and abuse of Thucydides in international relations’, International Organization 48: 131–53.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bakker, E. J. (2006) ‘Contract and design: Thucydides’ writing’, in Brill’s Companion to Thucydides, eds. Rengakos, A. and Tsakmakis, A.. Leiden and Boston: 109–29.Google Scholar
Balcer, J. M. (1976) ‘Imperial magistrates in the Athenian Empire’, Historia 25: 257–87.Google Scholar
Baldwin, B. (1982) ‘Tzetzes on Thucydides’, Byzantinische Zeitschrift 75: 313–16.Google Scholar
Balot, R. K. (2001) Greed and Injustice in Classical Athens. Princeton, NJ.Google Scholar
Balot, R. K. (2014) Courage in the Democratic Polis: Ideology and Critique in Classical Athens. New York and Oxford.Google Scholar
Balot, R. K. (2015) ‘Philosophy and “humanity”: reflections on Thucydidean piety, justice, and necessity’, in In Search of Humanity. Essays in Honor of Clifford Orwin, ed. Radasanu, A.. New York: 1735.Google Scholar
Balot, R. K. (2016) ‘Civic trust in Thucydides’ History’, in Thucydides and Political Order: Concepts of Order and the History of the Peloponnesian War, eds. Thauer, C. R. and Wendt, C.. New York: 151–73.Google Scholar
Balot, R. K. (2017) ‘Was Thucydides a political philosopher?’, in The Oxford Handbook of Thucydides, eds. Balot, R. K., Forsdyke, S. and Foster, E. M.. New York: 319–38.Google Scholar
Balot, R. K., Forsdyke, S. and Foster, E. M. (eds.) (2017) The Oxford Handbook of Thucydides. New York.Google Scholar
Bann, S. (1984) The Clothing of Clio: A Study of the Representation of History in Nineteenth-Century Britain and France. Cambridge and New York.Google Scholar
Baragwanath, E. (2008) Motivation and Narrative in Herodotus. Oxford.Google Scholar
Barbour, R. (1954–56) ‘A Thucydides belonging to Ciriaco d’Ancona’, Bodleian Library Record 5: 713.Google Scholar
Barker, E. (2009) Entering the Agon: Dissent and Authority in Homer, Historiography and Tragedy. Oxford.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Beard, M. (2010) ‘Which Thucydides can you trust?’, New York Review of Books, 30 September.Google Scholar
Bearzot, C. (2004) ‘Il Cleone di Tucidide tra Archidamo e Pericle’, in Ad fontes! Festschrift für Gerhard Dobesch, eds. Heftner, H. and Tomaschitz, K.. Vienna: 125–35.Google Scholar
Beiser, F. C. (2011a) The German Historicist Tradition. Oxford.Google Scholar
Beiser, F. C. (2011b) ‘Hegel and Ranke: a re-examination’, A Companion to Hegel, eds. Houlgate, S. and Baur, M.. Oxford: 332–50.Google Scholar
Bellos, D. (2011) Is That a Fish in Your Ear? Translation and the Meaning of Everything. Harmondsworth.Google Scholar
Bender, G. F. (1938) Der Begriff des Staatsmannes bei Thukydides. Würzberg.Google Scholar
Berent, M. (2000) ‘Anthropology and the classics: war, violence, and the stateless polis’, CQ 50: 257–89.Google Scholar
Berlin, I. (1978) Selected Writings. Vol. I: Russian Thinkers. London.Google Scholar
Best, J. (1969) Thracian Peltasts and Their Influence on Greek Warfare. Groningen.Google Scholar
Blass, F. (1868) Die attische Beredsamkeit, I: Von Gorgias bis zu Lysias, 1st edition. Leipzig.Google Scholar
Bloedow, E. F. (1973) Alcibiades Reexamined. Wiesbaden.Google Scholar
Bloedow, E. F. (1981) ‘The speeches of Archidamus and Sthenelaidas at Sparta’, Historia 30: 129–43.Google Scholar
Bloedow, E. F. (1987) ‘Sthenelaidas the persuasive Spartan’, Hermes 115: 60–6.Google Scholar
Bloedow, E. F. (1991) ‘On “nurturing lions in the state”: Alcibiades’ entry on the political stage in Athens’, Klio 73: 4965.Google Scholar
Bloedow, E. F. (1996) ‘The speeches of Hermocrates and Athenagoras at Syracuse in 415 bc: difficulties in Syracuse and in Thucydides’, Historia 45: 141–58.Google Scholar
Bloedow, E. F. (2000) ‘The implications of a major contradiction in Pericles’ career’, Hermes 128: 295309.Google Scholar
Blok, J. H. and Lambert, S. D. (2009) ‘The appointment of priests in Attic gene’, ZPE 169: 95121.Google Scholar
Blösel, W. (2012) ‘Thucydides on Themistocles: a Herodotean narrator?’, in Thucydides and Herodotus, eds. Foster, E. M. and Lateiner, D.. Oxford: 215–40.Google Scholar
Boedeker, D. and Sider, D. (eds.) (2001) The New Simonides: Contexts of Praise and Desire. Oxford.Google Scholar
Bommeljé, S. (1988) ‘Aeolis in Aetolia: Thuc. 3.102.5 and the origins of the Aetolian “ethnos’, Historia 37: 297316.Google Scholar
Boone, R. A. (2007) War, Domination, and the Monarchy of France: Claude de Seyssel and the Language of Politics in the Renaissance. Leiden.Google Scholar
Bosworth, A. B. (1993) ‘The humanitarian aspect of the Melian Dialogue’, JHS 113: 3044.Google Scholar
Bowie, E. (1986) ‘Early Greek elegy, symposium and public festival’, JHS 106: 13-35.Google Scholar
Bradeen, D. W. (1960) ‘The popularity of the Athenian Empire’, Historia 9: 257–69.Google Scholar
Bransby, G. (1992) Her Majesty’s Vietnam Soldier. Worcester.Google Scholar
Braun, H. (1885) Procopius Caesariensis quatenus imitatus sit Thucydidem. Erlangen.Google Scholar
Brice, L. (2013) ‘The Athenian expedition to Sicily’, in The Oxford Handbook of Warfare in the Classical World, eds. Campbell, B. and Tritle, L.. Oxford: 623–41.Google Scholar
Brunt, P. A. (1952) ‘Thucydides and Alcibiades’, REG 65: 5996.Google Scholar
Brunt, P. A. (1953) ‘The Hellenic League against Persia’, Historia 2: 135–63.Google Scholar
Brunt, P. A. (1993) Studies in Greek History and Thought. Oxford.Google Scholar
Brutus, Stephanus Junius’ (1579) Vindiciae, Contra Tyrannos: sive, de Principis in Populum, Populíque in Principem, legitima potestate. ‘Edimburgi’ [but Basel].Google Scholar
Bruzzone, R. (2017) ‘Polemos, pathemata, and plague: Thucydides’ narrative and the tradition of upheaval’, GRBS 57: 882909.Google Scholar
Burke, P. (1966) ‘A survey of the popularity of ancient historians, 1450–1700’, History and Theory 5: 135–52.Google Scholar
Burns, T. (2010) ‘Marcellinus’ Life of Thucydides’, Interpretation 38: 326.Google Scholar
Bury, J. B. (1903) The Science of History. An Inaugural Lecture Delivered in the Divinity School, Cambridge. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Bury, J. B. (1958) The Ancient Greek Historians. New York.Google Scholar
Bury, J. B. (1966) A History of Greece to the Death of Alexander the Great, 3rd edition, rev. Meiggs, R.. New York.Google Scholar
Büttner-Wobst, T. and Roos, A. G. (eds.) (1906–1910) Excerpta historica iussu imp. Constantini Porphyrogeniti confecta, vol. II. Berlin.Google Scholar
Buxton, R. F. (ed.) (2016) Aspects of Leadership in Xenophon, Histos Suppl. 5.Google Scholar
Cairns, D. L. (1993) Aidōs: The Psychology and Ethics of Honour and Shame in Ancient Greek Literature. Oxford.Google Scholar
Cairns, D. L. (2019) ‘Honour and kingship in Herodotus: status, role, and the limits of self-assertion’, Frontiers of Philosophy in China 14: 7593.Google Scholar
Cairns, F. (1982) ‘Cleon and Pericles: a suggestion’, JHS 102: 203–4.Google Scholar
Călinescu, M. (1987) Five Faces of Modernity: Modernism, Avant-garde, Decadence, Kitsch, Postmodernism. Durham, NC.Google Scholar
Cambiano, G. (2000) Polis: Un modello per la cultura europea. Rome and Bari.Google Scholar
Canevaro, M. (2019) ‘La deliberation démocratique à l’Assemblée athénienne: procédures et stratégies de legitimation’, Annales HSS 74: 339–81.Google Scholar
Canfora, L. (2006) ‘Biographical obscurities and problems of composition’, in Brill’s Companion to Thucydides, eds. Rengakos, A. and Tsakmakis, A.. Leiden and Boston: 331.Google Scholar
Carawan, E. (1996) ‘The trials of Thucydides ‘the Demagogue’ in the anonymous “Life” of Thucydides the Historian’, Historia 45: 405–22.Google Scholar
Carney, E. (2010) ‘Macedonian women’, in A Companion to Ancient Macedonia, eds. Roisman, J. and Worthington, I.. Malden, MA: 409–27.Google Scholar
Carr, E. H. (1987) What Is History?, 2nd edition. Harmondsworth.Google Scholar
Carroll, L. (1871) Through the Looking Glass, and What Alice Found There. London.Google Scholar
Carsten, J. (2000) Cultures of Relatedness: New Approaches to the Study of Kinship. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Cartledge, P. (1993) ‘The silent women of Thucydides: 2.45.2 re-viewed’, in Nomodeiktes: Greek Studies in Honor of Martin Ostwald, eds. Rosen, R. M. and Farrell, J.. Ann Arbor: 125–32.Google Scholar
Cartledge, P. (1998a) ‘Introduction: defining a kosmos, in Kosmos: Essays in Order, Conflict and Community in Classical Athens, eds. Cartledge, P., Millett, P. and von Reden, S.. Cambridge: 112.Google Scholar
Cartledge, P. (1998b) ‘The machismo of the Athenian empire – or the reign of the phaulus?’, in When Men Were Men: Masculinity, Power and Identity in Classical Antiquity, eds. Foxhall, L. and Salmon, J.. London: 5467.Google Scholar
Cartledge, P. (2001a) ‘Spartan kingship: doubly odd?’, in Spartan Reflections. Berkeley: 5567.Google Scholar
Cartledge, P. (2001b) ‘The peculiar position of Sparta in the development of the Greek city-state’, in Spartan Reflections. Berkeley: 2138.Google Scholar
Cartledge, P. and Debnar, P. (2006) ‘Sparta and the Spartans in Thucydides’, in Brill’s Companion to Thucydides, eds. Rengakos, A. and Tsakmakis, A.. Leiden and Boston: 559–87.Google Scholar
Casson, L. (1971) Ships and Seamanship in the Ancient World. Princeton.Google Scholar
Cavallo, G. (1986) ‘Conservazione e perdita dei testi greci: fattori materiali, sociali, culturali’, in Tradizione dei classici, Trasformazioni della cultura, ed. Giardin, A.. Rome: 83172.Google Scholar
Cawkwell, G. L. (1978) Philip of Macedon. London.Google Scholar
Cawkwell, G. L. (1987) Thucydides and the Peloponnesian War. London.Google Scholar
Cawkwell, G. L. (1989) ‘Orthodoxy and hoplites’, CQ 39: 375–89.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cawkwell, G. L. (1997) Thucydides and the Peloponnesian War. London and New York.Google Scholar
Chambers, M. (2008) Valla’s Translation of Thucydides in Vat. Lat. 1801 with the Reproduction of the Codex. Vatican City.Google Scholar
Chaniotis, A. (2013) ‘Greeks under siege: challenges, experiences, and emotions’, in The Oxford Handbook of Warfare in the Classical World, eds. Campbell, B. and Tritle, L.. Oxford: 438–56.Google Scholar
Christ, M. R. (2006) The Bad Citizen in Classical Athens. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Chytraeus, D. (1563) Chronologia Historiae Herodoti, & Thucydidis. Strasbourg.Google Scholar
Chytraeus, D. (1567) Chronologia Historiae Herodoti et Thucydidis. Rostock.Google Scholar
Cogan, M. (1981) The Human Thing: The Speeches and Principles of Thucydides’ History. Chicago.Google Scholar
Collingwood, R. G. (1939) An Autobiography. Oxford.Google Scholar
Connor, W. R. (1971) The New Politicians of Fifth-Century Athens. Princeton.Google Scholar
Connor, W. R. (1977) ‘A post modernist Thucydides?’, CJ 72: 289–98.Google Scholar
Connor, W. R. (1984a) ‘Review of A. W. Gomme, A. Andrewes, and K. J. Dover A Historical Commentary on Thucydides, Vol. 5: Book 8’, CPh 79: 230–5.Google Scholar
Connor, W. R. (1984b) Thucydides. Princeton.Google Scholar
Connor, W. R. (1985) ‘Narrative discourse in Thucydides’, in The Greek Historians. Literature and History. Papers Presented to A. E. Raubitschek, ed. Jameson, M. H.. Saratoga, CA: 117.Google Scholar
Connor, W. R. (1988) ‘Early Greek land warfare as symbolic expression’, P&P 119: 329.Google Scholar
Connor, W. R. (1994) ‘The problem of Athenian civic identity’, in Athenian Identity and Civic Ideology, eds. Boegehold, A. L. and Scafuro, A. C.. London: 3444.Google Scholar
Connor, W. R. (2017–18) ‘Pericles on democracy: Thucydides 2.37.1’, CW 111: 165–75.Google Scholar
Constantakopoulou, C. (2013) ‘Tribute, the Athenian Empire and small states and communities in the Aegean’, in Handels- und Finanzgebaren in der Ägäis im 5. Jh. v. Chr., Trade and Finance in the Fifth Century bc Aegean World, ed. Slawisch, A.. Istanbul: 2542.Google Scholar
Cook, M. L. (2006) ‘Thucydides as a resource for teaching ethics and leadership in military education environments’, Journal of Military Ethics 5: 353–62.Google Scholar
Corcella, A. (2006) ‘The new genre and its boundaries: poets and logographers.’ in Brill’s Companion to Thucydides, eds. Rengakos, A. and Tsakmakis, A.. Leiden and Boston: 3356.Google Scholar
Cornford, F. (1907) Thucydides Mythistoricus. London.Google Scholar
Crane, G. (1996) The Blinded Eye: Thucydides and the New Written Word. Lanham, MD, and London.Google Scholar
Crane, G. (1998) Thucydides and the Ancient Simplicity: The Limits of Political Realism. Berkeley.Google Scholar
Crawley, R. (trans.) (1874) The History of the Peloponnesian War. London.Google Scholar
Crowley, J. (2012) The Psychology of the Athenian Hoplite: The Culture of Combat in Classical Athens. Cambridge.Google Scholar
d’Andrea, A. (1970) ‘The political and ideological context of Innocent Gentillet’s Anti-Machiavel’, Renaissance Quarterly 23: 397411.Google Scholar
Daub, S. (1996) Leonardo Brunis Rede auf Nanni Strozzi: Einleitung, Edition und Kommentar. Stuttgart and Leipzig.Google Scholar
Debnar, P. (2001) Speaking the Same Language: Speech and Audience in Thucydides’ Spartan Debates. Ann Arbor.Google Scholar
Debnar, P. (2013) ‘Blurring the boundaries of speech: Thucydides and indirect discourse’, in Thucydides Between History and Literature, eds. Tsakmakis, A. and Tamiolaki, M.. Berlin and Boston: 271–85.Google Scholar
Delebecque, E. (1965) Thucydide et Alcibiade. Aix en Provence.Google Scholar
Demont, P. (2013) ‘The causes of the Athenian plague in Thucydides’, in Thucydides between History and Literature, eds. Tsakmakis, A. and Tamiolaki, M.. Berlin and Boston: 7387.Google Scholar
Denniston, J. D. (1952) Greek Prose Style. Oxford.Google Scholar
Derks, T. and Roymans, N. (eds.) (2009) Ethnic Constructs in Antiquity: The Role of Power and Tradition. Amsterdam.Google Scholar
Develin, R. (1979) ‘The election of archons from Solon to Telesinos’, L’antiquité classique 48: 455–68.Google Scholar
Dewald, C. (1987) ‘Narrative surface and authorial voice in Herodotus’ Histories’, Arethusa 20: 147–70.Google Scholar
Dewald, C. (1999) ‘The figured stage: focalizing the initial narratives of Herodotus and Thucydides’, in Contextualizing Classics: Ideology, Performance, Dialogue. Festschrift Peradotto, eds. Felson, N., Konstan, D. and Faulkner, T.. Lanham, MD: 229–61.Google Scholar
Dewald, C. (2005) Thucydides’ War Narrative: A Structural Study. Berkeley.Google Scholar
Dewald, C. (2009) ‘The figured stage: focalizing the initial narratives of Herodotus and Thucydides’, in Thucydides, ed. Rusten, J. S.. Oxford Readings in Classical Studies. Oxford: 114–47.Google Scholar
Dickey, E. (2007) Ancient Greek Scholarship. Oxford.Google Scholar
Dougherty, C. and Kurke, L. (eds.) (2003) The Cultures within Greek Cultures: Contact, Conflict, Collaboration. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Dover, K. J. (1965) Thucydides, Book 6. Oxford.Google Scholar
Dover, K. J. (1973) Thucydides. Oxford.Google Scholar
Doyle, M. W. (1986) Empires. Ithaca, NY.Google Scholar
Ducat, J. (2006) Spartan Education: Youth and Society in the Classical Period. Swansea.Google Scholar
Earl, D. C. (1972) ‘Prologue form in ancient historiography’, ANRW I: 842–56.Google Scholar
Earley, B. (2020) The Thucydidean Turn. (Re)Interpreting Thucydides’ Political Thought Before, During and After the Great War. London.Google Scholar
Eco, U. (2003) Mouse or Rat: Translation as Negotiation. London.Google Scholar
Edmunds, L. (1975) Chance and Intelligence in Thucydides. Cambridge, MA.Google Scholar
Edmunds, L. (2009) ‘Thucydides in the act of writing', in Thucydides, ed. Rusten, J. S.. Oxford Readings in Classical Studies. Oxford: 91113.Google Scholar
Ellis, J. R. (1978) ‘Thucydides at Amphipolis’, Antichthon 12: 2835.Google Scholar
Engel, G. (1910) ‘De antiquorum epicorum didacticorum historicorum prooemiis’, Dissertation, Marburg.Google Scholar
Erskine, A. (2001) Troy between Greece and Rome. Oxford.Google Scholar
Euben, J. P. (2010) ‘Thucydides in Baghdad’, in When Worlds Elide, eds. Euben, J. P. and Bassi, K.. Lexington: 161–84.Google Scholar
Evans, J. A. S. (1976) ‘The attitudes of the secular historians of the Age of Justinian towards the classical past’, Traditio 32: 353–8.Google Scholar
Evans, R. J. (1997) In Defence of History. London.Google Scholar
Evelyn-White, H. G. (1914) Hesiod: Theogony, Works and Days, Testimonia. Loeb Classical Library 57. Cambridge, MA.Google Scholar
Fabian, J. (2014) Time and the Other: How Anthropology Makes Its Object, 2nd edition. New York.Google Scholar
Farrar, C. (1988) The Origins of Democratic Thinking: The Invention of Politics in Classical Athens. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Feeney, D. (1994) ‘Beginning Sallust’s Catiline’, Prudentia 26: 139–46.Google Scholar
Ferrario, S. B. (2013) ‘“Reading” Athens: foreign perceptions of the political roles of Athenian leaders in Thucydides’, in Thucydides between History and Literature, eds. Tsakmakis, A. and Tamiolaki, M.. Berlin and Boston: 181–97.Google Scholar
Ferrario, S. B. (2014) Historical Agency and the ‘Great Man’ in Classical Greece. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Finley, J. H. (1939) ‘The origins of Thucydides’ style’, HSCPh 50: 3584. (Reprinted in Three Essays on Thucydides, Cambridge, MA, 1967: 55–117.)Google Scholar
Finley, J. H. (1940) ‘The unity of Thucydides’ History’, in Athenian Studies Presented to William Scott Ferguson. HSCPh Supplement. Cambridge, MA: 255–97. (Reprinted in Three Essays on Thucydides, Cambridge, MA, 1967: 118–69.)Google Scholar
Finley, J. H. (1942) Thucydides. Oxford.Google Scholar
Finley, J. H. (1967) Three Essays on Thucydides. Cambridge, MA.Google Scholar
Finley, M. I. (1962) ‘Athenian demagogues’, Past and Present 21: 324.Google Scholar
Finley, M. I. (1968) ‘Thucydides the moralist’, in Aspects of Antiquity: Discoveries and Controversies. New York: 4457.Google Scholar
Finley, M. I. (1978) ‘The fifth-century Athenian Empire: a balance sheet’, in Imperialism in the Ancient World, eds. Garnsey, P. D. A. and Whittaker, C.. Cambridge: 103–26.Google Scholar
Fisher, M. and Hoekstra, K. (2017) ‘Thucydides and the politics of necessity’, in The Oxford Handbook of Thucydides, eds. Balot, R. K., Forsdyke, S. and Foster, E. M.. New York: 373–90.Google Scholar
Flacelière, R. (1937) Les Aitoliens à Delphes. B.E.F.A.R. 143. Paris.Google Scholar
Flory, S. (1990) ‘The meaning of τὸ μὴ μυθῶδες (1,22,4) and the usefulness of Thucydides’ History’, CJ 85: 193208.Google Scholar
Flory, S. (1993) ‘The death of Thucydides and the motif of “land on sea”’, in Nomodeiktes: Greek Studies in Honor of Martin Ostwald, eds. Rosen, R. M. and Farrell, J.. Ann Arbor: 113–23.Google Scholar
Flower, M. A. (2009) ‘Athenian religion and the Peloponnesian War’, in Art in Athens during the Peloponnesian War, ed. Palagia, O.. Cambridge: 123.Google Scholar
Flower, M. A. and Marincola, J. (eds.) (2002) Herodotus. Histories. Book IX. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Foerster, R. and Richtsteig, E. (eds.) (1929) Choricii Gazaei opera. Leipzig.Google Scholar
Forde, S. (1989) The Ambition to Rule: Alcibiades and the Politics of Imperialism in Thucydides. Ithaca, NY.Google Scholar
Fornara, C. W. (1971a) Herodotus: An Interpretative Essay. Oxford.Google Scholar
Fornara, C. W. (1971b) ‘Evidence for the date of Herodotus’ publication’, JHS 91: 2534.Google Scholar
Fornara, C. W. (1981) ‘Herodotus’ knowledge of the Archidamian War’, Hermes 109: 149–56.Google Scholar
Fornara, C. W. (1983) The Nature of History in Ancient Greece and Rome. Berkeley.Google Scholar
Forrest, W. G. (1969) ‘Two chronographic notes’, CQ 19: 95110.Google Scholar
Foster, E. M. (2010) Thucydides, Pericles, and Athenian Imperialism. Cambridge and New York.Google Scholar
Fowler, R. L. (1996) ‘Herodotos and his contemporaries’, JHS 116: 6287.Google Scholar
Fowler, R. L. (2013) Early Greek Mythography. Commentary, vol. II. Oxford.Google Scholar
Fox, M. (2001) ‘Dionysius, Lucian, and the prejudice against rhetoric in history’, JRS 91: 7693.Google Scholar
Fragoulaki, M. (2013) Kinship in Thucydides: Intercommunal Ties and Historical Narrative. Oxford.Google Scholar
Fragoulaki, M. (2020a) ‘Thucydides Homericus and the episode of Mycalessus (Th. 7.29–30): myth and history, space and collective memory’, in Shaping Memory in Ancient Greece: Poetry, Historiography and Epigraphy, eds. Constantakopoulou, C. and Fragoulaki, M.. Histos Suppl. 11: 37–86.Google Scholar
Fragoulaki, M. (2020b) ‘The mytho-political map of Spartan colonisation in Thucydides: the “Spartan colonial triangle” vs. the “Spartan Mediterranean”’, in Thucydides and Sparta, eds. Debnar, P. and Powell, A.. Swansea: 183220.Google Scholar
Fritzsche, P. (2001) ‘Specters of history: on nostalgia, exile, and modernity’, The American Historical Review 106: 1587–618.Google Scholar
Fromentin, V. and Gotteland, S. (2015) ‘Thucydides’ ancient reputation’, in A Handbook to the Reception of Thucydides, eds. Lee, C. and Morley, N.. Chichester: 1325.Google Scholar
Fromentin, V., Gotteland, S. and Payen, P. (eds.) (2010) Ombres de Thucydide. La réception de l’historien depuis l’Antiquité jusqu’au début du XXe siècle. Pessac.Google Scholar
Furley, W. (2006) ‘Thucydides and religion’, in Brill’s Companion to Thucydides, eds. Rengakos, A. and Tsakmakis, A.. Leiden and Boston: 415–38.Google Scholar
Gaca, K. (2010) ‘The andrapodizing of war captives in Greek historical memory’, TAPhA 140: 117–61.Google Scholar
Gallie, W. B. (1956) ‘Essentially contested concepts’, Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 56: 167–98.Google Scholar
Garlan, Y. (1975) War in the Ancient World. London.Google Scholar
Garland, R. (1992) Introducing New Gods. London.Google Scholar
Garst, D. (1989) ‘Thucydides and neorealism’, International Studies Quarterly 33: 327.Google Scholar
Gautier, P. (ed.) (1989) Michaelis Pselli Theologica, vol. I. Leipzig.Google Scholar
Genette, G. (1980) Narrative Discourse: An Essay in Method, trans. J. E. Lewin, with a foreword by J. Culler. Ithaca, NY.Google Scholar
Gentili, A. (1585) De legationibus, libri tres. London.Google Scholar
Gentili, A. (1587) Disputationum decas prima. London.Google Scholar
Gentili, A. (1933) De iure belli libri tres. Oxford. (Citations are to page numbers of the English and Latin volumes, respectively (vol. 1, reproduction of the 1612 Hanau edition; vol. 2, trans. J. C. Rolfe).)Google Scholar
Gentillet, I. (1576) Discours, svr les moyens de bien govverner et maintenir en bonne paix vn Royaume ou autre Principauté … Contre Nicolas Machiauel Florentin. N.p.Google Scholar
Geuss, R. (2005) ‘Thucydides, Nietzsche, and Williams’, in Outside Ethics. Princeton: 219–33.Google Scholar
Geuss, R. (2008) Philosophy and Real Politics. Princeton.Google Scholar
Gibson, G. (2004) ‘Learning Greek history in the ancient classroom: the evidence of the treatises on progymnasmata’, CPh 99: 103–29.Google Scholar
Gilpin, R. (1988) ‘The theory of hegemonic war’, Journal of Interdisciplinary History 18: 591613.Google Scholar
Goldhill, S. D. (2002) Who Needs Greek? Contests in the Cultural History of Hellenism. Cambridge and New York.Google Scholar
Goldhill, S. D. (2009) ‘The audience on stage: rhetoric, emotion, and judgement in Sophoclean theatre’, in Sophocles and the Greek Tragic Tradition, eds. Goldhill, S. and Hall, E.. Cambridge: 2747.Google Scholar
Goldhill, S. D. (2011) Victorian Culture and Classical Antiquity: Art, Opera, Fiction, and the Proclamation of Modernity. Princeton.Google Scholar
Goldsworthy, A. K. (1997) ‘The othismos, myths and heresies: the nature of hoplite battle’, War in History 4: 126.Google Scholar
Golfin, E. (2011) ‘Reflections on the causes of evil in Thucydides’ work’, in Thucydides – A Violent Teacher? History and Its Representations, eds. Rechenauer, G. and Pothou, V.. Gottingen: 213–39.Google Scholar
Gomme, A. W. (1937) ‘The greatest war in Greek history’, in Essays in Greek History and Literature. Oxford: 116–24.Google Scholar
Gomme, A. W., Andrewes, A. and Dover, K. J. (1945–81) A Historical Commentary on Thucydides (5 vols.). Oxford.Google Scholar
Gould, S. J. (1977) Ontogeny and Phylogeny. Cambridge, MA.Google Scholar
Grafton, A. (1997) The Footnote: A Curious History. Cambridge, MA.Google Scholar
Grafton, A., Most, G. W. and Zetzel, J. E. G. (1985) ‘Introduction’, in Prolegomena to Homer, 1795, ed. Wolf, F. A.. New Jersey: 336.Google Scholar
Graninger, D. (2015) ‘Ethnicity and ethne’, in A Companion to Ancient Thrace, eds. Valeva, J., Nankov, E. and Graninger, D.. Malden, MA: 2232.Google Scholar
Grant, J. (1974) ‘Toward knowing Thucydides’, Phoenix 28: 8194.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gray, V. J. (2011) Xenophon’s Mirror of Princes: Reading the Reflections. Oxford.Google Scholar
Green, P. (2004) ‘Athenian history and historians in the fifth century’, in From Ikaria to the Stars. Austin: 67103.Google Scholar
Greenwood, E. (2006) Thucydides and the Shaping of History. London.Google Scholar
Greenwood, E. (2015) ‘On translating Thucydides’, in A Handbook to the Reception of Thucydides, eds. Lee, C. and Morley, N.. Chichester: 91121.Google Scholar
Greenwood, E. (2016) ‘Futures real and unreal in Greek historiography: from Herodotus to Plato’, in Knowing Future Time in and through Greek Historiography. Trends in Classics, supplementary vol. 32, ed. Lianeri, A.. Berlin: 79100.Google Scholar
Greenwood, E. (2017) ‘Thucydides on the Sicilian Expedition’, in The Oxford Handbook of Thucydides, eds. Balot, R. K., Forsdyke, S. and Foster, E. M.. New York: 161–77.Google Scholar
Greenwood, E. (2018) ‘Pericles’ utopia: a reading of Thucydides and Plato’, in How to Do Things with History, eds. Allen, D., Christesen, P. and Millett, P.. Oxford: 5580.Google Scholar
Grell, C. (1993) L’histoire entre érudition et philosophie. Essai sur la connaissance historique à l’âge des Lumières. Paris.Google Scholar
Grethlein, J. (2006) ‘The unthucydidean voice of Sallust’, TAPhA 136: 299327.Google Scholar
Grethlein, J. (2010a) ‘Experientiality and “narrative reference” with thanks to Thucydides’, History and Theory 49: 315–35.Google Scholar
Grethlein, J. (2010b) The Greeks and their Past. Poetry, Oratory and History in the Fifth Century bce. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Grethlein, J. (2011) ‘The rise of Greek historiography and the invention of prose’, in The Oxford History of Historical Writing. Vol. 1: Beginnings to ad 600, ed. Feldherr, A.. Oxford: 148–70.Google Scholar
Grethlein, J. (2013a) Experience and Teleology in Ancient Historiography. Futures Past from Herodotus to Augustine. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Grethlein, J. (2013b) ‘The presence of the past in Thucydides’, in Thucydides between History and Literature, eds. Tsakmakis, A. and Tamiolaki, M.. Berlin and Boston: 91118.Google Scholar
Grethlein, J. (2016) ‘Ancient historiography and “future past”’, in Knowing Future Time in and through Greek Historiography, ed. Lianeri, A. Berlin and Boston: 59-77.Google Scholar
Grethlein, J. and Krebs, C. B. (eds.) (2012) Time and Narrative in Ancient Historiography. The ‘Plupast’ from Herodotus to Appian. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Gribble, D. (1998) ‘Narrator invention in Thucydides’, JHS 118: 4167.Google Scholar
Gribble, D. (1999) Thucydides and Athens. Oxford.Google Scholar
Griggio, C. (1986) ‘Due lettere inedite del Bruni al Salutati e a Francesco Barbaro’, Rinascimento 26: 2750.Google Scholar
Grissom, D. (2012) ‘Thucydides’ dangerous world: dual forms of danger in classical Greek interstate relations’, Dissertation, University of Maryland, College Park.Google Scholar
Grote, G. (1843) ‘“Grecian legends and early Greek history”: review of Niebuhr’s Griechische Heroen Geschichte’, Westminster Review 39: 285328.Google Scholar
Grote, G. (1857) History of Greece, Vol. 5. Reprinted from the 1st London edition. New York.Google Scholar
Grote, G. (1880) History of Greece, Vol. 1. Reprint of the 2nd London edition. New York.Google Scholar
Grotius, H. (1625) De ivre belli ac pacis libri tres. Paris.Google Scholar
Grotius, H. (1631) De ivre belli ac pacis libri tres. Amsterdam.Google Scholar
Grube, G. (1650) ‘Dionysius of Halicarnassus on Thucydides’, Phoenix 4: 95110.Google Scholar
Gruen, E. S. (2011) Rethinking the Other in Antiquity. Princeton.Google Scholar
Grundy, G. B. (1911) Thucydides and the History of His Age. London.Google Scholar
Guha, R. (2002) History at the Limit of World-History. New York.Google Scholar
Hall, E. (2006) The Theatrical Cast of Athens: Interactions Between Ancient Greek Drama and Society. Oxford.Google Scholar
Hall, J. M. (1997) Ethnic Identity in Greek Antiquity. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Hall, J. M. (2001) ‘Contested ethnicities: perceptions of Macedonia within evolving definitions of Greek identity’, in Ancient Perceptions of Greek Ethnicity, ed. Malkin, I.. Cambridge, MA: 159–86.Google Scholar
Hall, J. M. (2002) Hellenicity: Between Ethnicity and Culture. London.Google Scholar
Hamel, D. (1998) Athenian Generals: Military Authority in the Classical Period. Leiden and Boston.Google Scholar
Hammond, M. (2009) Thucydides, The Peloponnesian War, A New Translation. Oxford.Google Scholar
Hammond, N. G. L. (1952) ‘The arrangement of thought in the proem and in other parts of Thucydides I’, CQ 2: 127–41.Google Scholar
Hammond, N. G. L. (1967) ‘The origins and the nature of the Athenian alliance of 478/7 b.c.’, JHS 87: 4161.Google Scholar
Hammond, N. G. L. (1969) ‘Strategia and hegemonia in fifth century Athens’, CQ 19: 111–44.Google Scholar
Hansen, M. H. (1980) ‘Seven hundred archai in classical Athens’, GRBS 21: 167–9.Google Scholar
Hansen, M. H. (1999) The Athenian Democracy in the Age of Demosthenes: Structure, Principles and Ideology. Bristol.Google Scholar
Hanson, V. D. (1991) ‘Hoplite technology in phalanx battle’, in Hoplites: The Classical Greek Battle Experience, ed. Hanson, V. D.. London: 6384.Google Scholar
Hanson, V. D. (1996) ‘Hoplites into democrats: the changing ideology of the Athenian infantry’, in Dēmokratia: A Conversation on Democracies, Ancient and Modern, eds. Hedrick, C. and Ober, J.. Princeton: 289312.Google Scholar
Hanson, V. D. (2000) The Western Way of War: Infantry Battle in Classical Greece. London.Google Scholar
Hanson, V. D. (2001) ‘Hoplite battle as ancient Greek warfare: when, where, and why?’, in War and Violence in Ancient Greece, ed. van Wees, H.. London: 201–32.Google Scholar
Hanson, V. D. (2005) A War Like No Other: How the Athenians and Spartans Fought the Peloponnesian War. London.Google Scholar
Harding, P. (2007) ‘Local history and atthidography,’ in A Companion to Greek and Roman Historiography, ed. Marincola, J.. Malden, MA, and Oxford: 180–8.Google Scholar
Hardwick, L. (2000) Translating Words, Translating Cultures. London.Google Scholar
Harloe, K. (2013) Winckelmann and the Invention of Antiquity: History and Aesthetics in the Age of Altertumswissenschaft. Oxford.Google Scholar
Harloe, K. and Morley, N. (2012a) ‘Introduction’, in Thucydides and the Modern World: Reception, Reinterpretation and Influence from the Renaissance to the Present, eds. Harloe, K. and Morley, N.. Cambridge: 124.Google Scholar
Harloe, K. and Morley, N. (eds.) (2012b) Thucydides and the Modern World: Reception, Reinterpretation and Influence from the Renaissance to the Present. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Harrison, T. (2000) ‘Sicily in the Athenian imagination: Thucydides and the Persian Wars’, in Ancient Sicily, eds. Smith, C. J. and Serrati, J.. Edinburgh: 8496.Google Scholar
Harrison, T. (ed.) (2001) Greeks and Barbarians. Edinburgh.Google Scholar
Harrison, T. and Skinner, J. (eds.) (2020) Herodotus in the Long Nineteenth Century. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Hartog, F. (1988) The Mirror of Herodotus: The Representation of the Other in the Writing of History, trans. Lloyd, J.. Berkeley.Google Scholar
Hatzopoulos, M. B. (2011) ‘Macedonians and other Greeks’, in Brill’s Companion to Ancient Macedon. Studies in the Archaeology and History of Macedon, 650 bc–300 ad, ed. Lane Fox, R.. Leiden: 5178.Google Scholar
Hawthorn, G. (2014) Thucydides on Politics: Back to the Present. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Hegel, G. W. F. (1861) Lectures on the Philosophy of History, trans. (of 3rd German edition) and ed. Sibree, J.. London.Google Scholar
Helm, R. (ed.) (1956) Die Chronik des Hieronymus (= Eusebius Werke, vol. VII). Berlin.Google Scholar
Hemmerdinger, B. (1955) Essai sur l’histoire du texte de Thucydide. Paris.Google Scholar
Henderson, B. W. (1927) The Great War between Athens and Sparta: A Companion to the Military History of Thucydides. London.Google Scholar
Henry, R. (ed. and trans.) (1959–77) Photius: Bibliothèque (8 vols.). Paris.Google Scholar
Hesk, J. (2000) Deception and Democracy in Classical Athens. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Hinrichs, F. T. (1981) ‘Hermokrates bei Thukydides’, Hermes 109: 4659.Google Scholar
Hirshfield, N. (1996) ‘Appendix G: trireme warfare in Thucydides’, in The Landmark Thucydides: A Comprehensive Guide to the Peloponnesian War, ed. Strassler, R.. New York: 608–13.Google Scholar
Hobbes, T. (trans.) (1629) Eight Bookes of the Peloponnesian Warre. London.Google Scholar
Hobbes, T. (1975) Hobbes’ Thucydides, ed. Schlatter, R.. New Brunswick.Google Scholar
Hodkinson, S. (1983) ‘Social order and the conflict of values in classical Sparta’, Chiron 13: 245–51.Google Scholar
Hodkinson, S. (2000) Property and Wealth in Classical Sparta. Swansea.Google Scholar
Hoekstra, K. (2012) ‘Thucydides and the bellicose beginnings of modern political theory’, in Thucydides and the Modern World: Reception, Reinterpretation, and Influence from the Renaissance to the Present, eds. Harloe, K. and Morley, N.. Cambridge: 2554.Google Scholar
Hoekstra, K. (2016) ‘Hobbes’s Thucydides’, in The Oxford Handbook of Hobbes, eds. Martinich, A. P. and Hoekstra, K.. Oxford: 547–74.Google Scholar
Honig, B. (2013) Antigone, Interrupted. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Honig, B. and Stears, M. (2011) ‘The new realism: from modus vivendi to justice’, in Political Philosophy versus History?, eds. Floyd, J. and Stears, M.. Cambridge: 177205.Google Scholar
Hornblower, S. (1987) Thucydides. Baltimore.Google Scholar
Hornblower, S. (1990) ‘Intellectual affinities’, in Thucydides, ed. Rusten, J. S.. Oxford Readings in Classical Studies. Oxford: 6088.Google Scholar
Hornblower, S. (1991–2008) A Commentary on Thucydides (3 vols.). Oxford.Google Scholar
Hornblower, S. (1992) ‘The religious dimension to the Peloponnesian War, or, what Thucydides does not tell us’, HSCPh 94: 169–97. (Reprinted in Thucydidean Themes, Oxford, 2011: 25–53.)Google Scholar
Hornblower, S. (1994a) ‘Narratology and narrative techniques in Thucydides’, in Greek Historiography, ed. Hornblower, S.. Oxford: 131–66. (Reprinted in Thucydidean Themes, Oxford, 2011: 59–99.)Google Scholar
Hornblower, S. (1994b) Thucydides, 2nd (corrected) impression. London.Google Scholar
Hornblower, S. (1995) ‘The fourth-century and Hellenistic reception of Thucydides’, JHS 115: 4668. (Reprinted in Thucydidean Themes. Oxford, 2011: 286–322.)Google Scholar
Hornblower, S. (2000) ‘Personal names and the study of the ancient Greek historians’, in Greek Personal Names: Their Value as Evidence eds. Hornblower, S. and Matthews, E.. Oxford: 129–43.Google Scholar
Hornblower, S. (2004) Thucydides and Pindar: Historical Narrative and the World of Epinikian Poetry. Oxford and New York.Google Scholar
Hornblower, S. (2007) ‘Warfare in ancient literature: the paradox of war’, in The Cambridge History of Greek and Roman Warfare, Vol. 1: Greece, the Hellenistic World and the Rise of Rome, eds. Sabin, P., van Wees, H. and Whitby, M.. Cambridge: 2253.Google Scholar
Hornblower, S. (2008) ‘Greek identity in the archaic and classical periods’, in Hellenisms: Culture, Identity, and Ethnicity from Antiquity to Modernity, ed. Zacharia, K.. Aldershot: 375–8.Google Scholar
Hornblower, S. (2009) ‘Intellectual affinities’, in Thucydides, ed. Rusten, J. S.. Oxford Readings in Classical Studies. Oxford: 6088.Google Scholar
Hornblower, S. (2011a) ‘Sticks, stones, and Spartans’, in Thucydidean Themes. Oxford: 250–74.Google Scholar
Hornblower, S. (2011b) The Greek World. 479–323 bc, 4th edition. London.Google Scholar
Hornblower, S. (2011c) ‘Thucydides’ awareness of Herodotus, or Herodotus’ awareness of Thucydides?’, in Thucydidean Themes. Oxford: 277–85.Google Scholar
Hornblower, S. (2013) Herodotus. Histories. Book V. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Hose, M. (2006) ‘Peloponnesian War: sources other than Thucydides’, in Brill’s Companion to Thucydides, eds. Rengakos, A. and Tsakmakis, A.. Leiden and Boston: 669–90.Google Scholar
Howie, J. G. (2005) ‘The aristeia of Brasidas: Thucydides’ presentation of events at Pylos and Amphipolis’, PLLS 12: 207–84.Google Scholar
Hude, K. (1927) Scholia in Thucydidem ad optimos codices collata. Leipzig.Google Scholar
Hunger, H. (1969–70) ‘On the imitation (ΜΙΜΗΣΙΣ) of antiquity in Byzantine literature’, Dumbarton Oaks Papers 23–24: 1738.Google Scholar
Hunt, P. (1998) Slaves, Warfare, and Ideology in the Greek Historians. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Hunt, P. (2006) ‘Warfare’, in Brill’s Companion to Thucydides, eds. Rengakos, A. and Tsakmakis, A.. Boston and Leiden: 385413.Google Scholar
Hunt, P. (2007) ‘Military force’, in The Cambridge History of Greek and Roman Warfare, Vol. 1: Greece, the Hellenistic World and the Rise of Rome, eds. Sabin, P., van Wees, H. and Whitby, M.. Cambridge: 108–46.Google Scholar
Hunter, V. J. (1973) Thucydides, the Artful Reporter. Toronto.Google Scholar
Hunter, V. J. (1982) Past and Process in Herodotus and Thucydides. Princeton.Google Scholar
Hyland, A. (2013a) ‘War and the horse: Part 1: horses for war: breeding and keeping a warhorse’, in The Oxford Handbook of Warfare in the Classical World, eds. Campbell, B. and Tritle, L.. Oxford: 493511.Google Scholar
Hyland, A. (2013b) ‘Part II: the development and training of cavalry in Greece and Rome’, in The Oxford Handbook of Warfare in the Classical World, eds. Campbell, B. and Tritle, L.. Oxford: 512–26.Google Scholar
Iggers, G. G. (1962) ‘The image of Ranke in American and German historical thought', History and Theory 2: 1740.Google Scholar
Iggers, G. G. (2011) ‘Introduction’, in von Ranke, L., The Theory and Practice of History. London: xixliii.Google Scholar
Iglesias-Zoido, J. C. (2011) El legado de Tucídides en la cultura occidental: Discursos e historia. Coimbra.Google Scholar
Immerwahr, H. R. (1960) ‘Ergon: history as a monument in Herodotus and Thucydides', AJPh 81: 261–90.Google Scholar
Iori, L. (2015) Thucydides Anglicus: Gli Eight Bookes di Thomas Hobbes e la ricezione inglese delle Storie di Tucidide (1450–1642). Rome.Google Scholar
Irwin, E. (2013a) ‘“The hybris of Theseus” and the date of the Histories’, in Herodots Quellen – Die Quellen Herodots, eds. Dunsch, B. and Ruffing, K.. Classica et Orientalia 6. Wiesbaden: 784.Google Scholar
Irwin, E. (2013b) ‘To whom does Solon speak? Conceptions of happiness and ending life well in the later fifth century (Hdt. 1.29–33)’, in Wege des Erzählens: Logos und Topos bei Herodot, eds. Geus, K., Irwin, E. and Poiss, T.. Frankfurt am Main: 261321.Google Scholar
Irwin, E. (2015a) ‘Dionysius of Halicarnassus’ On Thucydides and Thucydides’ rhetoric of the episodic’, in Tecendo narrativas: unidade e episódio na literatura grega antiga, eds. Werner, C., Dourado-Lopes, A. and Werner, E.. São Paulo: 121–99.Google Scholar
Irwin, E. (2015b) ‘The nothoi come of age? Illegitimate sons and political unrest in late fifth-century Athens’, in Minderheiten und Migration in der griechisch-römischen Welt: Politische, rechtliche, religiöse und kulturelle Aspekte, ed. Sänger, P.. Paderborn: 75122.Google Scholar
Irwin, E. (2018) ‘The end of the Histories and the end of the Atheno-Peloponnesian Wars’, in Interpreting Herodotus, eds. Irwin, E. and Harrison, T. J.. Oxford: 279334.Google Scholar
Isaac, B. (2004) The Invention of Racism in Classical Antiquity. Princeton.Google Scholar
Jacoby, F. (1923–58) Die Fragmente der Griechischen Historiker. Berlin and Leiden.Google Scholar
Jaffe, S. N. (2015) ‘The Straussian Thucydides’, in A Handbook to the Reception of Thucydides, eds. Lee, C. and Morley, N.. Chichester: 278–95.Google Scholar
Jaffe, S. N. (2017a) ‘The regime (politeia) in Thucydides’, in The Oxford Handbook of Thucydides, eds. Balot, R. K., Forsdyke, S. and Foster, E. M.. New York: 391408.Google Scholar
Jaffe, S. N. (2017b) ‘The risks and rewards of Thucydides’ History of the Peloponnesian War’, War on the Rocks. 6 July. Available at: https://warontherocks.com/2017/07/the-risks-and-rewards-of-thucydides-history-of-the-peloponnesian-war/Google Scholar
Jaffe, S. N. (2017c) Thucydides on the Outbreak of War: Character and Contest. Oxford.Google Scholar
Jeffreys, E. (1979) ‘The attitudes of Byzantine chronicles towards ancient history’, Byzantion 49: 199238.Google Scholar
Jenkins, K. (1991) Re-thinking History. London and New York.Google Scholar
Jesse, N. G. (2014) ‘Ethnicity and identity in conflict’, in Routledge Handbook of Civil Wars, eds. Newman, E. and DeRouen, K., Jr. Oxford: 93103.Google Scholar
Johnson, L. M. (2014) ‘Thucydides the realist?’ in A Handbook to the Reception of Thucydides, eds. Morley, N. and Lee, C.. Chichester: 391405.Google Scholar
de Jong, I. J. F. (2014) Narratology and Classics: A Practical Guide. Oxford.Google Scholar
de Jonge, C. C. (2017) ‘Dionysius of Halicarnassus on Thucydides’, in The Oxford Handbook of Thucydides, eds. Balot, R., Forsdyke, S. and Foster, E. M.. New York: 781800.Google Scholar
Jones, C. P. (1996) ‘ἔθνος and γένος in Herodotus’, CQ 46: 315–20.Google Scholar
Jones, C. P. (1999) Kinship Diplomacy in the Ancient World. Cambridge, MA.Google Scholar
Jones, H. S. and Powell, J. E. (eds.) (1942) Thucydidis Historiae (2 vols.). Oxford.Google Scholar
Jowett, B. (1881) Thucydides, Translated into English with Introduction, Marginal Analysis, Notes and Indices (2 vols.). Oxford.Google Scholar
Kagan, D. (1974) The Archidamian War. London.Google Scholar
Kagan, D. (1987) The Fall of the Athenian Empire. London.Google Scholar
Kagan, D. (2009) Thucydides: The Reinvention of History. New York.Google Scholar
Kagan, D. and Viggiano, G. F. (eds.) (2013) Men of Bronze: Hoplite Warfare in Ancient Greece. Princeton.Google Scholar
Kaldellis, A. (2004) Procopius of Caesarea: Tyranny, History, and Philosophy at the End of Antiquity. Philadelphia.Google Scholar
Kaldellis, A. (2005) ‘The works and days of Hesychios the Illoustrios of Miletos’, GRBS 45: 381403.Google Scholar
Kaldellis, A. (2007) ‘The literature of plague and the anxieties of piety in sixth-century Byzantium’, in Piety and Plague: From Byzantium to the Baroque, eds. Mormando, F. and Worcester, T.. Kirksville, MO: 122.Google Scholar
Kaldellis, A. (2009) ‘Classical scholarship in twelfth-century Byzantium’, in Medieval Greek Commentaries on the Nicomachean Ethics, eds. Barber, C. and Jenkins, D.. Leiden and Boston: 143.Google Scholar
Kaldellis, A. (2012) ‘The Byzantine role in the making of the corpus of classical Greek historiography: a preliminary investigation’, JHS 132: 7185.Google Scholar
Kaldellis, A. (2014) A New Herodotos: Laonikos Chalkokondyles on the Ottoman Empire, the Fall of Byzantium, and the Emergence of the West. Cambridge, MA.Google Scholar
Kaldellis, A. (2021) ‘The classicism of Procopius’, in The Brill Companion to Procopius, ed. Meier, M.. Leiden and Boston.Google Scholar
Kallet, L. (1999) ‘The diseased body politic, Athenian public finance, and the massacre at Mycalessos (Thucydides 7.27–29)’, AJPh 120: 223–44.Google Scholar
Kallet, L. (2001) Money and the Corrosion of Power in Thucydides: The Sicilian Expedition and Its Aftermath. Berkeley and London.Google Scholar
Kallet, L. (2006) ‘Thucydides’ workshop of history and utility outside the text’, in Brill’s Companion to Thucydides, eds. Rengakos, A. and Tsakmakis, A.. Leiden and Boston: 335–68.Google Scholar
Kallet, L. (2013a) ‘The origins of the Athenian economic arche, JHS 133: 4360.Google Scholar
Kallet, L. (2013b) ‘Thucydides, Apollo, the plague, and the war’, AJPh 134: 355–82.Google Scholar
Kallet-Marx, L. (1993a) Money, Expense, and Naval Power in Thucydides’ History 1–5.24. Berkeley and London.Google Scholar
Kallet-Marx, L. (1993b) ‘Thucydides 2.45.2 and the status of war widows in Periclean Athens’, in Nomodeiktes: Greek Studies in Honor of Martin Ostwald, eds. Rosen, R. M. and Farrell, J.. Ann Arbor: 133–43.Google Scholar
Kallet-Marx, L. (1994) ‘Money talks: rhetor, demos and the reserve of the Athenian Empire’, in Ritual, Finance, Politics: Athenian Democratic Accounts Presented to D.M. Lewis, eds. Hornblower, S. and Osborne, R. G.. Oxford: 227–51.Google Scholar
Kalyvas, S. N. (2006) The Logic of Violence in Civil War. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Karavites, P. (1984) ‘Greek interstate relations in the fifth century bc’, PP 216: 161–92.Google Scholar
Karp, W. (1998) ‘The two thousand years’ war’, in The Peloponnesian War, ed. Blanco, W. and Roberts, J. T.. New York and London: 400–4. (Originally published in Harpers Magazine, 1981.)Google Scholar
Kelly, D. H. (1981) ‘Thucydides and Herodotus on the Pitanate lochos’, GRBS 22: 31–8.Google Scholar
Kennedy, G. A. (1963) The Art of Persuasion in Greece. Princeton.Google Scholar
Kennedy, G. A. (1991) Aristotle: On Rhetoric. A Theory of Civic Discourse. Translated, with Introduction and Notes by G. A. Kennedy. Oxford.Google Scholar
Kennedy, S. (2018a) ‘A classic dethroned: the decline and fall of Thucydides in Middle Byzantium’, GRBS 58: 607–35.Google Scholar
Kennedy, S. (2018b) ‘How to write history: Thucydides and Herodotus in the ancient rhetorical tradition’, Dissertation, The Ohio State University.Google Scholar
Kennell, N. M. (1995) The Gymnasium of Virtue: Education and Culture in Ancient Sparta. London.Google Scholar
Keohane, R. O. (ed.) (1986) Neorealism and Its Critics. New York.Google Scholar
Klee, U. (1990) Beiträge zur Thukydides-Rezeption während des 15. und 16. Jahrhunderts in Italien und Deutschland. Frankfurt.Google Scholar
Kleinlogel, A. (1965) Geschichte des Thukydidestextes im Mittelalter. Berlin.Google Scholar
Kleinlogel, A. (ed.) (2019) Scholia Graeca in Thucydidem. Berlin.Google Scholar
Kleinlogel, A. and Alpers, K. (2019) Scholia Graeca in Thucydidem, Scholia vetustiora et Lexicon Thucydideum Patmense, Aus dem Nachlass herausgegeben von Klaus Alpers. Berlin.Google Scholar
Knox, B. (1956) ‘The date of the Oedipus Tyrannus of Sophocles’, AJPh 77: 133–47.Google Scholar
Knox, B. (1957) Oedipus at Thebes. New Haven.Google Scholar
Konstan, D. (2001) ‘To Hellenikon ethnos: ethnicity and the construction of ancient Greek identity’, in Ancient Perceptions of Greek Ethnicity, ed. Malkin, I.. Cambridge, MA: 2950.Google Scholar
Koselleck, R. (2002) The Practice of Conceptual History: Timing History, Spacing Concepts, trans. Presner, T. S. et al. Stanford.Google Scholar
Koselleck, R. (2004) Futures Past: On the Semantics of Historical Time. New York.Google Scholar
Koselleck, R., Mommsen, W. J. and Rüsen, J. (eds.) (1977) Objektivität und Parteilichkeit in der Geschichtswissenschaft. Munich.Google Scholar
Kosmetatou, E. (2013) ‘Tyche’s force: lottery and chance in Greek government’, in A Companion to Ancient Greek Government, ed. Beck, H.. Malden, MA: 235–51.Google Scholar
Kowerski, L. M. (2005) Simonides on the Persian Wars. A Study of the Elegiac Verses of the ‘New Simonides’. New York.Google Scholar
Krentz, P. (1985) ‘The nature of hoplite battle’, ClAnt 4: 5061.Google Scholar
Krentz, P. (2007) ‘War’, in The Cambridge History of Greek and Roman Warfare, Vol. 1: Greece, the Hellenistic World and the Rise of Rome, eds. Sabin, P., van Wees, H. and Whitby, M.. Cambridge: 147–85.Google Scholar
Krieger, L. (1989) Time’s Reasons: Philosophies of History Old and New. Chicago.Google Scholar
Laird, A. (1999) Powers of Expression, Expressions of Power: Speech Presentation and Latin Literature. Oxford.Google Scholar
Lambert, S. D. (2011) ‘What was the point of inscribed honorific decrees in classical Athens?’, in A Sociable Man. Essays on Ancient Greek Social Behaviour in Honour of Nick Fisher, ed. Lambert, S. D.. Swansea: 193214.Google Scholar
Landemore, H. (2012) Democratic Reason: Politics, Collective Intelligence, and the Rule of the Many. Princeton.Google Scholar
Lane Fox, R. J. (2010) ‘Thucydides and documentary history’, CQ 60: 1129.Google Scholar
Lang, M. L. (1972) ‘Cleon as the anti-Pericles’, CPh 67: 159–69.Google Scholar
Lang, M. L. (2011) Thucydidean Narrative and Discourse, eds. Rusten, J. S. and Hamilton, R.. Ann Arbor.Google Scholar
Lateiner, D. (1976) ‘Tissaphernes and the Phoenician fleet (Thuc. 8.87)’, TAPhA 106: 267–90.Google Scholar
Lateiner, D. (1977a) ‘Heralds and corpses in Thucydides’, CW 71: 97106.Google Scholar
Lateiner, D. (1977b) ‘Pathos in Thucydides’, Antichthon 11: 4251.Google Scholar
Lateiner, D. (1985) ‘Nicias’ inadequate encouragement (Thucydides 7.69.2)’, CPh 80: 201–13.Google Scholar
Lateiner, D. (1986) ‘Early Greek medical writers and Herodotus’, Antichthon 20: 120.Google Scholar
Lateiner, D. (2017) ‘Review of Graham Allison, Destined for War. Can America and China escape the Thucydides Trap?’, Michigan War Studies Review 2017: 63.Google Scholar
Lateiner, D. (2018) ‘Elpis as emotion and reason (hope and expectation) in fifth-century Greek historians’, in Hope in Ancient Literature, History, and Art, eds. Spatharas, D. and Kazantzidis, G.. Berlin and Boston: 131–50.Google Scholar
Lawrence, A. W. (1979) Greek Aims in Fortification. Oxford.Google Scholar
Lazenby, J. (1985) The Spartan Army. Warminster.Google Scholar
Lazenby, J. (1987) ‘The diekplous’, G&R 34: 169–77.Google Scholar
Lazenby, J. (1991) ‘The killing zone’, in Hoplites: The Classical Greek Battle Experience, ed. Hanson, V. D.. London: 87109.Google Scholar
Lazenby, J. (1993) The Defence of Greece 490–479 bc. Warminster.Google Scholar
Lazenby, J. (2004) The Peloponnesian War: A Military Study. London.Google Scholar
Lebow, R. N. (2001) ‘Thucydides the constructivist’, American Political Science Review 95: 547–60.Google Scholar
Lebow, R. N. (2003) The Tragic Vision of Politics. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Lee, C. (2014) ‘Thucydides and democratic horizons’, in A Handbook to the Reception of Thucydides, eds. Lee, C. and Morley, N.. Chichester: 332–51.Google Scholar
Lee, C. (2016) ‘The power and politics of ontology’, in Thucydides and Political Order: Concepts of Order and the History of the Peloponnesian War, eds. Thauer, C. and Wendt, C.. Basingstoke and New York: 96130.Google Scholar
Lee, C. and Morley, N. (eds.) (2015) A Handbook to the Reception of Thucydides. Chichester.Google Scholar
Lefkowitz, M. (1981) The Lives of the Greek Poets. London.Google Scholar
Leimbach, R. (1985) Militärische Musterrhetorik: eine Untersuchung zu den Feldherrnreden des Thukydides. Stuttgart.Google Scholar
Leone, P. (1970–1) ‘Nicephori Gregorae opuscula nunc primum edita’, Annali della Facoltà di Lettere e Filosofia dell’ Università di Macerata 3/4: 731–82.Google Scholar
Leslie, M. (1970) ‘In praise of anachronism’, Political Studies 18: 433–47.Google Scholar
Levene, D. (1992) ‘Sallust’s Jugurtha: an “historical fragment”’, JRS 82: 5370.Google Scholar
Lewis, D. M. (1977) Sparta and Persia. Leiden.Google Scholar
Lewis, S. (1996) News and Society in the Greek Polis. London.Google Scholar
Lianeri, A. (ed.) (2011) The Western Time of Ancient History: Historiographical Encounters with the Greek and Roman Pasts. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Lianeri, A. (2015) ‘On historical time and method: Thucydides’ contemporary history in nineteenth-century Britain’, in A Handbook to the Reception of Thucydides, eds. Lee, C. and Morley, N.. Chichester: 176–96.Google Scholar
Lianeri, A. (ed.) (2016a) Knowing Future Time in and through Greek Historiography. Berlin and Boston.Google Scholar
Lianeri, A. (2016b) ‘Introduction: the futures of Greek historiography’, in Knowing Future Time in and through Greek Historiography, ed. Lianeri, A.. Berlin and Boston: 154.Google Scholar
Lianeri, A. (2018) ‘Historia Magistra Vitae, interrupting: Thucydides and the agonistic temporality of antiquity and modernity’, History and Theory 57: 327–48.Google Scholar
Lianeri, A. and Zajko, V. (eds.) (2008) Translation and the Classic: Identity as Change in the History of Culture. Oxford.Google Scholar
Liberman, G. (2017) Les préliminaires de la guerre: prolégomènes à la lecture du premier livre de Thucydide. Bordeaux.Google Scholar
Liddell Hart, B. H. (1948) The Other Side of the Hill: Germany’s Generals, Their Rise and Fall, with Their Own Account of Military Events. London.Google Scholar
Lipsius, J. (2004) Politica, ed. Waszink, J.. Assen.Google Scholar
Listas, F. K. (1980) ‘Choricius of Gaza: an approach to his work’, Dissertation, University of Chicago.Google Scholar
Lloyd, G. E. R. (1979) Magic, Reason, and Experience. Studies in the Origin and Development of Greek Science. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Longrigg, J. (2000) ‘Death and epidemic disease in classical Athens’, in Death and Disease in the Ancient City, eds. Hope, V. and Marshall, E.. London and New York: 5565.Google Scholar
Loraux, N. (1986a) The Invention of Athens. The Funeral Oration in the Classical City, trans. A. Sheridan. Cambridge, MA.Google Scholar
Loraux, N. (1986b) ‘Thucydide a écrit la guerre du Péloponnèse’, Métis 1: 139–61.Google Scholar
Loraux, N. (1993) The Children of Athena: Athenian Ideas about Citizenship and the Division between the Sexes, trans. Levine, C.. Princeton.Google Scholar
Loraux, N. (2009) ‘Thucydides and sedition among words’, in Thucydides, ed. Rusten, J. S.. Oxford Readings in Classical Studies. Oxford: 261–92.Google Scholar
Loraux, N. (2011) ‘Thucydides is not a colleague’, in Greek and Roman Historiography. Oxford Readings in Classical Studies, ed. Marincola, J.. Oxford: 139. (Originally published as ‘Thucydide n’est pas un collegue’, Quaderni di Storia 12 (1980) 55–81.)Google Scholar
Loraux, N. and Vidal-Naquet, P. (1990) ‘La formation de l’Athènes bourgeoise. Essai d’historiographie, 1750–1850’, in La démocratie grecque vue d’ailleurs, ed. Vidal-Naquet, P.. Paris: 161209, 362–83.Google Scholar
Lorenz, C. (2013) ‘Explorations between philosophy and history’, Historein 14: 5970.Google Scholar
Low, P. A. (2007) Interstate Relations in Classical Greece: Morality and Power. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Low, P. A. (2013) ‘Law, authority and legitimacy in the Athenian Empire’, in Empire and Law, eds. Duindam, J., Harries, J., Humfress, C. and Hurvitz, N.. Leiden and Boston: 2544.Google Scholar
Low, P. A. (2015) ‘Empire and crisis in fourth-century Greece’, in Deformations and Crises of Ancient Civil Communities, eds. Gouschin, V. and Rhodes, P. J.. Stuttgart: 6372.Google Scholar
Luce, T. (1997) The Greek Historians. London.Google Scholar
Luginbill, R. D. (1994) ‘Othismos: the importance of the mass-shove in hoplite warfare’, Phoenix 48: 5161.Google Scholar
Luginbill, R. D. (1999) Thucydides on War and National Character. Boulder.Google Scholar
Luiso, F. P. (1980) Studi su l’epistolario di Leonardo Bruni, ed. Gualdo Rosa, L.. Rome.Google Scholar
Luraghi, N. (2008) The Ancient Messenians: Constructions of Ethnicity and Memory. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Luraghi, N. (2014) ‘The study of Greek ethnic identities’, in A Companion to Ethnicity in the Ancient Mediterranean, ed. McInerney, J.. Malden, MA: 213–27.Google Scholar
Luschnat, O. (1942) Die Feldherrnreden im Geschichtswerk des Thucydides, Philologus Supplementband 34.2. Leipzig.Google Scholar
Luschnat, O. (1974) ‘Thukydides (1), Nachträge’, RE Supp. XIV: 766–86.Google Scholar
Luzzato, M. J. (1999) Tzetzes lettore di Tucidide: note autografe sul codice Heidelberg Palatino Greco 252. Bari.Google Scholar
Mac Sweeney, N. (2013) Foundation Myths and Politics in Ancient Ionia. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Macleod, C. W. (1975) ‘Rhetoric and history (Thucydides 6. 16–18)’, Quaderni di Storia 2: 3965.Google Scholar
Macleod, C. W. (1977) ‘Thucydides’ Plataean Debate’, GRBS 18: 227–46. (Reprinted in Macleod 1983: 103–22.)Google Scholar
Macleod, C. W. (1978) ‘Reason and necessity: Thucydides III 9–14, 37–48’, JHS 98: 6478. (Reprinted in Macleod 1983: 88–102.)Google Scholar
Macleod, C. W. (1979) ‘Thucydides on faction (3.82–83)’, PCPS 25: 5268. (Reprinted in Macleod 1983: 123–39.)Google Scholar
Macleod, C. W. (1983) Collected Essays, ed. Taplin, O.. Oxford.Google Scholar
Maitland, J. (1996) ‘Marcellinus’ Life of Thucydides: criticism and criteria in the biographical tradition’, CQ 46: 538–58.Google Scholar
Mantena, K. (2012) ‘Another realism: the politics of Gandhian nonviolence’, American Political Science Review 126: 455–70.Google Scholar
Mara, G. (2008) The Civic Conversations of Thucydides and Plato: Classical Political Philosophy and the Limits of Democracy. Albany, NY.Google Scholar
Marinatos, N. (1981) Thucydides and Religion. Beiträge zur Klassischen Philologie 129. Königstein.Google Scholar
Marincola, J. (1997) Authority and Tradition in Ancient Historiography. Cambridge and New York.Google Scholar
Marr, J. L. and Rhodes, P. J. (2008) The ‘Old Oligarch’. The Constitution of the Athenians Attributed to Xenophon. Warminster.Google Scholar
Marsden, E. W. (1969) Greek and Roman Artillery: Historical Development. Oxford.Google Scholar
Marshall, M. (1990) ‘Pericles and the plague,’ in Owls to Athens: Essays on Classical Subjects Presented to Sir Kenneth Dover, ed. Craik, E. M.. Oxford: 163–70.Google Scholar
Marshall, M. H. B. (1984) ‘Cleon and Pericles: Sphacteria’, G&R 31: 1936.Google Scholar
Mastronarde, D. J. (2010) The Art of Euripides: Dramatic Technique and Social Context. Cambridge and New York.Google Scholar
Matthew, C. A. (2009) ‘When push comes to shove: what was the othismos of hoplite combat?’, Historia 58: 395415.Google Scholar
Mattingly, H. B. (1963) ‘The growth of Athenian imperialism’, Historia 12: 257–73.Google Scholar
Maurer, K. (1995) Interpolation in Thucydides. Mnemosyne Supplement 150. Leiden and New York.Google Scholar
McCoskey, D. E. (2012) Race: Antiquity and Its Legacy. London.Google Scholar
McGushin, P. (1977) C. Sallustius Crispus, Bellum Catilinae: A Commentary. Leiden.Google Scholar
McInerney, J. (1999) Land and Ethnicity in Ancient Phokis. The Folds of Parnassos. Austin.Google Scholar
McInerney, J. (2001) ‘Ethnos and ethnicity in early Greece’, in Ancient Perceptions of Greek Ethnicity, ed. Malkin, I.. Cambridge, MA: 5173.Google Scholar
McInerney, J. (2014) ‘Introduction’, in A Companion to Ethnicity in the Ancient Mediterranean, ed. McInerney, J.. Malden, MA: 116.Google Scholar
McLeod, W. (1965) ‘The range of the ancient bow’, Phoenix 19: 114.Google Scholar
McLeod, W. (1972) ‘The range of the ancient bow: addendaPhoenix 26: 7882.Google Scholar
Megill, A. (ed.) (1994) Rethinking Objectivity. Durham, NC.Google Scholar
Megill, A. (1995) ‘“Grand narrative” and the discipline of history’, in A New Philosophy of History, eds. Ankersmit, F. and Kellner, H.. London: 151–73.Google Scholar
Meiggs, R. (1943) ‘The growth of Athenian imperialism’, JHS 63: 2134.Google Scholar
Meiggs, R. (1972) The Athenian Empire, revised edition. Oxford.Google Scholar
Meineke, S. (2003) ‘Thukydidismus’, in Der Neue Pauly: Rezeptions- und Wissenschafts-geschichte, vol. XV.3. Stuttgart and Weimar: 480–94.Google Scholar
Meister, K. (2013) Thukydides als Vorbild der Historiker: von der Antike bis zur Gegenwart. Paderborn.Google Scholar
Meister, K. (2015) ‘Thucydides in nineteenth-century Germany: historicization and glorification’, in A Handbook to the Reception of Thucydides, eds. Lee, C. and Morley, N.. Chichester: 197217.Google Scholar
Melanchthon, P. (1550) Explicatio proverbiorum Salomonis in schola Witembergensi recens dictata. Frankfurt.Google Scholar
Melanchthon, P. (1559) Chronicon absolvtissimvm ab orbe condito vsque ad Christum deductum, in quo non Carionis solùm opus continetur, verùm etiam alia multa eaque insignia explicantur, adeo vt iustae Historiae loco occupatis esse possit. Basel.Google Scholar
Melanchthon, P. (1562) Orationes ex historia Thvcydidis, et insigniores aliqvot Demosthenis & aliorum Oratorum Graecorum, ed. Peucer, C.. Wittenberg.Google Scholar
Melanchthon, P. (1564) Selectarum declamationum, vol. 1. Strasbourg.Google Scholar
Melanchthon, P. (1582) In epitomen philosophiae moralis Philippi Melancthonis. Neustadt.Google Scholar
Melanchthon, P. (1642) Epistolae Philippi Melancthonis, Thomae Mori et Lvdovici Vivis. London.Google Scholar
Merrit, B., Wade-Gery, H. T. and McGregor, M. F. (1939–53) The Athenian Tribute Lists (4 vols.). Princeton.Google Scholar
Mikalson, J. (1984) ‘Religion and the plague in Athens, 431–423 bc’, in Studies Presented to Sterling Dow on his Eightieth Birthday, ed. K. J. Rigsby. Durham, NC: 217–25.Google Scholar
Miller, M. (1997) Athens and Persia in the Fifth Century bc: A Study in Cultural Receptivity. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Miller, M. (2010) ‘I am Eurymedon: tensions and ambiguities in Athenian war imagery’, in War, Democracy and Culture in Classical Athens, ed. Pritchard, D.. Cambridge: 304–38.Google Scholar
Mione, E. (1968) ‘Bessarione bibliofilo e filologo’, Rivista di studi bizantini e neoellenici 5: 6183.Google Scholar
Mitchell, L. G. (2007) Panhellenism and the Barbarian in Archaic and Classical Greece. Swansea.Google Scholar
Mitchell-Boyask, R. (2008) Plague and the Athenian Imagination. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Moles, J. L. (1993) ‘Truth and untruth in Herodotus and Thucydides’, in Lies and Fiction in the Ancient World, eds. Gill, C. and Wiseman, T. P.. Exeter: 88121.Google Scholar
Moles, J. L. (1996) ‘Herodotus warns the Athenians’, Papers of the Leeds International Latin Seminar 9: 259–84.Google Scholar
Moles, J. L. (1999) ‘Anathema kai ktema: the inscriptional inheritance of ancient historiography’, Histos 3: 2769.Google Scholar
Moles, J. L. (2010) ‘Narrative and speech problems in Thucydides I’, in Ancient Historiography and Its Contexts: Studies in Honour of A. J. Woodman, eds. Kraus, C. S., Marincola, J. and Pelling, C. B. R.. Oxford: 1539.Google Scholar
Momigliano, A. (1957) ‘Perizonius, Niebuhr and the character of early Roman tradition’, JRS 47: 104–14.Google Scholar
Momigliano, A. (1966) ‘Time in ancient historiography’, History and Theory 6: 123.Google Scholar
Momigliano, A. (1972) ‘Tradition and the classical historian’, History and Theory 11: 279–93.Google Scholar
Momigliano, A. (1984) ‘The place of ancient historiography in modern historiography’, in Settimo contributo alla storia degli studi classici e del mondo antico. Rome: 1336.Google Scholar
Momigliano, A. (1990) ‘The Herodotean and the Thucydidean tradition’, in The Classical Foundations of Modern Historiography. Berkeley: 2950.Google Scholar
Momigliano, A. (2012) Essays in Ancient and Modern Historiography, with a new forward by Grafton, A.. Chicago.Google Scholar
Moravcsik, G. (ed.) and Jenkins, R. J. H. (trans.) (1967) Constantine Porphyrogenitus De administrando imperio. Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Morens, D. M. and Littman, R. J. (1992) ‘Epidemiology of the plague of Athens’, TAPhA 122: 271304.Google Scholar
Morgan, C. (2001) ‘Ethne, ethnicity, and early Greek states, ca. 1200–480 bc: an archaeological perspective’, in Ancient Perceptions of Greek Ethnicity, ed. Malkin, I.. Cambridge, MA: 75112.Google Scholar
Morgan, C. (2003) Early Greek States beyond the Polis. London and New York.Google Scholar
Morgenthau, H. J. (1993) Politics among Nations: The Struggle for Power and Peace, brief edition. New York and London.Google Scholar
Morley, N. (2012) ‘Thucydides, history and historicism in Wilhelm Roscher’, in Thucydides and the Modern World: Reception, Reinterpretation and Influence from the Renaissance to the Present, eds. Harloe, K. and Morley, N.. Cambridge: 115–39.Google Scholar
Morley, N. (2014) Thucydides and the Idea of History. London and New York.Google Scholar
Morley, N. (2016) ‘Contextualism and universalism in Thucydidean thought’, in Thucydides and Political Order: Concepts of Order and the History of the Peloponnesian War, eds. Thauer, C. and Wendt, C.. Basingstoke and New York: 2340.Google Scholar
Morrison, J. S. and Williams, R. T. (1968) Greek Oared Ships, 900–322 bc. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Morrison, J. S., Coates, J. F. and Rankov, N. B. (2000) The Athenian Trireme: The History and Reconstruction of an Ancient Greek Warship, 2nd edition. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Morrison, J. V. (2006a) ‘Interaction of speech and narrative in Thucydides’, in Brill’s Companion to Thucydides, eds. Rengakos, A. and Tsakmakis, A.. Leiden and Boston: 251–77.Google Scholar
Morrison, J. V. (2006b) Reading Thucydides. Columbus, OH.Google Scholar
Muhlack, U. (2011) ‘Herodotus and Thucydides in the view of nineteenth-century German historians’, in The Western Time of Ancient History: Historiographical Encounters with the Greek and Roman Pasts, ed. Lianeri, A.. Cambridge: 179209.Google Scholar
Munson, R. V. (2001) Telling Wonders: Ethnography and Political Thought in the Work of Herodotus. Ann Arbor.Google Scholar
Munson, R. V. (2012) ‘Persians in Thucydides’, in Thucydides and Herodotus, eds. Foster, E. M. and Lateiner, D.. Oxford: 241–77.Google Scholar
Munson, R. V. (2014) ‘Herodotus and ethnicity’, in A Companion to Ethnicity in the Ancient Mediteranean, ed. McInerney, J.. Malden, MA: 341–55.Google Scholar
Munson, R. V. (2015) ‘Natural upheavals in Thucydides (and Herodotus)’, in Kinesis: Essays for Donald Lateiner on the Ancient Depiction of Gesture, Motion, and Emotion, eds. Foster, E. M. and Clark, C.. Ann Arbor.Google Scholar
Murari Pires, F. (2006a) ‘Thucydidean modernities: history between science and art’, in Brill’s Companion to Thucydides, eds. Rengakos, A. and Tsakmakis, A.. Leiden: 811–37.Google Scholar
Murari Pires, F. (2006b) ‘Tucídides e o (re)acerto do fato da tirania de Hípias: alcance e limites dos indiciamentos investigativos da verdade’, Phaos 6: 5784.Google Scholar
Murari Pires, F. (2015) ‘The Thucydidean Clio between Machiavelli and Hobbes’, in A Handbook to the Reception of Thucydides, eds. Lee, C. and Morley, N.. Chichester: 141–57.Google Scholar
Murray, O. (1986) ‘Greek historians’, in The Oxford History of the Classical World, eds. Boardman, J., Griffin, J. and Murray, O.. Oxford: 186203.Google Scholar
Murray, W. (2013) ‘Thucydides, theorist of war’, Naval War College Review 66: 3147.Google Scholar
Mynott, Jeremy (ed. and trans.) (2013a) Thucydides. The War of the Peloponnesians and the Athenians. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Mynott, Jeremy (2013b) ‘Translating Thucydides’, Arion 21: 4962.Google Scholar
Nannini, R. (ed.) (1557) Orationi militari. Venice.Google Scholar
Nease, A. S. (1949) ‘Garrisons in the Athenian Empire’, Phoenix 3: 102–11.Google Scholar
Németh, A. (2018) The Excerpta Constantiniana and the Byzantine Appropriation of the Past. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Nevin, S. (2008) ‘Military ethics in the writing of history: Thucydides and Diodorus on Delium’, in Beyond the Battlefields: New Perspectives on Warfare and Society in the Graeco-Roman World, eds. Bragg, E., Hau, L. and Macaulay-Lewis, E.. Newcastle: 99120.Google Scholar
Nichols, M. P. (2015) Thucydides and the Pursuit of Freedom. Ithaca, NY.Google Scholar
Nicolai, R. (2001) ‘Thucydides’ Archaeology: between epic and oral traditions’, in The Historian’s Craft in the Age of Herodotus, ed. Luraghi, N.. Oxford: 263–85.Google Scholar
Nicolai, R. (2009) ‘Ktêma es aei: aspects of the reception of Thucydides in the ancient world’, in Thucydides, ed. Rusten, J. S.. Oxford Readings in Classical Studies. Oxford: 381404.Google Scholar
Niebuhr, B. G. (1831) History of Rome (3 vols.), trans. Hare, J. C. and Thirlwall, C.. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Niebuhr, B. G. (1852a) Lectures on Ancient History (3 vols.), trans. Schmitz, L.. Philadelphia.Google Scholar
Niebuhr, B. G. (1852b) The Life and Letters of Barthold Georg Niebuhr. London.Google Scholar
Nietzsche, F. (1990) Twilight of the Idols and Anti-Christ, trans. Hollingdale, R. J.. Harmondsworth.Google Scholar
Norman, A. F. (trans.) (1992) Libanius: Autobiography and Selected Letters. Cambridge, MA, and London.Google Scholar
Nussbaum, M. (1986) The Fragility of Goodness: Luck and Ethics in Greek Tragedy and Philosophy. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Ober, J. (1989) Mass and Elite in Democratic Athens: Rhetoric, Ideology, and the Power of the People. Princeton.Google Scholar
Ober, J. (1993) ‘Thucydides’ criticism of democratic knowledge’, in Nomodeiktes: Greek Studies in Honor of Martin Ostwald, eds. Rosen, R. M. and Farrell, J.. Ann Arbor: 8198.Google Scholar
Ober, J. (1996) ‘The Athenian revolution of 508/7 bce: violence, authority, and the origins of democracy’, in The Athenian Revolution: Essays on Ancient Greek Democracy and Political Theory. Princeton: 3252. (Originally published in Cultural Poetics in Archaic Greece: Cult, Performance, Politics, eds. C. Dougherty and L. Kurke. Cambridge, 1993: 215–32.)Google Scholar
Ober, J. (1998) Political Dissent in Democratic Athens. Intellectual Critics of Popular Rule. Princeton.Google Scholar
Ober, J. (2009) ‘Thucydides theorêtikos/Thucydides histôr: realist theory and the challenge of history,’ in Thucydides, ed. Rusten, J. S.. Oxford Readings in Classical Studies. Oxford: 434–78. (Originally published in War and Democracy: A Comparative Study of the Korean War and the Peloponnesian War, eds. D. R. McCann and B. S. Strauss. Armonk and London, 2001: 273–306.)Google Scholar
Ober, J. (2010) ‘Thucydides on Athens’ democratic advantage in the Archidamian War’, in War, Democracy, and Culture in Classical Athens, ed. Pritchard, D.. Cambridge: 6587.Google Scholar
Oldfather, W. A. (1923) Aeneas Tacticus, Asclepiodotus, Onasander. London and New York.Google Scholar
Orwin, C. (1994) The Humanity of Thucydides. Princeton.Google Scholar
Orwin, C. (2016) ‘Beneath politics: Thucydides on the body as the ground and limit of the political regime’, in Thucydides and Political Order: Concepts of Order and the History of the Peloponnesian War, eds. Thauer, C. R. and Wendt, C.. New York: 113–27.Google Scholar
Osborne, P. (1995) The Politics of Time: Modernity and the Avant-Garde. London and New York.Google Scholar
Osborne, R. G. (2000) The Athenian Empire, 4th edition. LACTOR 1. London.Google Scholar
Ostwald, M. (1986) From Popular Sovereignty to the Sovereignty of Law. Berkeley.Google Scholar
Ostwald, M. (1988) ΑΝΑΓΚΗ in Thucydides. American Classical Studies 18. Atlanta.Google Scholar
Pade, M. (2003) ‘Thucydides’, in Catalogus Translationum et Commentariorum: Mediaeval and Renaissance Latin Translations and Commentaries Annotated Lists and Guides, vol. VIII, eds. Brown, V., Hankins, J. and Kaster, R. A.. Washington, DC: 103–81.Google Scholar
Pade, M. (2006) ‘Thucydides’ Renaissance readers’, in Brill’s Companion to Thucydides, eds. Rengakos, A. and Tsakmakis, A.. Leiden: 779810.Google Scholar
Page, D. L. (1953) ‘Thucydides’ description of the Great Plague at Athens’, CQ 3: 97119.Google Scholar
Papagrigorakis, M. J., Yapijakis, C., Synodinos, P. N. and Baziotopoulou-Valavani, E. (2006a) ‘DNA examination of ancient dental pulp incriminates typhoid fever as a probable cause of the plague of Athens’, International Journal of Infectious Diseases 10: 206–14.Google Scholar
Papagrigorakis, M. J., Yapijakis, C., Synodinos, P. N. and Baziotopoulou-Valavani, E. (2006b) ‘Insufficient phylogenetic analysis may not exclude candidacy of typhoid fever as a probable cause of the plague of Athens (reply to Shapiro et al.)’, International Journal of Infectious Diseases 10: 335–36.Google Scholar
Parker, R. (1996) Athenian Religion. A History. Oxford.Google Scholar
Parker, V. (2005) ‘Pausanias the Spartiate as depicted by Charon of Lampsacus and Herodotus,’ Philologus 149: 311.Google Scholar
Parry, A. (1970) ‘Thucydides’ use of abstract language’, Yale French Studies 45: 320.Google Scholar
Parry, A. (1972) ‘Thucydides’ historical perspective’, Yale Classical Studies 22: 4761.Google Scholar
Parry, A. (1981) Logos and Ergon in Thucydides. New York.Google Scholar
Parry, A. (1989) ‘The language of Thucydides’ description of the plague’, in The Language of Achilles and Other Papers. Oxford: 156–76.Google Scholar
Patterson, L. (2010) Kinship Myth in Ancient Greece. Austin.Google Scholar
Patzer, H. (1937) Das Problem der Geschichtsschreibung des Thukydides und die thukydideische Frage. Berlin.Google Scholar
Payen, P. (2015) ‘The reception of Thucydides in eighteenth- and nineteenth-century France’, in A Handbook to the Reception of Thucydides, eds. Lee, C. and Morley, N.. Chichester: 158–75.Google Scholar
Pazdernik, C. (2000) ‘Procopius and Thucydides on the labors of war: Belisarius and Brasidas in the field’, TAPhA 130: 149–87.Google Scholar
Pelling, C. B. R. (1991) ‘Thucydides’ Archidamus and Herodotus’ Artabanus’, in Georgica: Greek Studies in Honour of George Cawkwell, eds. Flower, M. A. and Toher, M.. BICS Suppl. 58: 120–42.Google Scholar
Pelling, C. B. R. (1997) ‘East is east and west is west – or are they? National stereotypes in Herodotus’, Histos 1: 5166. (Also published in Herodotus, vol. II, ed. R. V. Munson. Oxford Readings in Classical Studies. Oxford, 2013: 60–79.)Google Scholar
Pelling, C. B. R. (2000) Literary Texts and the Greek Historian. London.Google Scholar
Pelling, C. B. R. (2009) ‘Thucydides’ speeches’, in Thucydides, ed. Rusten, J. S.. Oxford Readings in Classical Studies. Oxford: 176–87. (Originally published in Pelling 2000: 112–22.)Google Scholar
Pelling, C. B. R. (2012) ‘Aristotle’s Rhetoric, the Rhetorica ad Alexandrum, and the speeches in Herodotus and Thucydides’, in Thucydides & Herodotus, eds. Foster, E. M. and Lateiner, D.. Oxford: 281315.Google Scholar
Pérez Martín, I. (2002) ‘Lectores y público de la historiografía griega’, Estudios clásicos 121: 125–47.Google Scholar
Pertusi, A. (ed.) (1952) Costantino Porfirogenito de Thematibus. Vatican City.Google Scholar
Petrarca, F. (1996) Trionfi, Rime estravaganti, Codice degli abbozzi, eds. Pacca, V. and Paolino, L.. Milan.Google Scholar
Philp, M. (2012) ‘Realism without illusions’, Political Theory 40: 629–49.Google Scholar
Piccirilli, L. (1985) Storie dello storico Tucidide. Genoa.Google Scholar
Pires, F. M. (2007) Modernidades Tucidideanas: Ktema es Aei. São Paulo.Google Scholar
Pitcher, L. V. (2009) Writing Ancient History: An Introduction to Classical Historiography. London.Google Scholar
Pitcher, L. V. (2011) ‘The stones of blood: family, monumentality, and memory in Velleius’ second century’, in Velleius Paterculus: Making History, ed. Cowan, E.. Swansea: 253–64.Google Scholar
Plant, I. M. (1999) ‘The influence of forensic oratory on Thucydides’ principles of method’, CQ 49: 6273.Google Scholar
Podlecki, A. (1987) Plutarch, Life of Pericles. Bristol.Google Scholar
Pope, M. (1988) ‘Thucydides and democracy’, Historia 37: 276–96.Google Scholar
Porciani, l. (2001) Prime forme della storiografia greca: prospettiva locale e generale nella narrazione storica. Historia Einzelschriften 152. Stuttgart.Google Scholar
Porciani, L. (2007) ‘The enigma of discourse: a view of Thucydides’, in A Companion to Greek and Roman Historiography, vol. II, ed. Marincola, J.. Malden, MA: 328–35.Google Scholar
Postclassicisms Collective (ed.) (2020) Postclassicisms. Chicago and London.Google Scholar
Powell, A. (ed.) (2001) Athens and Sparta: Constructing Greek Political and Social History from 478 bc, 2nd edition. London.Google Scholar
Powell, A. and Hodkinson, S. (eds.) (1994) The Shadow of Sparta. London.Google Scholar
Powell, J. E. (1936) ‘The Bâle and Leyden scholia to Thucydides,’ CQ 30: 8093.Google Scholar
Powell, J. E. (1938) ‘The Cretan manuscripts of Thucydides’, CQ 32: 103–8.Google Scholar
Price, J. (2001) Thucydides and Internal War. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Pritchard, D. M. (1998) ‘The fractured imaginary: popular thinking on military matters in fifth century Athens’, AH 28: 3861.Google Scholar
Pritchard, D. M. (2010) ‘The symbiosis between democracy and war’, in War, Democracy and Culture in Classical Athens, ed. Pritchard, D.. Cambridge: 162.Google Scholar
Pritchett, W. K. (1974) The Greek State at War, Part 2. Berkeley.Google Scholar
Pritchett, W. K. (1985) The Greek State at War, Part 4. Berkeley.Google Scholar
Pritchett, W. K. (1991) The Greek State at War, Part 5. Berkeley.Google Scholar
Raaflaub, K. (1987) ‘Herodotus’ political thought and the meaning of history’, in Herodotus and the Invention of History. ed. Boedeker, D.. Arethusa 20: 221–48.Google Scholar
Raaflaub, K. (2004) The Discovery of Freedom in Ancient Greece, trans. Franciscono, R., revised by the author. Chicago.Google Scholar
Raaflaub, K. (2006) ‘Thucydides on democracy and oligarchy’, in Brill’s Companion to Thucydides, eds. Rengakos, A. and Tsakmakis, A.. Leiden and Boston: 189222.Google Scholar
Raaflaub, K. (2009) ‘Learning from the enemy’, in Interpreting the Athenian Empire, eds. Ma, J., Papazarkadas, N. and Parker, R.. London: 89124.Google Scholar
Raaflaub, K. (2013) ‘Ktēma es aiei: Thucydides’ concept of “learning through history” and its realization in his work’, in Thucydides: Between History and Literature, eds. Tsakmakis, A. and Tamiolaki, M.. Berlin and Boston: 321.Google Scholar
Rabe, H. (1926) Aphthonii Progymnasmata. Leipzig.Google Scholar
Radice, W. and Reynolds, B. (eds.) (1987) The Translator’s Art: Essays in Honour of Betty Radice. Harmondsworth.Google Scholar
Ranke, L. von. (1824) Geschichten der romanischen und germanischen Völker von 1494 bis 1535. Leipzig and Berlin.Google Scholar
Ranke, L. von (1888) Abhandlungen und Versuche. Neue Sammlung, vols. LI–LII, eds. Dove, A. and Wiedemann, T.. Leipzig.Google Scholar
Ranke, L. von (1973) The Theory and Practice of History, ed. with an introduction by Iggers, G. G. and von Moltke, K., trans. Iggers, W. A. and von Moltke, K.. Indianapolis.Google Scholar
Ranke, L. von (1981) The Secret of World History: Selected Writings on the Art and Science of History, ed. and trans. Wines, R.. New York.Google Scholar
Raubitschek, A. E. (1973) ‘The speech of the Athenians at Sparta’, in The Speeches in Thucydides, ed. Stadter, P. A.. Chapel Hill: 3248.Google Scholar
Rawlings, H. R. (1975) A Semantic Study of Prophasis to 400 b.c. Hermes Einzelschriften 33. Wiesbaden.Google Scholar
Rawlings, H. R. (1977) ‘Thucydides on the purpose of the Delian League’, Phoenix 31: 18.Google Scholar
Rawlings, H. R. (1981) The Structure of Thucydides’ History. Princeton.Google Scholar
Rawlings, H. R. (2016) ‘Ktema te es aiei … akouein’. CPh 111: 107–16.Google Scholar
Rawlings, L. (2000) ‘Alternative agonies: hoplite martial and combat experiences beyond the phalanx’, in War and Violence in Ancient Greece, ed. van Wees, H.. London: 233–59.Google Scholar
Rawlings, L. (2013) ‘War and warfare in ancient Greece’, in The Oxford Handbook of Warfare in the Classical World, eds. Campbell, B. and Tritle, L.. Oxford: 328.Google Scholar
Rechenauer, G. (1991) Thukydides und die hippokratische Medizin: naturwissenschaftliche Methodik als Modell für Geschichtsdeutung. Spudasmata 47. Hildesheim.Google Scholar
Reinsch, D. R. (1983) Critobuli Imbriotae Historiae. Berlin.Google Scholar
Reinsch, D. R. (2006) ‘Byzantine adaptations of Thucydides’, in Brill’s Companion to Thucydides, eds. Rengakos, A. and Tsakmakis, A.. Leiden and Boston: 755–78.Google Scholar
Reinsch, D. R. (2014) Michaelis Pselli Chronographia. Berlin.Google Scholar
Rengakos, A. and Tsakmakis, A. (eds.) (2006) Brill’s Companion to Thucydides. Leiden and Boston.Google Scholar
[Reynolds, J.] (1624) Vox Coeli, or, Newes from Heaven. ‘Elesium’ [London].Google Scholar
Reynolds, J. J. (2009) ‘Proving power: signs and sign-interference in Thucydides’ “Archaeology”TAPhA 139: 325–68.Google Scholar
Rhodes, P. J. (1988) Thucydides, History, 2. Warminster.Google Scholar
Rhodes, P. J. (1993a) A Commentary on the Aristotelian Athenaion Politeia, revised edition. Oxford.Google Scholar
Rhodes, P. J. (1993b) The Athenian Empire, 2nd edition. Greece & Rome New Surveys in the Classics 17. Oxford.Google Scholar
Rhodes, P. J. (1994) Thucydides, History, 3. Warminster.Google Scholar
Rhodes, P. J. (1998) Thucydides, History, 4.1–5.24. Warminster.Google Scholar
Rhodes, P. J. (2000) ‘Who ran democratic Athens?’, in Polis and Politics: Studies in Greek History Presented to Mogens Herman M. H. Hansen, eds. Flensted-Jensen, P., Nielsen, T. H. and Rubinstein, L.. Copenhagen: 465–77.Google Scholar
Rhodes, P. J. (2007) ‘Democracy and empire’, in The Cambridge Companion to the Age of Pericles, ed. Samons, L.. Cambridge: 2445.Google Scholar
Rhodes, P. J. (2008) ‘Thucydides and his audience: what Thucydides explains and what he does not’, AAntHung 48: 83–8.Google Scholar
Rhodes, P. J. (2011) ‘Biaios didaskolos? Thucydides and his lessons for his readers’, in Thucydides – A Violent Teacher?: History and its Representations, eds. Rechenauer, G. and Pothou, V.. Gottingen: 1728.Google Scholar
Rhodes, P. J. (2014) Thucydides, History, Book I: With an Introduction, Translation and Commentary. Aris and Philips Classical Texts. Oxford.Google Scholar
Richards, J. (2013) ‘Thucydides in the circle of Philip Melanchthon’, Dissertation, The Ohio State University.Google Scholar
Robinson, E. (2000) ‘Democracy in Syracuse, 466–412 bc’, HSCPh 100: 189205.Google Scholar
Robinson, P. (1985) ‘Why do we believe Thucydides? A comment on W. R. Connor’s “Narrative discourse in Thucydides”’, in The Greek Historians: Literature and History. Papers Presented to A. E. Raubitschek. Stanford: 1924.Google Scholar
Rodríguez-Piñero, L. (2006) Indigenous Peoples, Postcolonialism, and International Law: The ILO Regime (1919–1989). Oxford.Google Scholar
Rogkotis, Z. (2006) ‘Thucydides and Herodotus: aspects of their intertextual relationship’, in Brill’s Companion to Thucydides, eds. Rengakos, A. and Tsakmakis, A.. Leiden and Boston: 5786.Google Scholar
Roisman, J. (1993) The General Demosthenes and his Use of Military Surprise: Stuttgart.Google Scholar
Roisman, J. (2002) ‘The rhetoric of courage in the Athenian orators’, in Andreia: Studies in Manliness and Courage in Classical Antiquity, eds. Rosen, R. M. and Sluiter, I.. Boston: 126–43.Google Scholar
Roisman, J. (2005) The Rhetoric of Manhood: Masculinity in the Attic Orators. London.Google Scholar
de Romilly, J. (1956) Histoire et raison chez Thucydide. Paris.Google Scholar
de Romilly, J. (1958) ‘L’utilité de l’histoire selon Thucydide’, in Histoire et Historiens dans l’antiquité, Entretiens sur l’antiquité classique, vol. 4. Geneva: 3981.Google Scholar
de Romilly, J. (1963) Thucydides and Athenian Imperialism, trans. Thody, P.. Oxford. (Originally published as Thucydides et l’imperialisme athénien: la pensée de l’historien et la genèse de l’oeuvre, Paris, 1951.)Google Scholar
de Romilly, J. (1966) ‘Thucydides and the cities of the Athenian Empire’, BICS 13: 112.Google Scholar
de Romilly, J. (2012) The Mind of Thucydides, trans. Rawlings, E. T.. Ithaca, NY. (Originally published as Histoire et raison chez Thucydide, Paris, 1956.)Google Scholar
Rood, T. C. B. (1998a) ‘Thucydides and his predecessors’, Histos 2: 230–67.Google Scholar
Rood, T. C. B. (1998b) Thucydides: Narrative and Explanation. Oxford.Google Scholar
Rood, T. C. B. (1999) ‘Thucydides’ Persian Wars’, in The Limits of Historiography: Genre and Narrative in Ancient Historical Texts, ed. Kraus, C. S.. Leiden: 141–68.Google Scholar
Rood, T. C. B. (2004) ‘Xenophon and Diodorus: continuing Thucydides’, in Xenophon and His World: Papers from a Conference Held in Liverpool in July 1999, ed. Tuplin, C. J.. Historia Einzelschriften 172. Stuttgart: 341–95.Google Scholar
Rood, T. C. B. (2006) ‘Objectivity and authority: Thucydides’ historical method’, in Brill’s Companion to Thucydides, eds. Rengakos, A. and Tsakmakis, A.. Leiden and Boston: 225–49.Google Scholar
Rood, T. C. B. (2007) ‘Thucydides’, in Time in Ancient Greek Narrative, eds. de Jong, I. J. F. and Nünlist, R.. Mnemosyne Supplement 291. Leiden and Boston: 131-46.Google Scholar
Rood, T. C. B. (2009) ‘Thucydides’ Persian Wars’, in Thucydides, ed. Rusten, J. S.. Oxford Readings in Classical Studies. Oxford: 148–75. (Originally published in The Limits of Historiography: Genre and Narrative in Ancient Historical Texts, ed. C. S. Kraus. Leiden, 1999: 141–68.)Google Scholar
Rood, T. C. B. (2020) ‘From ethnography to history: Herodotean and Thucydidean traditions in the development of Greek historiography’, in Herodotus in the Long Nineteenth Century, eds. Harrison, T. and Skinner, J.. Cambridge: 2045.Google Scholar
Roscher, W. (1842) Leben, Werk und Zeitalter des Thukydides. Göttingen.Google Scholar
Rosen, R. M. and Sluiter, I. (eds.) (2010) Valuing Others in Classical Antiquity. Leiden.Google Scholar
Runciman, W. G. (1998) ‘Greek hoplites, warrior culture, and indirect bias’, The Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute 4: 731–51.Google Scholar
Rusten, J. S. (1989) The Peloponnesian War, Book 2. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Rusten, J. S. (ed.) (2009a) Thucydides. Oxford Readings in Classical Studies. Oxford.Google Scholar
Rusten, J. S. (2009b) ‘Thucydides and his readers’, in Thucydides, ed Rusten, J. S.. Oxford Readings in Classical Studies. Oxford: 128.Google Scholar
Rusten, J. S. (2011) ‘Four ways to hate Corcyra’, in Thucydides, a Violent Teacher? History and Its Representations, eds. Rechenauer, G. and Pothou, V.. Göttingen: 99113.Google Scholar
Rusten, J. S. (2015) ‘Carving up Thucydides: the rise and demise of “Analysis,” and its legacy’, in A Handbook to the Reception of Thucydides, eds. Lee, C. and Morley, N.. Chichester: 6174.Google Scholar
Rusten, J. S. (2020) ‘τὴν ἐκβολὴν τοῦ λόγου ἐποιησάμην: Thucydides’ chronicle in the Pentekontaeteia (97–117) is not a “Digression”’, Histos 14: 230–54.Google Scholar
Rusten, J. S. (in preparation) Thucydides: The Peloponnesian War, Book I. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Rutherford, R. (2012) ‘Structure and meaning in epic and historiography’, in Thucydides and Herodotus, eds. Foster, E. M. and Lateiner, D.. Oxford: 1338.Google Scholar
Rutter, N. K. (2002) ‘Syracusan democracy: “most like the Athenian”?’, in Alternatives to Athens: Varieties of Political Organization and Community in Ancient Greece, eds. Brock, R. and Hodkinson, S.. Oxford: 137–51.Google Scholar
Sabin, P., van Wees, H. and Whitby, M. (eds.) (2007) The Cambridge History of Greek and Roman Warfare. Vol. I: Greece, the Hellenistic World and the Rise of Rome. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Said, E. (1975) Beginnings: Intention and Method. New York.Google Scholar
de Ste. Croix, G. E. M. (1954) ‘The character of the Athenian Empire’, Historia: 3: 141.Google Scholar
de Ste. Croix, G. E. M. (1961a) ‘Notes on jurisdiction in the Athenian Empire: I’, CQ 11: 94112.Google Scholar
de Ste. Croix, G. E. M. (1961b) ‘Notes on jurisdiction in the Athenian Empire: II’, CQ 11: 268–80.Google Scholar
de Ste. Croix, G. E. M. (1972) The Origins of the Peloponnesian War. London.Google Scholar
Samons, L. J. (2000) Empire of the Owl: Athenian Imperial Finance. Historia Einzelschrift 142. Stuttgart.Google Scholar
Samons, L. J. (2007) ‘Conclusion: Pericles and Athens’, in Cambridge Companion to the Age of Pericles, ed. Samons, L.. Cambridge: 282308.Google Scholar
Samons, L. J. (2016) Pericles and the Conquest of History. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Sandridge, N. B. (2012) Loving Humanity, Learning, and Being Honored: The Foundations of Leadership in Xenophon’s Education of Cyrus. Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Saxonhouse, A. W. (1996) Athenian Democracy: Modern Mythmakers and Ancient Theorists. Notre Dame and London.Google Scholar
Saxonhouse, A. W (2006) Free Speech and Democracy in Ancient Athens. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Scanlon, T. (1980) The Influence of Thucydides on Sallust. Heidelberg.Google Scholar
Scardino, C. (2007) Gestaltung und Funktion der Reden bei Herodot und Thukydides. Beiträge zur Altertumskunde 250. Berlin.Google Scholar
Scardino, C. (2012) ‘Indirect discourse in Herodotus and Thucydides’, in Thucydides & Herodotus, eds. Foster, E. M. and Lateiner, D.. Oxford: 6796.Google Scholar
Schake, K. (2017) ‘The summer of misreading Thucydides’, The Atlantic. 18 July. Available at: www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2017/07/the-summer-of-misreading-thucydides/533859/Google Scholar
Schamp, J. (1996) ‘La réception de l’histoire chez Photios sous bénéfice d’inventaire’, in L’image de l’Antiquité chez les auteurs postérieurs, eds. Lewandowski, I. and Mrozewics, L.. Poznán: 926.Google Scholar
Schaps, D. (1977) ‘The woman least mentioned: etiquette and women’s names’, CQ 27: 323–30.Google Scholar
Schenkl, H. and Downey, G. (1965) Themistii Orationes quae supersunt. Leipzig.Google Scholar
Schepens, G. (2010) ‘Thucydide législateur de l’histoire? Appréciations antiques et modernes’, in Ombres de Thucydide: la réception de l’historien depuis l’Antiquité jusqu’au début du XXe siècle. Actes des colloques de Bordeaux, les 16–17 mars 2007, de Bordeaux, les 30–31 mai 2008 et de Toulouse, les 23–25 octobre 2008. eds. Fromentin, V, Gotteland, G. and Payen, P.. Pessac: 121–40.Google Scholar
Schiappa, A. E. (1999) The Beginnings of Rhetorical Theory in Classical Greece. New Haven.Google Scholar
Schiefsky, M. J. (2005) Hippocrates on Ancient Medicine. Leiden and Boston.Google Scholar
Schlosser, J. A. (2013) ‘“Hope, danger’s comforter”: Thucydides, hope, politics’, The Journal of Politics 75: 169–82.Google Scholar
Schlosser, J. A. (2014) ‘Herodotean realism’, Political Theory 42: 239–61.Google Scholar
Schwartz, A. (2009) Reinstating the Hoplite: Arms, Armour and Phalanx Fighting in Archaic and Classical Greece. Stuttgart.Google Scholar
Schwartz, E. (1919) Das Geschichtswerk des Thukydides. Bonn.Google Scholar
Seaman, M. (2013) ‘The Peloponnesian War and its sieges’, in The Oxford Handbook of Warfare in the Classical World, eds. Campbell, B. and Tritle, L.. Oxford: 642–56.Google Scholar
Sears, M. A. (2013) Athens, Thrace, and the Shaping of Athenian Leadership. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Sears, M. A. (2015) ‘Thucydides, Rousseau, and forced freedom: Brasidas’ speech at Acanthus’, Phoenix 69: 242–67.Google Scholar
Sears, M. A. (2020) ‘Brasidas and the un-Spartan Spartan’, CJ 116: 173–98.Google Scholar
Shapiro, B., Rambaut, A., Thomas, M. and Gilbert, P. (2006) ‘No proof that typhoid caused the plague of Athens. A reply to Papagrigorakis et al.’, International Journal of Infectious Diseases 10: 334–5.Google Scholar
Skinner, J. (2012) The Invention of Greek Ethnography: From Homer to Herodotus. Oxford.Google Scholar
Smith, A. (1986) The Ethnic Origins of Nations. Oxford.Google Scholar
Smith, A. (2004) The Antiquity of Nations. Oxford.Google Scholar
Smith, A. (2009) Ethno-Symbolism and Nationalism. New York.Google Scholar
Smith, C. F. (1903) ‘Character-drawing in Thucydides’, AJPh 24: 369–87.Google Scholar
Smyly, J. G. (1933) ‘Notes on Greek manuscripts in the Library of Trinity College’, Hermathena 48: 163–95.Google Scholar
Soldo di Strozzi, F. (trans.) ([1545]) Gli otto libri di Thvcydide Atheniese, delle guerre fatte tra popoli della Morea, et gli Atheniesi, corrected edition. Venice.Google Scholar
Sontag, S. (2007) ‘The world as India (St Jerome lecture on literary translation)’, in At the Same Time: Essays and Speeches. New York: 156–79.Google Scholar
Soulis, E. M. (1972) Xenophon and Thucydides. Athens.Google Scholar
de Souza, P. (2013) ‘War at sea’, in The Oxford Handbook of Warfare in the Classical World, eds. Campbell, B. and Tritle, L.. Oxford: 369–94.Google Scholar
Spence, I. G. (1993) The Cavalry of Classical Greece: A Social and Military History with Particular Reference to Athens. Oxford.Google Scholar
Spence, I. G. (2010) ‘Cavalry, democracy and military thinking in classical Athens’, in War, Democracy and Culture in Classical Athens, ed. Pritchard, D.. Cambridge: 111–38.Google Scholar
Stadter, P. A. (ed.) (1973) The Speeches in Thucydides: A Collection of Original Studies with a Bibliography. Chapel Hill.Google Scholar
Stadter, P. A. (1992) ‘Herodotus and the Athenian arche’, ANSP 3: 781809.Google Scholar
Stadter, P. A. (1993) ‘The form and content of Thucydides’ Pentecontaeteia (1.89–117)’, GRBS 34: 3572.Google Scholar
Stahl, H.-P. (1973) ‘Speeches and course of events in Books Six and Seven of Thucydides’, in The Speeches in Thucydides: A Collection of Original Studies, ed. Stadter, P. A.. Chapel Hill: 6077.Google Scholar
Stahl, H.-P. (2003) Thucydides: Man’s Place in History. Swansea. (Originally published as Thukydides: die Stellung des Menschen im geschichtlichen Prozess, Munich, 1966.)Google Scholar
Stahl, H.-P. (2009) ‘Speeches and course of events in Books Six and Seven of Thucydides’, Thucydides, ed Rusten, J. S.. Oxford Readings in Classical Studies. Oxford: 341–58. (A revised version of Stahl 1973.)Google Scholar
Stanford, W. B. (1941) ‘Tzetzes’ farewell to Thucydides’, G&R 11: 40–1.Google Scholar
Starr, C. G. (1968) The Awakening of the Greek Historical Spirit. New York.Google Scholar
Stein, F. J. (1957) ‘Dexippus et Herodianus rerum scriptores quatenus Thucydidem secuti sint’, Dissertation, University of Bonn.Google Scholar
Stockton, D. (1990) The Classical Athenian Democracy. Oxford.Google Scholar
Stout, J. (2010) Blessed Are the Organized: Grassroots Democracy in America. Princeton.Google Scholar
Strasburger, H. (1972) Homer und die Geschichtsschreibung. Heidelberg.Google Scholar
Strasburger, H. (2009) ‘Thucydides and the political self-portrait of the Athenians’, in Thucydides, ed. Rusten, J. S.. Oxford Readings in Classical Studies. Oxford: 191219. (Originally published as ‘Thukydides und die politische Selbstdarstellung der Athener’, Hermes 86 (1958) 17–40.)Google Scholar
Strassler, R. (ed.) (1996) The Landmark Thucydides. New York.Google Scholar
Strathern, M. (1992) After Nature: English Kinship in the Twentieth Century. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Strauss, B. S. (2000) ‘Perspectives on the death of fifth-century Athenian seamen’, in War and Violence in Ancient Greece, ed. van Wees, H.. London: 261–83.Google Scholar
Strauss, B. S. (2007) ‘Naval battles and sieges’, in The Cambridge History of Greek and Roman Warfare, Vol. 1: Greece, the Hellenistic World and the Rise of Rome, eds. Sabin, P., van Wees, H. and Whitby, M.. Cambridge: 223–47.Google Scholar
Strauss, L. (1964) The City and Man. Chicago.Google Scholar
Strebel, H. (1935) Wertung und Wirkung des Thukydideischen Geschichtswerkes in der griechisch-römischen Literatur. (Eine literargeschichtliche Studie nebst einem Exkurs über Appian als Nachahmer des Thukydides). Speyer a. Rh.Google Scholar
Stroud, R. S. (1987) ‘“Wie es eigentlich gewesen” and Thucydides 2.48.3’, Hermes 115: 379–82.Google Scholar
Stroud, R. S. (1994) ‘Thucydides and Corinth’, Chiron 24: 267304.Google Scholar
Süßmann, J. (2012) ‘Historicising the classics: how nineteenth-century German historiography changed the perspective on historical tradition’, in Thucydides and the Modern World: Reception, Reinterpretation and Influence from the Renaissance to the Present, eds. Harloe, K. and Morley, N.. Cambridge: 7792.Google Scholar
Tamiolaki, M. (2012) ‘Virtue and leadership in Xenophon: ideal leaders or ideal losers?’ in Xenophon: Ethical Principle and Historical Inquiry, eds. Hobden, F. and Tuplin, C.. Leiden: 563–89.Google Scholar
Tamiolaki, M. (2016) ‘Athenian leaders in Xenophon’s Memorabilia’, in Aspects of Leadership in Xenophon, ed. Buxton, R. F.. Histos Suppl. 5: 1–45.Google Scholar
Tasso, T. (1982) ‘Il Padre di Famiglia’, in Tasso’s Dialogues, trans. and eds. Lord, C. and Trafton, D. A.. Berkeley and Los Angeles: 44148.Google Scholar
Thesaurus Exemplorum Medii Aevi, eds. Berlioz, J., Burghart, M., Collomb, P. and Polo de Beaulieu, M. A.. Available at: http://thema.huma-num.fr/aboutGoogle Scholar
Thomas, R. (2000) Herodotus in Context: Ethnography, Science, and the Art of Persuasion. Cambridge and New York.Google Scholar
Thomas, R. (2006) ‘Thucydides’ intellectual milieu and the plague’, in Brill’s Companion to Thucydides, eds. Rengakos, A. and Tsakmakis, A.. Leiden and Boston: 87108.Google Scholar
Thomas, R. (2013) ‘Ethnicity, genealogy, and hellenism in Herodotus’, in Herodotus, vol. II, ed. Munson, R. V.. Oxford Readings in Classical Studies. Oxford: 339–59.Google Scholar
Thompson, E. (1945) ‘Priscus of Panium, Fragment I B’, CQ 39: 92–4.Google Scholar
Thompson, H. A. and Wycherley, R. E. (1972) The Athenian Agora XIV, The Agora of Athens: The History, Shape, and Uses of an Ancient City Center. Princeton.Google Scholar
Tomadakes, N. (1952) ‘Αἱ παρὰ Κριτοβούλῳ δημηγορίαι Μωάμεθ Β´’, Ἀθηνᾶ 56: 61–8.Google Scholar
Tompkins, D. P. (n.d.) ‘Diplomacy, dialogue and emotion: the crisis of Spartan identity in Thucydides: 1.68–86’, unpublished manuscript.Google Scholar
Trenkner, S. (1958) The Greek Novella in the Classical Period, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Tritle, L. (1989) ‘Epilektoi at Athens’, AHB 3: 54–9.Google Scholar
Trundle, M. (2010) ‘Light troops in classical Athens’, in War, Democracy and Culture in Classical Athens, ed. Pritchard, D.. Cambridge: 139–60.Google Scholar
Tsakmakis, A. (2006) ‘Leaders, crowds, and the power of the image: political communication in Thucydides’, in Brill’s Companion to Thucydides, eds. Rengakos, A. and Tsakmakis, A.. Leiden and Boston: 161–87.Google Scholar
Tsakmakis, A. (2017) ‘Speeches’, in The Oxford Handbook of Thucydides, eds. Balot, R. K., Forsdyke, S. and Foster, E. M.. New York: 267–81.Google Scholar
Tubach, F. C. (1969) Index Exemplorum: A Handbook of Medieval Religious Tales. Helsinki.Google Scholar
Tucker, A. (2016) ‘Historiographic ancients and moderns: the difference between Thucydides and Ranke’, in Knowing Future Time in and through Greek Historiography, ed. Lianeri, A., Berlin: 361–84.Google Scholar
Tuplin, C. J. (1985) ‘Imperial tyranny: some reflections on a Classical Greek political metaphor’, in Crux: Essays in Greek History Presented to G.E.M. de Ste. Croix on his 75th Birthday, eds. Cartledge, P. A. and Harvey, F. D.. HPTh 6. Exeter: 348–75.Google Scholar
Turner, J. (2014) Philology: The Forgotten Origins of the Modern Humanities. Princeton.Google Scholar
Ullrich, F. W. (1968) Die Entstehung des Thukydideischen Geschichtswerkes. Darmstadt. (Originally published in Beiträge zur Erklärung des Thukydides, Hamburg, 1846.)Google Scholar
Underhill, G. E. (1900) A Commentary on the Hellenica of Xenophon. Oxford.Google Scholar
Urbinati, N. (2012) ‘Thucydides the Thermidorian: democracy on trial in the making of modern liberalism’, in Thucydides and the Modern World: Reception, Reinterpretation and Influence from the Renaissance to the Present, eds. Harloe, K. and Morley, N.. Cambridge: 5576.Google Scholar
Usher, S. (1974) Dionysius of Halicarnassus. Critical Essays, vol. 1. Loeb Classical Library 465. Cambridge, MA.Google Scholar
Usher, S. (1985) Dionysius of Halicarnassus. Critical Essays, vol. 2. Loeb Classical Library 466. Cambridge, MA.Google Scholar
van Ittersum, M. J. (2009) ‘Dating the manuscript of De Jure Praedae (1604–1608): what watermarks, foliation and quire divisions can tell us about Hugo Grotius’ development as a natural rights and natural law theorist’, History of European Ideas 35: 125–93.Google Scholar
van Wees, H. (2004) Greek Warfare: Myths and Realities. London.Google Scholar
van Wees, H. (2007) ‘War and society’, in The Cambridge History of Greek and Roman Warfare, Vol. 1: Greece, the Hellenistic World and the Rise of Rome, eds. Sabin, P., van Wees, H. and Whitby, M.. Cambridge: 273–99.Google Scholar
Vasilikopoulou, A. (1992) ‘Ἀξιολόγηση τοῦ Θουκυδίδη ἀπὸ τοὺς βυζαντινοὺς λογίους’, Lakonikai Spoudai 11: 274–85.Google Scholar
Vasunia, P. (2013) The Classics and Colonial India. Oxford.Google Scholar
Vela Tejada, J. (2004) ‘Warfare, history and literature in the archaic and classical periods: the development of Greek military treatises’, Historia 53: 129–46.Google Scholar
Vernant, J.-P. and Vidal-Naquet, P. (1990) ‘Ambiguity and reversal: on the enigmatic structure of Oedipus Rex’, in Myth and Tragedy in Ancient Greece, trans. Lloyd, J.. New York: 113–40.Google Scholar
Vidal-Naquet, P. (1990) La démocratie grecque vue d’ailleurs. Paris.Google Scholar
Vidal-Naquet, P. (2000) Les grecs, les historiens, la démocratie: le grand écart. Paris.Google Scholar
Vierhaus, R. (1990) ‘Historiography between science and art’, in Leopold von Ranke and the Shaping of the Historical Discipline, eds. Iggers, G. G. and Powell, J.. Syracuse, NY: 61–9.Google Scholar
Villard, P. (1992) ‘Constantinople et la peste (1467)’, in Histoire et société: Mélanges offerts à Georges Duby, vol. IV. Aix-en-Provence: 143–50.Google Scholar
Vivian, A. (2021) ‘Entanglement at the Assinarus: destructive liquids and fluid Athenians in Thucydides’, CJ 116: 385408.Google Scholar
Vlassopoulos, K. (2013) Greeks and Barbarians. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Vogt, J. (2009) ‘The portrait of Pericles in Thucydides’, in Thucydides, ed. Rusten, J.. Oxford Readings in Classical Studies. Oxford: 220–37.Google Scholar
Walbank, F. W. (1972) Polybius. Berkeley.Google Scholar
Wallace, W. P. (1964) ‘Thucydides’, Phoenix 18: 251–61.Google Scholar
Wallinga, H. T. (1992) Ships and Sea Power Before the Great Persian War: The Ancestry of the Ancient Trireme. Leiden.Google Scholar
Walters, K. R. (1981) ‘“We fought alone at Marathon”: historical falsification in the Attic funeral oration’, RhM 124: 203–11.Google Scholar
Walton, J. M. (2006) Found in Translation: Greek Drama in English. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Walz, C. (1834) Rhetores Graeci, vol. 3. Stuttgart.Google Scholar
Wang, Q. E and Fillafer, F. L. (eds.) (2007) The Many Faces of Clio: Cross-Cultural Approaches to Historiography. Essays in Honor of Georg G. Iggers. New York.Google Scholar
Warner, R. (trans.) (1954) The Peloponnesian War. Harmondsworth.Google Scholar
Warren, C. N. (2015) Literature and the Law of Nations, 1580–1680. Oxford.Google Scholar
Warren, M. (2001) Dry Bones Rattling: Community Building to Revitalize American Democracy. Princeton.Google Scholar
Wassermann, F. M. (1964) ‘The voice of Sparta in Thucydides’, CJ 59: 289–97.Google Scholar
Waterfield, R. (forthcoming) ‘Becoming a leader in fifth-century Athens’, in A Companion to Leadership in the Greco-Roman World, ed. Ferrario, S. B.. Malden, MA.Google Scholar
Welch, D. (2003) ‘Why international relations theorists should stop reading Thucydides’, Review of International Studies 29: 301–19.Google Scholar
Wendt, A. (1992) ‘Anarchy is what states make of it: the social construction of power politics’, International Organization 46: 391425.Google Scholar
West, W. C. III (1973) ‘The speeches in Thucydides: a description and listing’, in The Speeches in Thucydides: A Collection of Original Studies with a Bibliography, ed. Stadter, P. A.. Chapel Hill: 315.Google Scholar
Westerink, L. G. (1986) ‘Leo the Philosopher: Job and other poems’, ICS 11: 193222.Google Scholar
Westlake, H. D. (1958–9) ‘Hermocrates the Syracusan’, BRL 41: 239–68.Google Scholar
Westlake, H. D. (1968) Individuals in Thucydides. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Westlake, H. D. (1969) Essays on the Greek Historians and Greek History. New York.Google Scholar
Westlake, H. D. (1980) ‘Thucydides, Brasidas and Clearidas’, GRBS 21: 333–9.Google Scholar
Westlake, H. D. (1989) ‘Thucydides on Pausanias and Themistocles – a written source?’, in Studies in Thucydides and Greek History. Bristol: 118.Google Scholar
Wheeler, E. L. (2007) ‘Battle: land battles’, in The Cambridge History of Greek and Roman Warfare, Vol. 1: Greece, the Hellenistic World and the Rise of Rome, eds. Sabin, P., van Wees, H. and Whitby, M.. Cambridge: 186223.Google Scholar
Whitby, M. (2007) ‘Reconstructing ancient warfare’, in The Cambridge History of Greek and Roman Warfare, Vol. 1: Greece, the Hellenistic World and the Rise of Rome, eds. Sabin, P., van Wees, H. and Whitby, M.. Cambridge: 5481.Google Scholar
White, H. (1973) Metahistory: The Historical Imagination in Nineteenth-Century Europe. Baltimore.Google Scholar
White, H. (1987) The Content of the Form: Narrative Discourse and Historical Representation. Baltimore.Google Scholar
White, H. (1999) ‘Historical emplotment and the problem of truth in historical representation’, in Figural Realism: Studies in the Mimesis Effect. Baltimore: 2742. (First published in 1992.)Google Scholar
White, J. B. (1984) When Words Lose Their Meaning. Chicago.Google Scholar
Whitehead, D. (1987) ‘The periplous’, G&R 34: 178–85.Google Scholar
Whittaker, G. R. (1969) Herodian Volume I: Books I–IV. Cambridge, MA.Google Scholar
Wiater, N. (2011) The Ideology of Classicism: Language, History, and Identity in Dionsyius of Halicarnassus. Berlin.Google Scholar
Wilamowitz-Moellendorff, U. von (1902) Griechisches Lesebuch. Berlin.Google Scholar
Will, W. (2003) Thukydides und Perikles: der Historiker und sein Held. Bonn.Google Scholar
Willett, S. J. (1999) ‘Thucydides domesticated and ‘foreignized”’, Arion 7: 118–45.Google Scholar
Williams, B. (1993) Shame and Necessity. Berkeley.Google Scholar
Wilson, J. (1982) ‘What does Thucydides claim for his speeches?’, Phoenix 36: 95103.Google Scholar
Wilson, N. G. (1983a) Scholars of Byzantium. London.Google Scholar
Wilson, N. G. (1983b) ‘Scoliasti e commentatori’, Studi Classici e Orientali 33: 83112.Google Scholar
Wingrove, E. (2016) ‘Political displacement at the point of reception’, Classical Receptions Journal 8: 114–32.Google Scholar
Witt, R. G. (2000) ‘In the Footsteps of the Ancients’: The Origins of Humanism from Lovato to Bruni. Leiden.Google Scholar
Wittek, M. (1953) ‘Pour une étude du scriptorium de Michel Apostolès et consorts’, Scriptorium 7: 290–7.Google Scholar
Wohl, V. (2002) Love among the Ruins: The Erotics of Democracy in Classical Athens. Princeton.Google Scholar
Woodman, A. J. (1988) Rhetoric in Classical Historiography: Four Studies. London.Google Scholar
Woodruff, P. (2021) Thucydides on Justice, Power, and Human Nature. Selections from the History of the Peloponnesian War, 2nd edition. Indianapolis, IN.Google Scholar
Worley, L. (1994) Hippeis: The Cavalry of Ancient Greece. Oxford.Google Scholar
Wylie, G. (1992) ‘Brasidas: great commander or whiz-kid?’, QUCC 41: 7595.Google Scholar
Yoshitake, S. (2010) ‘Aretē and the achievements of the war dead: the logic of praise in the Athenian funeral oration’, in War, Democracy and Culture in Classical Athens, ed. Pritchard, D.. Cambridge: 359–77.Google Scholar
Yunis, H. (1991) ‘How do the people decide? Thucydides on Periclean rhetoric and civic instruction’, AJPh 112: 179200.Google Scholar
Yunis, H. (1996) Taming Democracy: Models of Political Rhetoric in Classical Athens. Ithaca, NY, and London.Google Scholar
Zahrnt, M. (2006) ‘Macedonia and Thrace in Thucydides’, in Brill’s Companion to Thucydides, eds. Rengakos, A. and Tsakmakis, A.. Leiden and Boston: 589614.Google Scholar
Zammito, J. H. (2015) ‘Historicism’, in The Oxford Handbook of German Philosophy in the Nineteenth Century, eds. Forster, M. and Gjesdal, K.. Oxford: 779805.Google Scholar
Ziegler, K. (1929) ‘Der Ursprung der Exkurse im Thukydides’, RhM 78: 5867.Google Scholar
Zincgref, J. W. (1619) Emblematvm Ethico-Politicorvm Centvria. [Heidelberg].Google Scholar
Zincgref, J. W. (2011) Gesammelte Schriften IV, 1: Apophthegmata Teutsch, eds. Verweyen, T., Mertens, D. and Schnabel, W. W.. Berlin.Google Scholar
Ziolkowski, J. (1981) Thucydides and the Tradition of Funeral Speeches at Athens. New York.Google Scholar
Zoido, J. C. I. (2007) ‘The battle exhortation in ancient rhetoric’, Rhetorica 25: 141–58.Google Scholar
Zumbrunnen, J. (2008) Silence and Democracy: Athenian Politics in Thucydides’ History. University Park, PA.Google 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.

  • Bibliography
  • Edited by Polly Low, University of Durham
  • Book: The Cambridge Companion to Thucydides
  • Online publication: 02 March 2023
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781316227442.025
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.

  • Bibliography
  • Edited by Polly Low, University of Durham
  • Book: The Cambridge Companion to Thucydides
  • Online publication: 02 March 2023
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781316227442.025
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.

  • Bibliography
  • Edited by Polly Low, University of Durham
  • Book: The Cambridge Companion to Thucydides
  • Online publication: 02 March 2023
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781316227442.025
Available formats
×