Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Colophon
- ERRATA ET CORRIGENDA
- Contents
- No. XLIII
- No. XLIV
- Essay “On the evidence from Scripture that the Soul, immediately after the Death of the body, is not in a state of sleep or insensibility; but of happiness or misery: and on the moral uses of that doctrine.” Part II
- Comicorum Graecorum Fragmenta, Specimen Editionis
- Oxford Prize Essay, 1801:—Gulielmi Jones, Eguitis Aurati, Laudatio
- Latin Poem: Non tangenda rates tramiliunt vada
- On the Theology of the Greeks. Part II
- Classical Criticism
- On the Origin, Progress, Prevalence, and Decline, of Idolatry. Part III
- Notæ et Curae sequentes in Arati Diosemea
- Simonidis Fragmenta duo emendata a G. B.
- De Origine ac Vi Verborum, ut vocant, Depouentium et Mediorum Graecæ linguæ, præsertim Latinæ
- On the New Translation of the Bible
- Inscriptio Eliaca explicata a G. B
- Andocides emendatus a G. B.
- Critical Observations on the article in the Quarterly Review, No. XLV., entitled “The Course of the Niger.”
- An obscure passage in the first Catilinarian Oration of Cicero explained
- MS. Fragment of a Greek Ritual
- In Herodotum Emendationes, G. B.
- Thucydides Emendatus
- On the Ancient British Language of Cornwall. [Concluded.]
- De Patavinitate Liviana
- Amcenitates Philosophic, No. I. Containing Observations on, and Corrections of, Passages in Hermes, Hermias, Jamblichus, and Proclus
- Notice of Mr. Elmsley's Ed. of the Medea of Euripides No.III
- Remarks on a Passage in Dr. Vincent's ‘Periplus of the Erythrean Sea.’
- An Account of the Libraries at Leiden, Hanover, Cassel, Gotha, Weimar, Jena, Erlangen, Leipzig, and Dresden
- On the Arabic Inscription, discovered in the Pyramid of Cephrenes
- On the state of Religion and Philosophy among certain Writers of Antiquity, and the reasofis of their silence respecting the Christian Religion
- Adversaria Literaria
- Literary Intelligence
Amcenitates Philosophic, No. I. Containing Observations on, and Corrections of, Passages in Hermes, Hermias, Jamblichus, and Proclus
from No. XLIV
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 July 2015
- Frontmatter
- Colophon
- ERRATA ET CORRIGENDA
- Contents
- No. XLIII
- No. XLIV
- Essay “On the evidence from Scripture that the Soul, immediately after the Death of the body, is not in a state of sleep or insensibility; but of happiness or misery: and on the moral uses of that doctrine.” Part II
- Comicorum Graecorum Fragmenta, Specimen Editionis
- Oxford Prize Essay, 1801:—Gulielmi Jones, Eguitis Aurati, Laudatio
- Latin Poem: Non tangenda rates tramiliunt vada
- On the Theology of the Greeks. Part II
- Classical Criticism
- On the Origin, Progress, Prevalence, and Decline, of Idolatry. Part III
- Notæ et Curae sequentes in Arati Diosemea
- Simonidis Fragmenta duo emendata a G. B.
- De Origine ac Vi Verborum, ut vocant, Depouentium et Mediorum Graecæ linguæ, præsertim Latinæ
- On the New Translation of the Bible
- Inscriptio Eliaca explicata a G. B
- Andocides emendatus a G. B.
- Critical Observations on the article in the Quarterly Review, No. XLV., entitled “The Course of the Niger.”
- An obscure passage in the first Catilinarian Oration of Cicero explained
- MS. Fragment of a Greek Ritual
- In Herodotum Emendationes, G. B.
- Thucydides Emendatus
- On the Ancient British Language of Cornwall. [Concluded.]
- De Patavinitate Liviana
- Amcenitates Philosophic, No. I. Containing Observations on, and Corrections of, Passages in Hermes, Hermias, Jamblichus, and Proclus
- Notice of Mr. Elmsley's Ed. of the Medea of Euripides No.III
- Remarks on a Passage in Dr. Vincent's ‘Periplus of the Erythrean Sea.’
- An Account of the Libraries at Leiden, Hanover, Cassel, Gotha, Weimar, Jena, Erlangen, Leipzig, and Dresden
- On the Arabic Inscription, discovered in the Pyramid of Cephrenes
- On the state of Religion and Philosophy among certain Writers of Antiquity, and the reasofis of their silence respecting the Christian Religion
- Adversaria Literaria
- Literary Intelligence
Summary
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Classical Journal , pp. 389 - 404Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2013First published in: 1820