No CrossRef data available.
Article contents
Palatine Apollo: A Reply to Professor Richmond
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 February 2009
Extract
Professor Richmond's reply (C.Q. N.S. viii. 180–4) t o m y article on Palatine Apollo (C.Q. N.S. vi. 187–92) is argued with his usual enthusiasm and cogency. This reply to him, which has been delayed by my departure for Australia, must begin with an expression of the respect that I feel for an antagonist far more able and experienced than I can claim to be. Indeed, it was while lecturing on Ovid, Tristia 3 that I first met Professor Richmond's masterly article on the Augustan Palatium (J.R.S. iv [1914], 193–226). From this article my enthusiasm for the subject began, and I know that Professor Richmond has always welcomed discussion and argument about the famous Augustan temple of Apollo on the Palatine. I can but join him in urging any who may have been interested by our discussion to study his original article which contains much more besides a discussion of the site of Apollo's temple.
- Type
- Research Article
- Information
- Copyright
- Copyright © The Classical Association 1961
References
1 I said in my earlier article that Statius, Siluae 4. 2. 20–21Google Scholaruicina Tonantis regia might be one of the keys to the mystery and dismissed the view that the temple of Jupiter on the Capitol was meant. Professor Richmond says it must be the Capitol. ‘The height of the cella of Apollo Palatinus above sea-level is a few feet greater than the height of the cella of Iuppiter Capitolinus. ‘I wonder if Statius knew this. It would take more than a few feet to justify Statius' stupet, particularly when the distance between the two sites is taken into consideration: and regia is an odd word for a temple, anyway, Since writing this note, I have had my attention drawn to a further important contribution to this subject by G. Lugli, ‘Commento topografico all’ elegia la del III libro del Tristia ', Studi Ovidian (Rome 1959), pp. 29 ff.Google Scholar