![]() |
||||||
| Browse | Search | Information | Home | Shopping Basket | ||
| Easy Order Form | ||||||
| 13 March 2010 | ||||||
|
|
||||||
| New Arrivals | Text Only | View by: title, author, featured books |
| Browse | Sandpiper Editions | Classical Studies > Late Antiquity > Medieval > Modern History | ||
![]() |
Ammianus and the Historia Augusta | |||
| Sandpiper Editions | ||||
| Sir Ronald Syme | ||||
| Oxford University Press 2001 249 pages | ||||
| Hardback 0198143443 | ||||
| Published Price £14.99 | Our Price £11.99 | |||
| Forgery or not, the collection of biographies of emperors and usurpers from Hadrian to Numerianus (117 to 284 CE) known as the Historia Augusta has exercised classical scholars for centuries and raises intriguing questions of authorial motive and historiography. Symes brings peerless scholarship in Roman history and prosography to bear on the bogus Historia and the single 'artful impostor' who wrote it, assessing the history in relation to that of Ammianus Marcellinus and other writers such as Jerome and Marius Maximus and identifying contemporary events and people named in the Historia Augusta. (1968) | ||||
|
|
||||
![]() |
A Study of Cassius Dio | |||
| Sandpiper Editions | ||||
| Fergus Millar | ||||
| Oxford University Press 1999 254 pages | ||||
| Hardback 0198143362 | ||||
| Published Price $24.98 | Our Price £10.99 | |||
| Dio's 'Roman History' is one of the most important sources for the study of classical Rome, but comparatively little attention has been devoted to Cassius Dio Cocceianus himself, a Greek from Bithynia who was consul in AD 229. This book discusses Dio's background and career and analyzes both the composition of the 'History' and the nature of the political and historical views expressed in it. Millar looks in detail at Dio's eyewitness account of his own period and also shows how the 'History' reflects the fusion of two traditions - Greek civilization and Roman government. (1964) | ||||
| Top of Page |
||||
![]() |
The Troad | |||
| Sandpiper Editions | ||||
| JM Cook | ||||
| Oxford University Press 1999 534 pages | ||||
| Hardback Illustrated 0198131658 | ||||
| Published Price £19.99 | Our Price £15.99 | |||
| This topographical and archaeological study of the region in which ancient Troy was situated, is based on field work carried out between 1960 and 1969. Taking the geographical account of Strabo as a starting point, Cook describes the ancient remains of the region, identifies new sites and discusses the sources in which they are mentioned. He then surveys travellers' literature since the journey of Bellonius in 1548 and the various maps made of the Troad. The book concludes with a discussion of the pattern of habitation from ancient times to the present century. (1973) | ||||
|
|
||||
![]() |
Colony and Mother City in Ancient Greece | |||
| Sandpiper Editions | ||||
| AJ Graham | ||||
| Manchester University Press 1999 288 pages | ||||
| Hardback 0719057396 | ||||
| Published Price £9.99 | Our Price £7.99 | |||
| The relations between Greek colonies and their mother cities have been the subject of scholarly investigation since Valesius in 1634, not only because of the intrinsic interest of colonizing activity, but because of the special nature of Greek colonies. In this investigation of colonial relations from the 8th to 4th centuries BC, Dr Graham first describes Greek ideas and practices regarding the actual founding of colonies before turning to a discussion of individual cities including Thasos, Miletus, Corinth, Argos and Athens. (1964) | ||||
|
|
||||
![]() |
Aristeas of Proconnesus | |||
| Sandpiper Editions | ||||
| JDP Bolton | ||||
| Oxford University Press 1999 272 pages | ||||
| Hardback Illustrated 019814332X | ||||
| Published Price £12.99 | Our Price £10.99 | |||
| A shadowy figure from the 7th century BC, Aristeas of Proconnesus was author of the 'Arimaspea', a poem describing his journey to central Asia in search of the Hyperboreans, and encounters with the Scythians, the Issodonians and their tales of one-eyed Arimaspi, griffins, swan-maidens and caves of the wind. The poem survives only in fragments quoted by Herodotus and other ancient authors. This study draws together all those fragments to examine both the status of the poem in antiquity and the evidence about Aristeas, his remarkable journey and his connection with Pythagoras. (1962) | ||||
|
|
||||
![]() |
Social and Economic History of the Roman Empire | |||
| (Two volumes) | Sandpiper Editions | |||
| Michael Rosztovtzeff | ||||
| Oxford University Press 1998 968 pages | ||||
| Hardback Illustrated 0198142315 | ||||
| Published Price £40.00 | Our Price £32.00 | |||
| First published in 1926, and revised by PM Fraser in 1957, Rostovtzeff's study of the Roman Empire was coloured by his bitterness at the Bolshevik victory in his native Russia. It traces the stages of Roman history from 'feudal capitalism', through the collapse of city-capitalism to the acute economic crisis of the 3rd century which brought about a rapid decline of business activity and the resuscitation of primitive forms of economy. For Rostovtzeff, Roman civilization and culture was finally destroyed by the lower classes in their 'onslaught on the city bourgeoisie.' (1926) | ||||
|
|
||||
![]() |
Sancti Romani Melodi Cantica | |||
| Cantica Genuina | Sandpiper Editions | |||
| P Maas; CA Trypanis | ||||
| Oxford University Press 1997 546 pages | ||||
| Hardback 0198152442 | ||||
| Published Price £14.99 | Our Price £11.99 | |||
| Romanos, called the Melodist (fl.c.AD 540), is the greatest poet of the Greek Orthodox church, and one of the most distinguished writers of the early Middle Ages. The present volume was the first full critical edition of all the poet's genuine cantica. It re-examines and reassesses earlier scholarship, and includes a number of hitherto unpublished cantica by Romanos. Greek text with English critical apparatus. (1963) | ||||
|
|
||||
| Search | Browse | Top of Page |
| Late Antiquity - SP edns Books | © Sandpiper Books Ltd 2001-2010 | Late Antiquity - SP edns Books |