Chapter 6: Other Early Families
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♠ Pherekydes FGrH 3F62 – Die Fragmente der griechischen Historiker 1, p. 78, ed. F. Jacoby. 2d ed. Leiden 1957.
♠ Nem 5.26 – Pindar, Nemean Odes
how Hippolyte, the opulent daughter of Cretheus, wanted to trap him with deceit. Greek Text
♠ Σ AR 1.224 – Scholia to Apollonios of Rhodes, Argonautika – Scholia in Apollonium Rhodium vetera, pp. 27-28, ed. C. Wendel. Berlin 1935.
♠ Σ Nem 4.92 – Scholia to Pindar, Nemean Odes – Scholia vetera in Pindari carmina, 3, p. 79, ed. A.B Drachman. Leipzig 1927.
♠ Σ Nem 5.46 – Scholia to Pindar, Nemean Odes – Scholia vetera in Pindari carmina, 3, p. 94, ed. A.B Drachman. Leipzig 1927.
♠ Lyk 901-2 – Lykophron, Alexandra
the Wolf that devoured the atonement and was turned to stone Greek Text
♠ Σ Lyk 901 – Scholia to Lykophron, Alexandra – Lykophronis Alexandra 2, pp. 290-91, ed E. Scheer. Berlin 1908.
♠ Il 16.173-78 – Homer, Iliad
The one rank was led by Menesthius of the flashing corselet, son of Spercheius, the heaven-fed river. [175] Him did fair Polydora, daughter of Peleus, bear to tireless Spercheius, a woman couched with a god, but in name she bare him to Borus, son of Perieres, who openly wedded her, when he had given gifts of wooing past counting. Greek Text
♠ Hesiod, Ehoiai (Catalogue of Women) fr 213 MW – Fragmenta Hesiodea, p. 108, ed. R. Merkelbach and M. L. West. Oxford 1967.
♠ ΣA Il 16.175 – Scholia A to Homer, Iliad – Scholia Graeca in Homeri Iliadem 2, p. 101, ed. W. Dindorf and E. Maass. Oxford 1875.
♠ Pherekydes FGrH 3F61 – Die Fragmente der griechischen Historiker 1, pp. 77-78, ed. F. Jacoby. 2d ed. Leiden 1957.
♠ Pherekydes FGrH 3F1b – Die Fragmente der griechischen Historiker 1, p. 59, ed. F. Jacoby. 2d ed. Leiden 1957.
♠ Pindar fr 48 SM – Pindarus 2, p. 13, ed. B. Snell and H. Maehler. Leipzig 1975.
♠ ΣA Il 16.175 – Scholia A to Homer, Iliad – Scholia Graeca in Homeri Iliadem 2, p. 101, ed. W. Dindorf and E. Maass. Oxford 1875.
See above
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Edited by Elena Bianchelli, Retired Senior Lecturer of Classical Languages and Culture, Univ. of Georgia, February 2024.
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