Twenty-six entries of a huge encyclopedia of Greek comedy in three volumes. Their subjects vary: from ancient scholarship and philology (Heliodorus, Platonius, Arethas, Eustathius, John Tzetzes, Maximus Planudes, Marcus Musurus, Manuel Moschopoulos, Thomas Magister, Demetrius Triclinius, the Ravenna manuscript) to Humanistic and Renaissance editions and translations (Aldus Manutius, Marcus Musurus, Rinuccio Aretino, Francesco Passi, the Rositini brothers, Ronsard), from Latin literature (Lucilius, Persius and Roman satire in general) to modern adaptations (Le Loyer and Schubert).
Beta, S. (2019). Adaptations (sixteenth to nineteenth centuries); Aldus Manutius; Arethas; Aretino, Rinuccio; Eustathius; Heliodorus; Le Loyer, Pierre; Lucilius; Moschopoulos, Manuel; Musurus, Marcus; Passi, Francesco; Persius; Planudes, Maximus; Platonius; Ravenna manuscript of Aristophanes; Ronsard, Pierre de; Rositini, Bartolomeo and Pietro; satire, Roman; scholarship, Byzantine; Schubert, Franz; Thomas magister; Triclinius, Demetrius; Tzetzes, John; Vergilius Romanus; Wind; Zwingli, Ulrich.
Adaptations (sixteenth to nineteenth centuries); Aldus Manutius; Arethas; Aretino, Rinuccio; Eustathius; Heliodorus; Le Loyer, Pierre; Lucilius; Moschopoulos, Manuel; Musurus, Marcus; Passi, Francesco; Persius; Planudes, Maximus; Platonius; Ravenna manuscript of Aristophanes; Ronsard, Pierre de; Rositini, Bartolomeo and Pietro; satire, Roman; scholarship, Byzantine; Schubert, Franz; Thomas magister; Triclinius, Demetrius; Tzetzes, John; Vergilius Romanus; Wind; Zwingli, Ulrich
Simone beta
2019-01-01
Abstract
Twenty-six entries of a huge encyclopedia of Greek comedy in three volumes. Their subjects vary: from ancient scholarship and philology (Heliodorus, Platonius, Arethas, Eustathius, John Tzetzes, Maximus Planudes, Marcus Musurus, Manuel Moschopoulos, Thomas Magister, Demetrius Triclinius, the Ravenna manuscript) to Humanistic and Renaissance editions and translations (Aldus Manutius, Marcus Musurus, Rinuccio Aretino, Francesco Passi, the Rositini brothers, Ronsard), from Latin literature (Lucilius, Persius and Roman satire in general) to modern adaptations (Le Loyer and Schubert).I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.
https://hdl.handle.net/11365/1076063