Epigraphy and the Greek historian /

Epigraphy is a method of inferring and analyzing historical data by means of inscriptions found on ancient artifacts such as stones, coins, and statues. It has proven indispensable for archaeologists and classicists, and has considerable potential for the study of ancient history at the undergraduat...

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Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: Cooper, Craig R. 1960- (Editor), Harding, Phillip
Format: Electronic eBook
Language:English
Published: Toronto : University of Toronto Press, [2008]
Series:Phoenix. Supplementary volume ; 47.
Subjects:
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504 |a Includes bibliographical references and indexes. 
505 0 |a Epigraphical sigla -- Phillip Edward Harding : list of publications -- pt. 1. Athens -- Drakonian procedure / David Mirhady -- Hypereides, Aristophon, and the settlement of Keos / Craig Cooper -- Athenians in Sicily in the fourth century BC / David Whitehead -- IG ii[superscript 2] 1622 and the collection of naval debts in the 340s / Kathryn Simonsen -- The slave-names of IG i[superscript 3] 1032 and the ideology of slavery at Athens / Bruce Robertson -- pt. 2. Athens from the outside : the wider Greek world -- Theopompos and the public documentation of fifth-century Athens / Frances Pownall -- Horton hears an Ionian / Gordon Shrimpton -- Rescuing local history : epigraphy and the island of Thera / Sheila Ager. 
588 0 |a Online resource; title from PDF title page (JSTOR, viewed August 10, 2020). 
520 |a Epigraphy is a method of inferring and analyzing historical data by means of inscriptions found on ancient artifacts such as stones, coins, and statues. It has proven indispensable for archaeologists and classicists, and has considerable potential for the study of ancient history at the undergraduate and graduate levels. Epigraphy and the Greek Historian is a collection of essays that explore various ways in which inscriptions can help students reconstruct and understand Greek History. In order to engage with the study of epigraphy, this collection is divided into two parts, Athens and Athens from the outside. The contributors maintain the importance of epigraphy, arguing that, in some cases, inscriptions are the only tools we have to recover the local history of places that stand outside the main focus of ancient literary sources, which are often frustratingly Athenocentric. Ideally, the historian uses both inscriptions and literary sources to make plausible inferences and thereby weave together the disconnected threads of the past into a connected and persuasive narrative. Epigraphy and the Greek Historian is a comprehensive examination of epigraphy and a timely resource for students and scholars involved in the study of ancient history. 
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