-
Abbreviations
- University of Texas Press
- Chapter
- Additional Information
Ael. Aelian [Claudius Aelianus], freedman, Second Sophistic writer, c. 160–c. 235 ce VH Varia Historia Aesch. Aeschylus of Athens, Greek tragedian, c. 525/4 –c. 456/5 bce Pers. Persians Aeschin. Aeschines, Athenian orator, c. 397–c. 322 bce Andoc. Andocides, Athenian orator, c. 440–c. 390 bce App. Appian[os] of Alexandria, Greek historian, fl. 2nd century ce BC Bella Civilia Arist. Aristotle of Stagira, Greek philosopher, 384 –322 bce Ath. Pol. Athenaion Politeia Pol. Politics Rhet. Rhetoric Aristoph. Aristophanes, Athenian comic playwright, c. 455–386 bce Acharn. Acharnians Kn. Knights Athen. Athenaeus of Naucratis, Greek essayist, fl. c. 200 ce CAH Cambridge Ancient History Cic. M. Tullius Cicero, orator and statesman, 106 – 43 bce De Orat. De Oratore Rep. De Re Publica ii Verr. In Verrem Actio Secunda CQ Classical Quarterly Ctes. Ctesias of Cnidos, Greek doctor and historian at the court of Artaxerxes II, late 5th century bce Diels5 H. Diels, Die Fragmente der Vorsokratiker. 5th ed. Berlin 1934 –1937 ABBREVIATIONS Diog. Laert. Diogenes Laertius, Greek biographer, ?3rd century ce Dion. Hal. Dionysius of Halicarnassus, Greek critic and historian, late 1st century bce AR Antiquitates Romanae Ep. ad Pomp. Epistula ad Cn. Pompeium Front. Sextus Iulius Frontinus, consul and governor of Britain, military writer, c. 40–103/4 ce Hdt. Herodotus of Halicarnassus, Greek historian, c. 485–c. 420 bce Hell. Oxy. Hellenica Oxyrhynchia IG Inscriptiones Graecae (Berlin 1873–) Isocr. Isocrates, Athenian orator and educator, 436 –338 bce Just. Justin [M. Iunianus Iustinus], Latin epitomator, 2nd century ce or later Liv.[y] T. Livius Patauinus, Roman historian, 59 bce–c. 17 ce LSJ A Greek-English Lexicon. 9th ed. H.G. Liddell, R. Scott, rev. H.S. Jones. Oxford 1940 Lycurg. Lycurgus, Athenian statesman, c. 390–c. 325/4 bce In Leocr. In Leocratem Lys. Lysias, Attic orator, ?459/8–c. 380 bce Nep. Cornelius Nepos, Roman biographer, c. 110–24 bce Alcib. Alcibiades Lys. Lysander Them. Themistocles OCD Oxford Classical Dictionary. 3rd ed. Oxford 1996 Paus. Pausanias of Magnesia-ad-Sipylum, travel writer, fl. c. 150 ce Pind. Pindar[os] of Boeotia, Greek lyric poet, 518–?438/7 bce Ol. Olympian Odes Pyth. Pythian Odes Plat. Plato of Athens, philosopher, c. 429–347 bce Apol. Apology Ep. Epistulae Menex. Menexenus xii diodorus siculus [3.138.105.31] Project MUSE (2024-04-18 00:32 GMT) abbreviations xiii Plut. Plutarch of Chaeroneia, Greek biographer and essayist, c. 50–c. 120 ce Alcib. Alcibiades Arist. Aristeides Artax. Artaxerxes Cim. Cimon Dion Dion Lys. Lysander Mor. Moralia Nic. Nicias Per. Pericles Sol. Solon Them. Themistocles Tim. Timoleon Polyaen. Polyaenus, Macedonian military writer, 2nd century ce Polyb. Polybius, Greek historian, c. 200–c. 118 bce schol. scholiast, scholia Soph. Sophocles, Athenian tragedian, c. 496/5– 405 bce OC Oedipus at Colonus Strab. Strabo of Amaseia, Greek geographer, c. 64 bce–c. 20 ce Suet. Suetonius [C. Suetonius Tranquillus], Roman biographer and chief secretary to Hadrian, ?69–140 ce Div. Iul. Divus Iulius Thuc. Thucydides son of Olorus, Athenian historian, c. 460–c. 403 bce Varr. Marcus Terentius Varro, Roman polymath (116 –27 bce); also used to indicate the “Varronian” (Republican) calendar Xen. Xenophon son of Gryllus, Athenian general and writer, c. 430–c. 355 bce Anab. Anabasis Hell. Hellenica THIS PAGE INTENTIONALLY LEFT BLANK [3.138.105.31] Project MUSE (2024-04-18 00:32 GMT) DIODORUS SICULUS THE PERSIAN WARS TO THE FALL OF ATHENS THIS PAGE INTENTIONALLY LEFT BLANK ...