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Classics

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Selected Works

Classical Commentaries

Articles 1 - 4 of 4

Full-Text Articles in Arts and Humanities

Helen By Giovanni Boccaccio: A New Translation, With Text, And Commentary, Edward H. Campbell Nov 2015

Helen By Giovanni Boccaccio: A New Translation, With Text, And Commentary, Edward H. Campbell

E. H. Campbell

Helen from Giovanni Boccaccio's Famous Women: A new Translation, with Text, and Commentary.
44 pages.


Medea By Giovanni Boccaccio: A New Translation With Text And Commentary, Edward H. Campbell Oct 2015

Medea By Giovanni Boccaccio: A New Translation With Text And Commentary, Edward H. Campbell

E. H. Campbell

Medea from Giovanni Boccaccio's Latin work Famous women, a new translation with Latin text and philological commentary.
36 pages.


Europa From Giovanni Boccaccio’S Famous Women A New Translation, With Text, And Commentary, Edward H. Campbell Oct 2015

Europa From Giovanni Boccaccio’S Famous Women A New Translation, With Text, And Commentary, Edward H. Campbell

E. H. Campbell

The second of two biographies I have translated from Giovanni Boccaccio's Famous Women, the first being about IO--intended to supplement my commentary on the opening of Herodotus about the abduction of four women, leading to the Trojan War.
The biography of Io: http://works.bepress.com/edward_campbell/19/
My commentary on the origin of the Trojan War: http://works.bepress.com/edward_campbell/16/


Io: From Giovanni Boccaccio’S Famous Women: A New Translation, With Text, And Commentary, Edward H. Campbell Oct 2015

Io: From Giovanni Boccaccio’S Famous Women: A New Translation, With Text, And Commentary, Edward H. Campbell

E. H. Campbell

The story of how Io came to be known as Isis, Egypt's most revered Goddess as told by Renaissance author Giovanni Boccaccio, parallel Latin-English a new translation, text, and commentary, by E.H. Campbell, 32 pages.