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Niobe

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 February 2009

A. D. Fitton Brown
Affiliation:
University College of North Wales, Bangor

Extract

Down to the present century the Niobe of Aeschylus was represented by eight significant manuscript fragments containing some twenty-three lines. Even in this condition it deservedly attracted the interest and attention of scholars; and in 1933 this interest was intensified by the publication in Florence by Vitelli and Norsa of a mutilated papyrus of twenty-one lines embodying two of the earlier fragments.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Classical Association 1954

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References

1 That is to say it may be an indirect question depending upon ⋯γὼ … λέξω.