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Menander's Samia in the light of the new evidence

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 January 2011

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Summary

In June 1969, the Bodmer Library at Cologny, near Geneva, brought out a photographic facsimile and a transcription of those pages of the codex containing Menander's Dyskolos which contain large fragments of the Samia and Aspis of the same author (Papyrus Bodmer XXV and XXVI). In July Dr Colin Austin, who has collaborated with Professor Rodolphe Kasser in the preparation of these volumes, published a critical edition of both works; a commentary in a separate volume soon followed (Menandri Samia et Aspis, I et II, in the series Kleine Texte für Vorlesungen und Übungen, Berlin, Walter de Gruyter, 1969, 1970). The reader of this article will be well advised to have in hand the facsimile and Dr Austin's text, or at any rate the latter. In it I am concerned not to discuss the critical problems in which the text abounds, but to attempt a general survey of the Samia, offering at the same time a translation of most of the new material. For detailed explanation of the text, I refer the reader to Dr Austin's work. 341 lines (or parts of lines) of this play are contained in the famous Cairo papyrus published by Lefèbvre in 1905, together with one line known from a quotation. We now have 738 lines altogether, and it seems likely that about 158 lines are missing.

In order to evaluate our new gains we may begin by recapitulating what was known about the play when we had only the portion of the text in Cairo.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1972

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