Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-2plfb Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-03T17:16:26.054Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Bibliography

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 February 2019

M. P. Hanaghan
Affiliation:
Australian Catholic University, Melbourne
Get access

Summary

Image of the first page of this content. For PDF version, please use the ‘Save PDF’ preceeding this image.'
Type
Chapter
Information
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2019

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Abram, S.L. (1994) Latin Letters and their Commonplaces in Late Antiquity and the Early Middle Ages, Dissertation (Indiana University).Google Scholar
Abram, S.L. (1998) “Brevity in Early Medieval Letters,” Florilegium 15, pp. 2335.Google Scholar
Adams, J.N. (2007) The Regional Diversification of Latin, 200 bc–ad 600 (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Alciati, R. (2009a) “Eucher, Salvien et Vincent: les Gallicani doctores de Lérin,” in Lérins, une île sainte; de l’Antiquité au Moyen Âge; Collection d’études médiévales, Y. Codou and M. Lauwers (eds) (Turnhout, Brepols), pp. 105119.Google Scholar
Alciati, R. (2009b) Monaci, Vescovi e Scuola nella Gallia Tardoantica (Rome, Edizione di Storia e Letteratura).Google Scholar
Allan, R. J. (2007) “Sense and Sentence Complexity. Sentence Structure, Sentence Connection, and Tense-Aspect as Indicators of Narrative Mode in Thucydides’ Histories,” in The Language of Literature. Linguistic Approaches to Classical Texts, Allan, R.J. and Buijs, M. (eds) (Leiden, Brill), pp. 93121.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Allen, M. (1995) “The Martyrdom of St. Jerome,” Journal of Early Christian Studies 3, pp. 211213.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Allen, P. (2015a) “Christian Correspondences: The Secrets of Letter-Writers and Letter-Bearers,” in The Art of Veiled Speech. Self-Censorship from Aristophanes to Hobbes, Baltussen, H. and Davis, P.J. (eds) (Philadelphia, University of Pennsylvania Press), pp. 209232.Google Scholar
Allen, P. (2015b) “Rationales for Episcopal Letter-Collections in Late Antiquity,” in Collecting Early Christian Letters from the Apostle Paul to Late Antiquity, Neil, B. and Allen, P. (eds) (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press), pp. 1834.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Allen, P. and Neil, B. (2013) Crisis Management in Late Antiquity (410–590 ce). A Survey of the Evidence from Episcopal Letters (Leiden, Brill).Google Scholar
Altman, J. G. (1982) Epistolarity: Approaches to a Form (Ohio, Ohio State University Press).Google Scholar
Amherdt, D. (2001) Sidoine Apollinaire, Le quatrième livre de la correspondance (Berlin, Peter Lang).Google Scholar
Amherdt, D. (2004) “Rusticus politicus. Esprit de caste? L’agriculture et la politique chez Sidoine Apollinaire. Réalité et lieux communs,” Hermes 132, pp. 373387.Google Scholar
Amherdt, D. (2013) “Sidonius in Francophone Countries,” in New Approaches to Sidonius Apollinaris, Van Waarden, J.A. and Kelly, G. (eds) (Leuven, Peeters), pp. 2336.Google Scholar
Anders, F. (2010) Flavius Ricimer, Macht und Ohnmacht des Weströmischen Heermeisters in der Zweiten Hälfte des 5. Jahrhunderts (Frankfurt am Main, Peter Lang).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Anderson, C.A. and Dix, T.K. (2013) “Vergil at the Races: The Contest of Ships in Book 5 of the Aeneid,” Vergilius 59, pp. 321.Google Scholar
Anderson, W.B. (1936) Sidonius: Poems and Letters I (London, Loeb Classical Library).Google Scholar
Anderson, W.B and Warmington, E.H. (1963) Sidonius: Poems and Letters II (London, Loeb Classical Library).Google Scholar
Arjava, A. (1998) “Paternal Power in Late Antiquity,” Journal of Roman Studies 88, pp. 147165.Google Scholar
Arnold, E.F. (2014) “Fluid Identities: Poetry and the Navigation of Mixed Ethnicities in Late Antique Gaul,” European Journal of Literature, Culture and Environment 5, pp. 88106.Google Scholar
Ash, R. (2003) “‘Aliud Est Enim Epistulam, Aliud Historiam … Scribere’ (Epistles 6.16.22),” Arethusa 36, pp. 211225.Google Scholar
Ash, R. (2013) “Drip-Feed Invective: Pliny, Self-Fashioning, and the Regulus Letters,” in The Author’s Voice in Classical and Late Antiquity, Marmodoro, A. and Hill, J. (eds) (Oxford, Oxford University Press), pp. 207232.Google Scholar
Attanasio, D., Brilli, M., and Bruno, M. (2008) “The Properties and Identification of Marble from Proconnesos (Marmara Island, Turkey): A New Database Including Isotopic, EPR and Petrographic Data,” Archaeometry 50, pp. 747774.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Auerbach, E. (1958) Literary Language and Its Public, in Late Latin Antiquity and in the Middle Ages, trans. Ralph Manheim, Bollingen Series LXXIV (New York, Bollingen Foundation).Google Scholar
Avlamis, P. (2011) “Isis and the People in the Life of Aesop,” in Revelation, Literature, and Community in Late Anitquity, Townsend, P. and Vidas, M. (eds) (Tübingen, Mohr Siebeck), pp. 65102.Google Scholar
Babic, M. (2015) “Pôžitky vidieckej vily v neskororímskej Galii. Sidonius Apollinaris, Ep. 2.2,” Kultúrne dejiny 6, pp. 8799.Google Scholar
Bailey, L. (2016) The Religious Worlds of the Laity in Late Antique Gaul (London, Bloomsbury Academic).Google Scholar
Bakhtin, M.M. (1981) The Dialogic Imagination: Four Essays (Austin, University of Texas Press).Google Scholar
Bakhtin, M.M. (2002) “Forms of Time and of the Chronotype in the Novel: Notes Towards a Historical Poetics,” in Narrative Dynamics, Essays on Time, Plot, Closure, and Frames, Richardson, B. (ed.) (Columbus, Ohio State University Press), pp. 1524.Google Scholar
Bakker, E. J. (1997) “Verbal Aspect and Mimetic Description in Thucydides,” in Grammar as Interpretation, Greek Literature in its Linguistic Contexts, Bakker, E.G. (ed.) (Leiden, Brill), pp. 754.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Baldwin, B. (1982) “Some Addenda to the Prosopography of the Later Roman Empire,” Historia: Zeitschrift für Alte Geschichte 31, pp. 97111.Google Scholar
Baldwin, M.C. (2005) Whose Acts of Peter? (Tübingen, Mohr Siebeck).Google Scholar
Balmelle, C. (2001) Les Demeures Aristocratiques D’Aquitaine, Société et culture de l’Antiquité tardive dans le Sud-Ouest de la Gaule (Bordeaux, Université Michel de Montaigne).Google Scholar
Banchich, T.M. (trans.) (2009) Aurelius Victor, Epitome de Caesaribus (Buffalo, Canisius College).Google Scholar
Banniard, M. (1992) “La Rouille et la Lime: Sidoine Apollinaire et la Langue Classique en Gaule au Ve Siècle,” in De Tertullien aux Mozarabes, Holtz, L. et al. (eds) (Paris, Institut d’Études Augustiniennes), pp. 413427.Google Scholar
Barcellona, R. (2013) “La “conversione” della cultura: una trasformazione tardoantica,” Chaos e Kosmos 14, pp. 123.Google Scholar
Barnes, T.D. (1983) “Review: Late Roman Prosopography: Between Theodosius and Justinian,” Phoenix 37, pp. 248270.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Barnwell, P.S. (1992) Emperors, Prefects and Kings, The Roman West, 395–565 (Chapel Hill, University of North Carolina Press).Google Scholar
Batstone, W.W. (1998) “Dry Pumice and the Programmatic Language of Catullus I,” Classical Philology 93, pp. 125135.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Beard, M. (2002) “Ciceronian Correspondences: Making a Book Out of Letters,” in Classics in Progress, Wiseman, T.P. (ed.) (Oxford, Oxford University Press), pp. 103144.Google Scholar
Becht-Jördens, G. (2017) “Ein Waschbecken mit Versinschrift des Sidonius als Danaergeschenk für die Gotenkönigin Ragnahild. Zur Bedeutung von Materialität, Handwerks- und Dichtkunst im Diskurs der Ohnmächtigen (Sidon. epist. IV 8),” Antike und Abendland 63, pp. 125153.Google Scholar
Becker, A. (2014a) “‘Ethnicité, identité ethnique. Quelques remarques pour l’Antiquité tardive,” Gerión 32, pp. 289305.Google Scholar
Becker, A. (2014b) “Les évêques et la diplomatie romano-barbare en Gaule au Ve siècle,” in L’empreinte chrétienne en Gaule du IVe au IXe siècle, Gaillard, M (ed.) (Turnhout, Brepols), pp. 4559.Google Scholar
Becker-Piriou, A. (2008) “De Galla Placidia à Amalasonthe, des femmes dans la diplomatie romano-barbare en Occident?,” Revue Historique 647, pp. 507543.Google Scholar
Behrwald, R. (2011) “Das Bild der Stadt Rom im 5. Jh. Das Beispiel des Sidonius Apollinaris,” in Rom und Mailand in der Spätantike. Repräsentationen städtischer Räume in Literatur, Architektur und Kunst, Fuhrer, T (ed.) (Berlin, De Gruyter), pp. 283302.Google Scholar
Bellès, J. (1997) Sidoni Apol∙linar Lletres 1–3 (Barcelona, Fundació Bernat Metge).Google Scholar
Bellès, J. (1998) Sidoni Apol∙linar Lletres 4–6 (Barcelona, Fundació Bernat Metge).Google Scholar
Bellès, J. (1999) Sidoni Apol∙linar Lletres 7–9 (Barcelona, Fundació Bernat Metge).Google Scholar
Bertocchi, A. and Maraldi, M. (2006) “Menaechmus quidam. Indefinites and Proper Nouns in Classical and Late Latin,” in Latin vulgaire, latin tardif VII: actes du VIIème Colloque international sur le latin vulgaire et tardif, Séville, 2–6 septembre 2003, Abellán, C. Arias (ed.) (Sevilla, Universidad de Sevilla Secretariado de Publicaciones), pp. 89108.Google Scholar
Beutler, R. (1937) “Der lateinische Neuplatonismus und Neupythagoreismus und Claudianus Mamertus in Sprache und Philosophie by Franz Bömer,” Gnomon 13, pp. 552558.Google Scholar
Blänsdorf, J. (1993) “Apollinaris Sidonius und die Verwandlung der römischen Satire in der Spätantike,” Philologus 137, pp. 122131.Google Scholar
Blockley, R.C. (1982) “Roman-Barbarian Marriages in the Late Empire,” Florilegium 4, pp. 6379.Google Scholar
Bodel, J. (2015) “The Publication of Pliny’s letters,” in Pliny the Book-Maker, Betting on Posterity in the Epistles, Marchesi, I. (ed.) (Oxford, Oxford University Press), pp. 13108.Google Scholar
Bömer, F. (1936) Der lateinische Neuplatonismus und Neupythagoreismus und Claudianus Mamertus in Sprache und Philosophie (Leipzig, Otto Harrassowitz).Google Scholar
Bonjour, M. (1981) “Sidonius Apollinaris inter Romanos et barbaros,” in Acta Treverica, Schnur, R. and Sallman, N. (eds) (Leichlingen, Brune), pp. 109118.Google Scholar
Bonjour, M. (1982) “Personnification, allegorie et prosopopée dans les Panégyriques de Sidoine Apollinaire,” Vichiana, 11, pp. 517.Google Scholar
Borius, R. (1965) Vie de Saint German d’Auxerre (Paris, Les Éditions du Cerf).Google Scholar
Börm, H. (2013) Westerom, von Honorius bis Justinian (Stuttgart, W. Kohlhammer).Google Scholar
Boshoff, L. (2016) “Looking Eastwards: The Regina Orientis in Sidonius Apollinaris’ Carmen 2,” in From Constantinople to the Frontier: the City and the Cities, Matheou, N.S.M., Kampianaki, T., and Bondioli, L.M. (eds) (Leiden, Brill), pp. 1124.Google Scholar
Bowersock, G.W., Brown, P., and Grabar, O. (1999) Late Antiquity, A Guide to the Postclassical World, repr. 2000 (Cambridge, MA, Harvard University Press).Google Scholar
Braund, D.C. (1980) “The Aedui, Troy, and the Apocolyntosis,” The Classical Quarterly 30, pp. 420425.Google Scholar
Bregman, J. (1982) Synesius of Cyrene, Philosopher-Bishop (Berkeley, University of California Press).Google Scholar
Brennan, B. (1985) “‘Episcopae’: Bishop’s Wives Viewed in Sixth-Century Gaul,” Church History 54, pp. 311323.Google Scholar
Brink, C.O. (1971) Horace on Poetry: The “Ars Poetica” II (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press).Google Scholar
Brittain, C. (2001) “No Place for a Platonist Soul in Fifth-Century Gaul? The Case of Mamertus Claudianus,” in Society and Culture in Late Antique Gaul, Revisiting the Source, Mathisen, R.W. and Schanzer, D. (eds) (Aldershot, Ashgate), pp. 239262.Google Scholar
Brocca, N. (2003–04) “Memoria poetica e attualità politica nel panegirico per Avito di Sidonio Apollinare,” Incontri triestini di filologia classica 3, pp. 279295.Google Scholar
Brown, P. (1971) The World of Late Antiquity: 150–750 ad (London, Thames and Hudson).Google Scholar
Brown, P. (1992) Power and Persuasion in Late Antiquity: Towards a Christian Empire (Madison, University of Wisconsin Press).Google Scholar
Brown, P. (2000) Augustine of Hippo: A Biography (London, Faber).Google Scholar
Burgess, R.W. (1987) “The Third Regnal Year of Eparchius Avitus: A Reply,” Classical Philology 4, pp. 335345.Google Scholar
Burton, P. (2009) “The Discourse of Later Latin,” in A Companion to Late Antiquity, Rousseau, P. (ed.) (Chichester, Wiley-Blackwell), pp. 327341.Google Scholar
Cabouret, B. (2012) “D’Apicius à la table des rois «barbares»,” Dialogues d’histoire ancienne Supplément 7, pp. 159172.Google Scholar
Cain, A. (2013) “Terence in Late Antiquity,” in A Companion to Terence, Augoustakis, A. and Traill, A. (eds) (Oxford, Wiley-Blackwell), pp. 380398.Google Scholar
Cameron, Alan. (1965) “The Fate of Pliny’s Letters in the Late Empire,” Classical Quarterly 15, pp. 289298.Google Scholar
Cameron, Averil. (1993) The Later Roman Empire, ad 284–430 (London, William Collins).Google Scholar
Castellanos, S. (2013) En el final de Roma (ca. 455–480) (Madrid, Marcial Pons).Google Scholar
Chadwick, N.K. (1955) Poetry and Letters in Early Christian Gaul (London, Bowes and Bowes).Google Scholar
Chafe, W. (1994) Discourse, Consciousness, and Time (Chicago, University of Chicago Press).Google Scholar
Chaix, L.A. (1868) Saint Sidoine Apollinaire et son siècle (Clermont-Ferrand, Ferdinand-Thiabud).Google Scholar
Chalon, M. et al. (1985) “Memorabile factum: Une célébration de l’évergétisme des rois Vandales dans l’Anthologie Latine,” Antiquités africaines 21, pp. 207262.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Champomier, J. (1938) Esquisse pour un portrait de Sidoine Apollinaire (Paris, Debresse).Google Scholar
Checon de Freitas, E. (2008) “Entre a Galliae a Francia,” Brathair 8, pp. 5078.Google Scholar
Chidiroglou, M. (2011) “Karystian Marble Trade in the Roman Mediterranean Region. An Overview of Old and New Data,” Bollettino di Archeologia online 1, pp. 4856.Google Scholar
Chronopoulos, T. (2010) “Brief Lives of Sidonius, Symmachus, and Fulgentius Written in Early Twelfth-Century England?Journal of Medieval Latin 20, pp. 232291.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cloppet, C. (1989) “À propos d’un voyage de Sidoine Apollinaire entre Lyon et Clermont-Ferrand,” Latomus 48, pp. 857868.Google Scholar
Collins, R. (2008) Visigothic Spain 409–711 (Oxford, Blackwell).Google Scholar
Colton, R.E. (1982) “Echoes of Juvenal in Sidonius Apollinaris,” Res Publica Litterarum 2, pp. 5974.Google Scholar
Colton, R.E. (1985) “Some Echoes of Martial in the Letters of Sidonius Apollinaris,” L’Antiquité Classique 54, pp. 277284.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Condorelli, S. (2012) “Dal parassita della commedia all’impudicus di Sidonio Apollinare (Epist. 3, 13, 1–4),” Paideia 67, pp. 409427.Google Scholar
Condorelli, S. (2015) “L’inizio della fine: l’epistola IX 1 di Sidonio Apollinare tra amicitia ed istanze estetico-letterarie,” Bollettino di Studi Latini 45, pp. 489511.Google Scholar
Connant, J. (2012) Staying Roman, Conquest and Identity in Africa and the Mediterranean, 439–700 (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press).Google Scholar
Conring, B. (2001) Hieronymus als Briefschreiber, Ein Beitrag zur spätantiken Epistolographie (Tübingen, Mohr Siebeck).Google Scholar
Consolino, F.E. (1974) “Codice retorico e manierismo stilistico nella poetica di Sidonio Apollinare,” Annali della Scuola Normale Superiore di Pisa. Classe di Lettere e Filosofia 4, pp. 423460.Google Scholar
Consolino, F.E. (2011) “Recusationes a confronto: Sidonio Apollinare Epist. IX 13,2 e Venanzio Fortunato carm. IX 7,” in Il calamo della memoria. Riuso di testi e mestiere letterario nella tarda antichità IV, Cristante, L. and Ravalico, S. (eds) (Trieste, Edizioni Università di Trieste), pp. 101125.Google Scholar
Constable, G. (1970) Letters and Letter-collections, Typologie des sources du moyen age occidental 17 (Turnhout, Brepols).Google Scholar
Conybeare, C. (2000) Paulinus Noster: Self and Symbols in the Letters of Paulinus of Nola (Oxford, Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Conybeare, C. (2012) “The Letters of Symachus: Book 1 by Michelle Renee Salzman, and Michael Roberts (review),” Journal of Late Antiquity 5, pp. 412414.Google Scholar
Cook, J. G. (2012) “Crucifixion in the West: From Constantine to Recceswinth,” Zeitschrift für Antikes Christentum / Journal of Ancient Christianity 16.2, pp. 226246.Google Scholar
Courcelle, P. (1948) Histoire littéraire des grandes invasions germaniques, repr. 1964 (Paris, Hachette).Google Scholar
Creese, M. (2006) Letters to the Emperor: Epistolarity and Power Relations from Cicero to Symmachus, Dissertation (University of St. Andrews).Google Scholar
Croke, B. (2014) “Dynasty and Aristocracy in the Fifth Century,” in The Cambridge Companion to Attila, Maas, M. (ed.) (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press), pp. 98124.Google Scholar
Curtius, E. R. (1953) Europäische Literatur und lateinisches Mittelalter, trans. Willard R. Trask (New York, Harper and Row).Google Scholar
Daly, W.M. (1987) “Christianitas Eclipses Romanitas in the Life of Sidonius Apollinaris,” in Religion, Culture and Society in the Early Middle Ages, Noble, T.F.X. and Contreni, J.J. (eds) (Kalamazoo, Medieval Institute Publications), pp. 726.Google Scholar
Daly, W.M. (2000) “An Adverse Consensus Questioned: Does Sidonius’s Eucharisticon (Carmen XVI) Show that he was Scripturally Naïve?,” Traditio 55, pp. 1971.Google Scholar
Dalton, O.M. (1915) The Letters of Sidonius I (Oxford, Clarendon Press).Google Scholar
Damon, C. (2010) “Quid tibi ego videor in epistulis, Cicero’s verecundia,” in Valuing Others in Classical Antiquity, Rosen, R.M. and Sluiter, I. (eds) (Leiden, Brill), pp. 375390.Google Scholar
Dark, K. (2005) “The Archaeological Implications of Fourth- and Fifth-Century Descriptions of Villas in the Northwest Provinces of the Roman Empire,” Historia: Zeitschrift für Alte Geschichte 54, pp. 331342.Google Scholar
De La Broise, R.M. (1890) Mamerti Claudiani vita eiusque doctrina de anima hominis, Dissertation (Paris).Google Scholar
De Pretis, A. (2003) ““Insincerity,” “Facts,” and “Epistolarity”: Approaches to Pliny’s Epistles,” Arethusa 36, pp. 127146.Google Scholar
De Saavedra Fajardo, D. (2008) Coronoa Gótica [1664], Villacañas Berlanga, J.L (ed.) (Murcia, Ediciones Tres Fronteras).Google Scholar
Deißmann, A. (1908) Licht vom Osten. Das Neue Testament und die neuentdeckten Texte der hellenistisch-römischen Welt (Tübingen, Mohr Siebeck).Google Scholar
Delaplace, C. (2012) “The So-Called “Conquest of the Auvergne” (469–475) in the History of the Visigothic Kingdom. Relations between the Roman Elites of Southern Gaul, The Central Imperial Power in Rome and the Military Authority of the Federates on the Periphery,” in Shifting Cultural Frontiers in Late Antiquity, Brakke, D., Watts, E., and Mauskopf Deliyannis, D. (eds) (Farnham, Ashgate), pp. 271281.Google Scholar
Delaplace, C. (2015) La fin de l’Empire romain d’Occident. Rome et les Wisigoths de 382 à 531 (Rennes, Presses Universitaires de Rennes).Google Scholar
Denecker, T. (2015) “Language Attitudes and Social Connotations in Jerome and Sidonius Apollinaris,” Vigiliae Christianae 69, pp. 393421.Google Scholar
Denecker, T. (2017) Ideas on Language in Early Latin Christianity: From Tertullian to Isidore of Seville (Leiden, Brill).Google Scholar
Desbrosses, L. (2015) “L’Ancien Monde chez Sidoine: prégnance et signification du modèle païen,” in Une antiquité tardive noire ou heureuse? Colloque international de Besançon, 12 et 13 novembre 2014, Ratti, S. (ed.) (Besançon, Presses Universitaires de Franche-Comté), pp. 209226.Google Scholar
Dewar, M. (2013) Leisured Resistance. Villas, Literature and Politics in the Roman World (London, Bloomsbury).Google Scholar
Diefenbach, S. (2013) ““Bischofsherrschaft.” Zur Transformation der politischen Kultur im spätantiken und frühmittelalterlichen Gallien,” in Gallien in Spätantike und Frühmittelalter. Kulturgeschichte einer Region, Müller, G.M. and Diefenbach, S. (eds) (Berlin, De Gruyter), pp. 91152.Google Scholar
Dill, Samuel. (1904) Roman Society from Nero to Marcus Aurelius (London, Macmillan).Google Scholar
Dill, Samuel. (1910) Roman Society in the Last Century of the Western Empire (London, Macmillan).Google Scholar
Dill, Samuel. (1926) Roman Society in Gaul in the Merovingian Age (London, Macmillan).Google Scholar
Drinkwater, J.F. (1978) “The Rise and Fall of the Gallic Iulii: Aspects of the Development of the Aristocracy of the Three Gauls under the Early Empire,” Latomus 37.4, pp. 817850.Google Scholar
Drinkwater, J.F. (1983) Roman Gaul, The Three Provinces 58 bc–ad 260 (Oxford, Routledge).Google Scholar
Drinkwater, J.F. (1987) The Gallic Empire. Separatism and Continuity in the North-Western Provinces of the Roman Empire A.D. 260–274 (Stuttgart, Historia Einzelschriften Heft 52).Google Scholar
Drinkwater, J.F. (1989) “Gallic Attitudes to the Roman Empire in the Fourth Century A.D.: Continuity or Change?,” in Labor Omnibus Unus. Gerold Walser zum 70. Geburtstag, Herzig, H.E. and Frei-Stolba, R (eds) (Stuttgart, Historia Einzelschriften Heft 60), pp. 136153.Google Scholar
Drinkwater, J.F. (1998) “The Usurpers Constantine III (407–411) and Jovinus (411–413),” Britannia 29, pp. 269298.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Drinkwater, J.F. (2001) “Women and Horses and Power and War,” in Urban Centers and Rural Contexts in Late Antiquity, Burns, T.S and Eadie, J.W (eds) (East Lansing, Michigan State University Press), pp. 135146.Google Scholar
Drinkwater, J.F. (2013) “Un-Becoming Roman. The End of Provincial Civilisation in Gaul,” in Gallien in Spätantike und Frühmittelalter. Kulturgeschichte einer Region, Müller, G.M and Diefenbach, S. (eds) (Berlin, De Gruyter), pp. 5978.Google Scholar
Drinkwater, J.F. and Elton, H. (eds) (1992) Fifth Century Gaul: A Crisis of Identity? (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press).Google Scholar
Duckett, E.S. (1930) Latin Writers of the Fifth Century (New York, H. Holt and Co).Google Scholar
Dunbabin, K.M.D. (1989) “Baiarum Grata Voluptas: Pleasures and Dangers of the Baths,” Papers of the British School at Rome 57, pp. 6–46.Google Scholar
Ebbeler, J. (2001) Pedants in the Apparel Of Heroes? Cultures of Latin Letter-Writing from Cicero to Ennodius, Dissertation (University of Pennsylvania).Google Scholar
Ebbeler, J. (2009) “Tradition, Innovation and Epistolary Mores,” in A Companion to Late Antiquity, Rousseau, P. (ed.) (Chichester, Wiley Blackwell), pp. 270284.Google Scholar
Ebbeler, J. (2012) Disciplining Christians, Correction and Community in Augustine’s Letters (Oxford, Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Eco, U. (1994) The Limits of Interpretation, first published 1990 (Bloomington, Indiana University Press).Google Scholar
Ehrenberg, V. and Jones, A.H.M. (1955) Documents Illustrating the Reigns of Augustus and Tiberius (Oxford, Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Eigler, U. (1997) “Horaz und Sidonius Apollinaris. Zwei Reisen und Rom (mit Tafel 1),” Jahrbuch für Antike und Christentum 40, pp. 168177.Google Scholar
Elg, A.G. (1937) In Faustum Reiensem Studia, Commentatio academica (Uppsala, Almqvist and Wiksell).Google Scholar
Engelbrecht, A. (1885) “Untersuchungen über die Sprache des Claudianus Mamertus,” Sitzungberichte der Wiener Akademie 110, pp. 423537.Google Scholar
Engelbrecht, A. (1889) “Studien über die Schriften des Bischofes von Reii Faustus,” Jahres-Bericht des Gymnasiums der k. k. Theresianischen Akademie, pp. 1104.Google Scholar
Engelbrecht, A. (1890) “Beiträge zur Kritik und Erklärung der Briefe des Apollinaris Sidonius, Faustus und Ruricius,” Zeitschrift für die österreichischen Gymnasien 6, pp. 481497.Google Scholar
Fagan, G.G. (1999) Bathing in Public in the Ancient World (Ann Arbor, University of Michigan Press).Google Scholar
Fanning, S. (1992) “Emperors and Empires in Fifth-Century Gaul,” in Fifth-century Gaul: A Crisis of Identity?, Drinkwater, J. and Elton, H. (eds) (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press), pp. 288297.Google Scholar
Faral, E. (1946) “Sidoine Apollinaire et la technique litteraire du Moyen Age,” Studi e testi 122, pp. 567580.Google Scholar
Fascione, S. (2016) “Seronato, Catilina e la moritura libertas della Gallia,” Koinonia 40, pp. 453462.Google Scholar
Fauriel, M. (1836) Histoire de la Gaule Méridionale sous la Domination des Conquérants Germains, Tome Premier (Paris, Paulin).Google Scholar
Fitzgerald, W. (2007) Martial: The World of the Epigram (Chicago, University of Chicago Press).Google Scholar
Flomen, M. (2009–10) “The Original Godfather: Ricimer and the Fall of Rome,” Hirundo 8, pp. 917.Google Scholar
Fo, A. (1991) “Percorsi e sogni geografici tardolatini,” Aion 13, pp. 5171.Google Scholar
Fögen, T. (1999) “Bezüge zwischen antiker und moderner Sprachnormentheorie,” Listy filologické 121, pp. 199219.Google Scholar
Forcellinus, A. andFacciolatus, J (1831) Totius Latinitatis Lexicon II (Schneebergae, C. Schumanni).Google Scholar
Forman, R.J. (1995) Augustine and the Making of a Christian Literature, Classical Tradition and Augustinian Aesthetics (Lewiston, E. Mellen Press).Google Scholar
Fortin, E. (1959) Christianisme et culture philosophique au cinquième siècle, La Querelle de L’âme Humaine en Occident (Paris, Études Augustiniennes).Google Scholar
Fournier, M. and Stoehr-Monjou, A.. (2013) “Représentation idéologique de l’espace dans la lettre 1, 5 de Sidoine Apollinaire: cartographie géo-littéraire d’un voyage de Lyon à Rome,” (version 1) Conference L’espace dans l’Antiquité. Utilisation, function et representation, organised by P. Voisin and M. de Béchillon, Paris, pp. 120.Google Scholar
Fournier, M. and Stoehr-Monjou, A.. (2014) “Cartographie géo-littéraire et géohistorique de la mobilité aristocratique au Ve siècle d’après la correspondence de Sidoine Apollinaire: du voyage officiel au voyage épistolaires,” Belgeo 2014(2), pp. 119.Google Scholar
Fowden, G. (2004) Art and the Umayyad Elite in Late Antique Syria, Quşayr ‘Amra (Berkeley, University of California Press).Google Scholar
Fowler, D.P. (1989) “First Thoughts on Closure: Problems and Prospects,” Materiali e discussion per l’analisi dei testi classici 22, pp. 75122.Google Scholar
Fowler, D.P. (1997) “Second Thoughts on Closure,” in Classical Closure, Reading the End in Greek and Latin Literature, Roberts, D.H., Dunn, F.M., and Fowler, D. (eds) (Princeton, Princeton University Press), pp. 322.Google Scholar
Frye, D. (2003) “Aristocratic Response to Late Roman Urban Change: the Examples of Ausonius and Sidonius in Gaul,” The Classical World 96, pp. 185196.Google Scholar
Furbetta, L. (2014) “Un nuovo manoscritto di Sidonio Apollinare: una prima ricognizione,” Res publica litterarum 37, pp. 135157.Google Scholar
Furbetta, L. (20142015a) “Empereurs, rois et délateurs. Esquisse d’étude sur la représentation du pouvoir et de ses dégénérescences dans l’oeuvre de Sidoine Apollinaire,” RET 4, pp. 123154.Google Scholar
Furbetta, L. (20142015b) “Tracce di Ausonio nelle lettere di Sidonio Apollinare (appunti di lettura),” Incontri di filologia classica 16, pp. 107133.Google Scholar
Furbetta, L. (2015a) “L’epitaffio di Sidonio Apollinare in un nuovo testimone manoscritto,” Euphrosyne 43, pp. 243254.Google Scholar
Furbetta, L. (2015b) “La lettre de recommandation en Gaule (Ve-VIIe siècles) entre tradition littéraire et innovation,” in Gouverner par les lettres, de l’Antiquité à l’époque contemporaine, Bérenger, A. and Dard, O. (eds) (Metz, Université de Lorraine), pp. 347368.Google Scholar
Furbetta, L. (2015c) “Sidonio Apollinare nei Libri Historiarum di Gregorio di Tours: qualche riflessione,” Mélanges de l’École française de Rome – Moyen Âge 127–2, pp. 113.Google Scholar
Fürst, A. 1999. Augustins Briefwechsel mit Hieronymus (Münster, Aschendorff).Google Scholar
Gamberini, F. (1983) Stylistic Theory and Practice in the Younger Pliny (Hildesheim, Olms-Weidmann).Google Scholar
Ganz, D. (1995) “Theology and the Organization of Thought,” in The New Cambridge Medieval History II, R. McKitterick (ed.) (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press), pp. 758785.Google Scholar
Gauly, B.M. (2006) “Das Glück des Pollius Felix. Römische Macht und privater Luxus in Statius’ Villengedicht silv. 2, 2,” Hermes 134, pp. 455470.Google Scholar
Geary, P.J. (2009) “What Happened to Latin?,” Speculum 84, pp. 859873.Google Scholar
Geisler, E. (1885) De Apollinaris Sidonii Studiis, Dissertation (Bratislava).Google Scholar
Geisler, E. (1887) “Loci Similes Auctorum: Sidonio Anteriorum,” in Gai Sollii Apollinaris Sidonii epistulae et carmina, Luetjohann, C. (ed.) (Berlin, Monumenta Germaniae Historia), pp. 351416.Google Scholar
Gemeinhardt, P. (2011) “Wozu Bildungsgeschichte in der Theologie? Gesprächsimpulse aus kirchengeschichtlicher Perspektive,” Zeitschrift für Religionspädagogik 10, pp. 190207.Google Scholar
Genette, G. (1980) Narrative Discourse: An Essay in Method, Jane E. Lewin (tran.) (Ithaca, Cornell University Press).Google Scholar
Germain, A.C. (1840) Essai Littéraire et Historique sur Apollinaris Sidonius (Montpellier, Boehm).Google Scholar
Gerth, M. (2013) Bildungsvorstellungen im 5. Jahrhundert n. Chr., Marcrobius, Martianus Capella und Sidonius Apollinaris (Berlin, Walter de Gruyter).Google Scholar
Giannotti, F. (2016) Sperare Meliora, il terzo libro delle Epistulae di Sidonio Apollinare, introduzione, traduzione e commento (Pisa, Edizione ETS).Google Scholar
Gibson, R.K. (2003) “Pliny and the Art of (in) Offensive Self-Praise,” Arethusa 36, pp. 235254.Google Scholar
Gibson, R.K. (2011) “<CLARUS> Confirmed? Pliny, Epistles I.1. and Sidonius Apollinaris,” Classical Quarterly 61, pp. 655659.Google Scholar
Gibson, R.K. (2012) “On the Nature of Ancient Letter Collections,” Journal of Roman Studies 102, pp. 5678.Google Scholar
Gibson, R.K. (2013a) “Letters into Autobiography: The Generic Mobility of the Ancient Letter Collection,” in Generic Interfaces in Latin Literature, Papanghelis, T.D. et al. (eds) (Berlin, de Gruyter), pp. 387416.Google Scholar
Gibson, R.K. (2013b) “Pliny and the Letters of Sidonius: From Constantius and Clarus to Firminus and Fuscus.” Arethusa 46, pp. 333355.Google Scholar
Gibson, R.K. (2013c) “Reading Sidonius by the Book,” in New Approaches to Sidonius Apollinaris, Van Waarden, J.A. and Kelly, G. (eds) (Leuven, Peeters), pp. 195220.Google Scholar
Gibson, R.K. (2015) “Not Dark Yet: Reading to the End of Pliny’s Nine-Book Collection,” in Pliny the Book-Maker, Betting on Posterity in the Epistles, Marchesi, I. (ed.) (Oxford, Oxford University Press), pp. 185221.Google Scholar
Gibson, R.K. and Morello, R.. (2012) Reading the Letters of Pliny the Younger (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press).Google Scholar
Gillett, A. (1995) “The Birth of Ricimer,” Historia: Zeitschrift für Alte Geschichte 44, pp. 380384.Google Scholar
Gillett, A. (1999) “The Accession of Euric,” Francia 26.1, pp. 140.Google Scholar
Gillett, A. (2003) Envoys and Political Communication in the Late Antique West, 411–533 (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press).Google Scholar
Gillett, A. (2012) “Communication in Late Antiquity: Use and Reuse,” Oxford Handbook of Late Antiquity Johnson, S.F. (ed.) (Oxford, Oxford University Press), pp. 815848.Google Scholar
Gilson, E. (1995) History of Christian Philosophy in the Middle Ages (New York, Random House).Google Scholar
Giuletti, I. (2014) Sidonio Apollinare, Diffensore della Romanitas, Epistulae 5, 1–13: Saggio di Commento, Dissertation (Università degli Studi di Macerata).Google Scholar
Goffart, W.A. (1980) Barbarians and Romans, A.D. 418–584: The Techniques of Accommodation (Princeton, Princeton University Press).Google Scholar
Goffart, W.A. (2006) Barbarian Tides: The Migration Age and the Later Roman Empire (Philadelphia, University of Pennsylvania Press).Google Scholar
Goncalves, V. (2013) “Aleae aut Tesserae? Les Significations d’une Opposition Ludique dans la Rome D’Ammien Marcellin,” AnTard 21, pp. 257264.Google Scholar
Graves, M. (2007) Jerome’s Hebrew Philology: A Study Based on his Commentary on Jeremiah (Leiden, Brill).Google Scholar
Greenhalgh, M. (2009) Marble Past, Monumental Present, Building with Antiquities in the Mediaeval Mediterranean (Leiden, Brill).Google Scholar
Grey, C. (2008) “Two Young Lovers: An Abduction Marriage and its Consequences in Fifth-Century Gaul,” Classical Quarterly 58.1, pp. 286302.Google Scholar
Griffin, M.T. (1976) Seneca, A Philosopher in Politics (Oxford, Clarendon).Google Scholar
Griffin, M.T. (1982) “The Lyons Tablet and Tacitean Hindsight,” Classical Quarterly 32, pp. 404418.Google Scholar
Grotowski, P. (2010) Arms and Armour of the Warrior Saints: Tradition and Innovation in Byzantine (London, Brill).Google Scholar
Gruber, J. (2013) D. Magnus Ausonius, Mosella: Kritische Ausgabe, Übersetzung, Kommentar (Berlin, Walter de Gruyter).Google Scholar
Gualandri, I. (1979) Furtiva Lectio (Milan, Cisalpino-Goliardica).Google Scholar
Gualandri, I. (2017) “Words Pregnant with Meaning: The Power of Single Words in Late Latin Literature,” in The Poetics of Late Latin Literature, Elsner, J. and Hernández Lobato, J. (eds) (Oxford, Oxford University Press), pp. 125148.Google Scholar
Günther, R. (1997/1998) “Ansätze eines Bedeutungswandels sozialer und politischer Termini bei latinischen Schriftstellern des 5. Jahrhunderts unter besonderer Berücksichtigung des Sidonius Apollinaris,” Kodai 8/9, pp. 3152.Google Scholar
Halsall, G. (2002) “Funny Foreigners: Laughing with the Barbarians in Late Antiquity,” in Humour, History and Politics in Late Antiquity and the Early Middle Ages, Halsall, G. (ed.) (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press), pp. 89113.Google Scholar
Hanaghan, M.P. (2017a) “All in a Word or Two; Micro Allusions in Sidonius’ Programmatic Epistles,” International Journal of the Classical Tradition 24.3, pp. 249261.Google Scholar
Hanaghan, M.P. (2017b) “Avitus’ Characterisation in Sidonius’ Carmen 7,” Mnemosyne 70.2, pp. 262280.Google Scholar
Hanaghan, M.P. (2017c) “Latent Criticism of Anthemius and Ricimer in Sidonius’ Epistula 1.5,” Classical Quarterly 67.2, pp. 631649.Google Scholar
Hanaghan, M.P. (2017d) “Note de lecture: The Temporality of Seneca’s Epistles,” Latomus 76.1, pp. 203206.Google Scholar
Hanaghan, M.P. (2018) “Pliny’s Epistolary Directions,” Arethusa 51.2, pp. 137162.Google Scholar
Hanaghan, M.P. (forthcoming) “Sidonius Apollinaris and the Making of an Exile Persona,” in Mobility and Exile at the End of Antiquity, Rohmann, D., Ulrich, J., and Vallejo Girves, M. (eds) (Frankfurt, Peter Lang).Google Scholar
Hanson, R.P.C. (1970) “Church in Fifth-Century Gaul: Evidence from Sidonius Apollinaris,” The Journal of Ecclesiastical History 21, pp. 110.Google Scholar
Harries, J.D. (1992a) “Christianity and the City in Late Roman Gaul,” in The City in Late Antiquity, Rich, J. (ed.) (London, Routledge), pp. 7798.Google Scholar
Harries, J.D. (1992b) “Sidonius Apollinaris, Rome and the Barbarians: A Climate of Treason?,” in Fifth-Century Gaul: A Crisis of Identity?, Drinkwater, J. and Elton, H. (eds) (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press), pp. 298308.Google Scholar
Harries, J.D. (1994) Sidonius Apollinaris and the Fall of Rome, ad 407–485 (Oxford, Clarendon Press).Google Scholar
Harries, J.D. (1996) “Sidonius Apollinaris and the Frontiers of Romanitas,” in Shifting Frontiers in Late Antiquity, Mathisen, R.W. and Sivan, H.S. (eds) (Aldershot, Variorum), pp. 3144.Google Scholar
Harries, J.D. (forthcoming) “East versus West: Sidonius, Anthemius and the Empire of Dawn,” in Festschrift for Ian Wood, Kıvılcım Yavuz, N., Broome, R., and Barnwell, T. (eds).Google Scholar
Hartmann, M. (2009) Die Königin im frühen Mittelalter (Stuttgart, Verlag W. Kohlhammer).Google Scholar
Haverling, G. (1988) Studies on Symmachus’ Language and Style (Gothenburg, Acta Universitatis Gothoburgensis).Google Scholar
Heather, P. (1992) “The Emergence of the Visigothic Kingdom,” in Fifth-Century Gaul: A Crisis of Identity?, Drinkwater, J. and Elton, H. (eds) (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press), pp. 8494.Google Scholar
Heather, P. (1999) “The Barbarian in Late Antiquity: Image, Reality and Transformation,” in Constructing Identities in Late Antiquity, Miles, R. (ed.) (London, Routledge), pp. 234258.Google Scholar
Heather, P. (2005) The Fall of the Roman Empire: A New History (London, Macmillan).Google Scholar
Heather, P. (2009) “Why Did the Barbarians Cross the Rhine?,” Journal of Late Antiquity 2, pp. 329.Google Scholar
Hebert, B. (1988) “Philosophenbildnisse bei Sidonius Apollinaris; Eine Ekphrasis zwischen Kunstbeschreibung und Philosophiekritik,” Klio 70, pp. 519538.Google Scholar
Heinzelmann, M. (1976) “L’aristocratie et les évêchés entre Loire et Rhin, jusqu’à la fin du VIIe siècle,” Revue d’histoire de l’Eglise de France 62, pp. 7590.Google Scholar
Henderson, J. (2002) Pliny’s Statue, The Letters, Self Portraiture and Classical Art (Exeter, University of Exeter Press).Google Scholar
Henke, R. (2008) “Eskapismus, poetische Aphasie und satirische Offensive: Das Selbstverständnis des spätantiken Dichters Sidonius Apollinaris,” in Arweiler, A.H. and Möller, M. (eds) Vom Selbst-Verständnis in Antike und Neuzeit. Notions of the self in Antiquity and beyond, Transformationen der Antike 8 (Berlin, De Gruyter), pp. 155173.Google Scholar
Henning, D. (1999) Periclitans res publica. Kaisertum und Eliten in der Krise des weströmischen Reiches 454/5–493 n. Chr (Stuttgart, Franz Steiner Verlag).Google Scholar
Herbert De La Portbarré-Viard, G. (2011) “Venance Fortunat et la representation litteraire du décor des villa après Sidoine Apollinaire,” in Decór et Architecture en Gaule, Balmelle, C., Eristov, H., and Monier, F. (eds) (Bordeaux, Aquitania), pp. 391401.Google Scholar
Hernández Lobato, J.M. (2012) Vel Apolline muto: estética y poética de la Antigüedad tardía (Bern, Peter Lang).Google Scholar
Hernández Lobato, J.M. (2014) El Humanismo que no fue. Sidonio Apollinar en el Renaciemento (Bologna, Pàtron).Google Scholar
Herrera, I. R. (1981) Poeta Christianus, Essencia y misión del poeta cristianoen Ia obra de Prudencio (Salamanca, Universidad Pontificia de Salamanca).Google Scholar
Herschkowitz, D. (1995) “Pliny the Poet,” Greece and Rome 42, pp. 168181.Google Scholar
Hodkinson, O. and Rosenmeyer, P.A.. (2013) “Introduction,” in Epistolary Narratives in Ancient Greek Literature, Hodkinson, O., Rosenmeyer, P.A., and Bracke, E. (eds) (Leiden, Brill), pp. 136.Google Scholar
Hoffer, S. (1999) The Anxieties of Pliny the Younger (Atlanta, American Philological Association).Google Scholar
Hoffmann, R.C. (1996) “Economic Development and Aquatic Ecosystems in Medieval Europe,” The American Historical Review 101, pp. 631669.Google Scholar
Hooper, F. and Schwartz, M. (1991) Roman Letters, History from a Personal Point of View (Detroit, Wayne State University Press).Google Scholar
Horvath, Á.T. (2000) “The Education of Sidonus in the Light of his Citations,” Acta Classica Universitatis Scientiarum Debreceniensis 34, pp. 151162.Google Scholar
Howland, J.W. (1991) The Letter Form and the French Enlightenment: The Epistolary Paradox (Paris, Peter Lang).Google Scholar
Huegelmeyer, C.T. (1962) Carmen De Ingratis S. Prosperi Aquitani, A translation with an Introduction and a Commentary, Dissertation (Catholic University of America, Washington, DC).Google Scholar
Humphries, M. (2012) “Valentinian III and the City of Rome (425–455): Patronage, Politics, Power,” in Two Romes: Rome and Constantinople in Late Antiquity, Grigs, L. and Kelly, G. (eds) (Oxford, Oxford University Press), pp. 161182.Google Scholar
Hutchings, L. (2009) “Travel and Hospitality in the Time of Sidonius Apollinaris,” Journal of the Australian Early Medieval Association 5, pp. 6574.Google Scholar
Janes, D. (1998) God and Gold in late Antiquity (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press).Google Scholar
Janes, D. (2000) “Treasure, Death and Display from Rome to the Middle Ages,” in Treasure in the Medieval West, Tyler, E.M. (ed.) (York, York Medieval Press), pp 110.Google Scholar
Janson, T. (1964) Latin Prose Prefaces, Studies in Literary Conventions (Stockholm, Almquist and Wiksell).Google Scholar
Jerg, E. (1970) Vir venerabilis: Untersuchungen zur Titulatur der Bischöfe in den ausserkirchlichen Texten der Spätantike als Beitrag zur Deutung ihrer öffentlichen Stellung (Vienna, Herder).Google Scholar
Jiménez Sánchez, J.A. (2003) “Julio Nepote y la agonía del Imperio Romano de Occidente,” Faventia 25, pp. 115137.Google Scholar
Johnson, W.A. (2010) Readers and Reading Culture in the High Roman Empire: A Study of Elite Communities (New York, Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Johnston, A.C. (2017) The Sons of Remus: Identity in Roman Gaul and Spain (Cambridge, MA, Harvard University Press).Google Scholar
Jones, A. E. (2009) Social Mobility in Late Antique Gaul, Strategies and Opportunities for the Non-Elite (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press).Google Scholar
Judge, E.-A. (2010) Jerusalem and Athens, Cultural Transformation in Late Antiquity (Tübingen, Mohr Siebeck).Google Scholar
Kaster, R. (1997) Guardians of Language: The Grammarian and Society in Late Antiquity (Berkeley, University of California Press).Google Scholar
Kaufmann, F.-M. (1995) Studien zu Sidonius Apollinaris (Frankfurt am Main, Peter Lang).Google Scholar
Kaufmann, G. (1864) Die Werke des Cajus Sollius Apollinaris Sidonius als eine Quelle für die Geschichte seiner Zeit (Göttingen, Universitäts-Buchdruckerei).Google Scholar
Kelly, G. (2008) Ammianus Marcellinus, the Allusive Historian (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press)Google Scholar
Kelly, H.A. (1993) Ideas and Forms of Tragedy from Aristotle to the Middle Ages (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press).Google Scholar
King, P.D. (1972) Law and Society in the Visigothic Kingdom (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press).Google Scholar
Kitchen, T.E. (2010) “Sidonius Apollinaris,” in Ego Trouble. Authors and Their Identities in The Early Middle Ages, Corradini, R. et al. (eds) (Vienna, Austrian Academy of Sciences), pp.5366.Google Scholar
Koch, A. (1895) Der heilige Faustus, Bischof von Riez (Stuttgart, Jos. Roth’sche Verlagshandlung).Google Scholar
Köhler, H. (1995) C. Sollius Apollinaris Sidonius Briefe Buch 1 (Heidelberg, Universitätsverlag C. Winter).Google Scholar
Köhler, H. (1998) “Der Geist ist offenbar im Buch wie das Antlitz im Spiegel: Zu Sidonius epist. I 2, III 13, VII 14,” in Mousopolos Stephanos: Festschrift für Herwig Görgemanns, Baumbach, M. et al. (eds) (Heidelberg, Universitätsverlag Winter), pp. 333345.Google Scholar
Köhler, H. (1999) “Der historische Infinitiv in den Briefen des Sidonius,” in Latin vulgaire – latin tardif, Actes du Ve Colloque international sur le latin vulgaire et tardif, R. Kettemann and H. Petersmann (eds.) (Heidelberg, 5–8 septembre 1997) (Heidelberg, Universitätsverlag Winter), pp. 409418.Google Scholar
Köhler, H. (2013) “Sidonius in German-Speaking Countries,” in New Approaches to Sidonius Apollinaris, van Waarden, J.A. and Kelly, G. (eds) (Leuven, Peeters), pp. 3746.Google Scholar
Köhler, H. (2014) C. Sollius Apollinaris Sidonius, Die Briefe (Stuttgart, Hiersemann).Google Scholar
Krabbe, M.K.C. (1965) Epistula ad Demetriadem de Vera Humilitate, A Critical Text and Translation with Introduction and Commentary, Dissertation (The Catholic University of America, Washington, DC).Google Scholar
Krause, J.-U. (1991) “Familien- und Haushaltsstrukturen im spätantiken Gallien,” Klio 73.2, pp. 537562.Google Scholar
Kroh, K. (2015) “Der laute und der leise Plinius. Vom Umgang mit exemplarischen Ordnungen in epist. 3, 1 und 3, 5,” in Was bedeutet Ordnung – was ordnet Bedeutung?, Haß, C.D. and Noller, E.M. (eds) (Berlin, De Gruyter), pp. 7196.Google Scholar
Kroon, C.H.M. (2002) “How to Write a Ghost story? A Linguistic View on Narrative Modes in Pliny Ep. 7.27,” in Donum Grammaticum: Studies in Latin and Celtic Linguistics in Honour of Hannah Rosén, Sawicki, L. and Shalev, D. (eds) (Leuven, Peeters), pp. 189200.Google Scholar
Kröner, H.O (1989) “Q. Symmachi rotunditas, C Plinii disciplina maturitasque,” Actas del VII Congreso Español de Estudios Clásicos 2, pp. 639652.Google Scholar
Kulikowski, M. (2000) “Barbarians in Gaul, Usurpers in Britain,” Britannia 31, pp. 325345.Google Scholar
Kulikowski, M. (2008) “Carmen VII of Sidonius and a Hitherto Unknown Gothic Civil War,” Journal of Late Antiquity 1, pp. 335352.Google Scholar
Kulikowski, M. (2012) “The Western Kingdoms,” in The Oxford Handbook of Late Antiquity, Johnson, S.F. (ed.) (Oxford, Oxford University Press), pp. 3159.Google Scholar
Kulikowski, M. (2013) “Sundered Aristocracies, New Kingdoms, and the End of the Western Empire,” in Gallien in Spätantike und Frühmittelalter. Kulturgeschichte einer Region, Müller, G.M and Diefenbach, S. (eds) (Berlin, De Gruyter), pp. 7990.Google Scholar
Küppers, J. (2005) “Autobiographisches in den Briefen des Apollinaris Sidonius,” in Antike Autobiographien, Reichel, M. (ed.) (Cologne, Weimer u. Wein), pp. 251277.Google Scholar
Laes, C. (2013) “Polyglots in Roman Antiquity. Writing Socio-Cultural History Based on Anecdotes,” Literatūra 55, pp. 726.Google Scholar
Lancel, S. (1999) St. Augustine, English translation (London, SCM Press).Google Scholar
Leach, E. W. (2003) “Otium as Luxuria: Economy of Status in the Younger Pliny’s Letters,” Arethusa 36.2, pp. 147165.Google Scholar
Leatherbury, S. (2017) “Writing (and Reading) Silver with Sidonius: The Material Contexts of Late Antique Texts,” Word and Image 33.1, pp. 3556.Google Scholar
Lendon, J.E. (1997) Empire of Honour, the Art of Government in the Roman World (Oxford, Clarendon Press).Google Scholar
Leppin, H. (2013) “Überlegungen zum Umgang mit Anhängern von Bürgerkriegsgegnern in der Spätantike,” in Vergeben und Vergessen? Amnestie in der Antike, Harter-Uibopuu, K. and Mitthof, F. (eds) (Vienna, Holzhausen), pp. 337358.Google Scholar
Levick, B.M. (1978) “Antiquarian or Revolutionary? Claudius Caesar’s Conception of His Principate,” AJPh 99, pp. 79105.Google Scholar
Lewis, C.M. (2000) “Gallic Identity and the Gallic Civitas from Caesar to Gregory of Tours,” in Ethnicity and Culture in Late Antiquity, Mitchell, S. and Greatrex, G. (eds) (London, Duckworth), pp. 6981.Google Scholar
Liebeschuetz, J.H.W.G. (2004) “The Collected Letters of Ambrose of Milan: Correspondence with Contemporaries and with the Future,” in Travel, Communication and Geography in Late Antiquity, Ellis, L. and Kidner, F.L. (eds) (Aldershot, Ashgate Publishing), pp. 95107.Google Scholar
Liebeschuetz, J.H.W.G. (2015) East and West in Late Antiquity (Leiden, Brill).Google Scholar
Lievestro, C.T. (1956) “Tertulian and the Sensus Argument,” Journal of the History of Ideas 17, pp. 264268.Google Scholar
Liverani, P. (2013) “Saint Peter’s and the city of Rome between Late Antiquity and the Early Middle Ages,” in Old Saint Peter’s, Rome, McKitterick, R. et al. (eds) (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press), pp. 2134.Google Scholar
López Fonseca, A. (1998) “San Jerónimo, lector de los cómicos latinos: cristianos y paganos,” Cuadernos de filología clásica: Estudios latinos 15, pp. 333352.Google Scholar
López Kindler, A. (2003) “Sidonius Apollinaris: Mitläufer im spätrömischen Gärungsprozess oder Zeuge des Glaubens?,” in Urbs aeterna: actas y colaboraciones del Coloquip Internacional Roma entre la Literature y la Historia: homenaje a la profesora Carmen Castillo, Pilar, M et al. (eds) (Pamplona, Ediciones Universidad de Navarra), pp. 835849.Google Scholar
Loretto, F. (1977) L. Annaeus Seneca: Epistulae morales ad Lucilium. Liber I (Stuttgart, Reclam).Google Scholar
Loyen, A. (1942) Recherches Historiques sur les Panégyriques de Sidoine Apollinaire (Paris, E. Champion).Google Scholar
Loyen, A. (1970a) Sidoine Apollinaire, Tome II Lettres (Paris, Société d’Édition Les Belles Lettres).Google Scholar
Loyen, A. (1970b) Sidoine Apollinaire, Tome III Lettres (Paris, Société d’Édition Les Belles Lettres).Google Scholar
Lucht, B. (2011) Gastfreundschaft und Landleben bei Sidonius Apollinaris am Beispiel von epist. 2,9 an Donidius (Berlin, Polyptoton II).Google Scholar
Luetjohann, C. (1887) Gai Sollii Apollinaris Sidonii Epistulae et Carmina (Berlin, Monumenta Germaniae Historica).Google Scholar
Macarthur, E. (1990) Extravagant Narratives, Closure and Dynamics in the Epistolary Form (Princeton, Princeton University Press).Google Scholar
MacGeorge, P. (2002) Late Roman Warlords (Oxford, Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
MacMullen, R. (1997) Christianity and Paganism in the Fourth to Eighth Centuries (New Haven, Yale University Press).Google Scholar
Maguire, H. (1999) “The Good Life,” in Late Antiquity, A Guide to the Postclassical World, repr. 2000, Bowersock, G.W., Brown, P., and Grabar, O. (eds) (Cambridge, MA, Harvard University Press), pp. 238257.Google Scholar
Manitius, M. (1888) “Zu Ausonius und Apollinaris Sidonius,” Jahrbücher für classische Philologie 137, pp. 7980.Google Scholar
Manuwald, G. (2003) “Eine ‘Schule’ für Novum Comum (epist. 4, 13). Aspekte der liberalitas des Plinius,” in Plinius der Jüngere und seine Zeit, Castagna, L. and Lefèvre, E. (eds) (Munich, K.G. Saur Verlag), pp. 203217.Google Scholar
March, D.A. (1989) “Cicero and the ‘Gang of Five’,” The Classical World 82, pp. 225234.Google Scholar
Marchesi, I. (2008a) The Art of Pliny’s Letters: A Poetics of Allusion in Private Correspondence (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press).Google Scholar
Marchesi, I. (2008b) “Review: William Fitzgerald, Martial: The World of the Epigram,” Bryn Mawr Classical Review 2008.01.23.Google Scholar
Marchesi, I. (2015) “Introduction,” in Pliny the Book-Maker, Betting on Posterity in the Epistles, Marchesi, I. (ed.) (Oxford, Oxford University Press) pp. 112.Google Scholar
Mariev, S. (2008) Ioannis Antiocheni Fragmenta Quae Supersunt Omnia (Berlin, De Gruyter).Google Scholar
Marinova, E. (2014) “Duties and Epistolarity: Semantic Transformations of officium in Latin Epistolography, 4th–5th c.,” Lucida Intervalla 43, pp. 99117.Google Scholar
Markus, R.A. (1990) The End of Ancient Christianity (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press).Google Scholar
Martínez, M.P. (2014) “El final del Imperio romano de Occidente en Tarraco. La inscripción de los emperadores León I y Anthemio (467–472 d.C.),” Pyrenae 45, pp. 117138.Google Scholar
Mascoli, P. (2001) “Gli Apollinari e l’eredità di una cultura,” Invigilata Lucernis 23, pp. 131145.Google Scholar
Mascoli, P. (2002) “Un nobile galloromano: Apollinare il Vecchio,” Annali della Facoltà di lettere e filosofia dell’Università di Bari 45, pp. 183197.Google Scholar
Mascoli, P. (2010) Gli Apollinari. Per la storia di una famiglia tardoantica (Bari, Quaderni di « Invigilata Lucernis » 39).Google Scholar
Mascoli, P. (2016) Amici di penna: dall’epistolario di Sidonio Apollinare, Biblioteca tardoantica 10 (Bari, Edipuglia).Google Scholar
Mathisen, R.W. (1979) “Sidonius on the Reign of Avitus: A Study in Political Prudence,” Transaction of the American Philological Association 109, pp. 165171.Google Scholar
Mathisen, R.W. (1981) “Epistolography, Literary Circles and Family Ties in Late Roman Gaul,” Transactions of the American Philological Association 111, pp. 95109.Google Scholar
Mathisen, R.W. (1984) “Emigrants, Exiles and Survivors: Aristocratic Options in Visigothic Aquitania,” Phoenix 38, pp. 159170.Google Scholar
Mathisen, R.W. (1985) “The Third Regnal Year of Eparchius Avitus,” Classical Philology 80, pp. 326335.Google Scholar
Mathisen, R.W. (1988) “The Theme of Literary Decline in Late Roman Gaul,” Classical Philology 83, pp. 4552.Google Scholar
Mathisen, R.W. (1989) Ecclesiastical Factionalism and Religious Controversy in Fifth-Century Gaul (Washington, DC, Catholic University of America Press).Google Scholar
Mathisen, R.W. (1991) “Review: De Gratia: Faustus of Riez’s Treatise on Grace and Its Place in the History of Theology, by Thomas A. Smith,” The Catholic Historical Review 77, pp. 495496.Google Scholar
Mathisen, R.W. (1993a) Roman Aristocrats in Barbarian Gaul: Strategies for Survival in an Age of Transition (Austin, University of Texas Press).Google Scholar
Mathisen, R.W. (1993b) “For Specialists Only: The Reception of Augustine and his Teachings in Fifth-Century Gaul,” in Collectanea Augustiniana, Augustine: Presbyter Factus Sum, Lienhard, J.T., Müller, E.C. and Teske, R.J. (eds) (New York, Peter Lang), pp. 2941.Google Scholar
Mathisen, R.W. (1996) “Review: Sidonius Apollinaris and the Fall of Rome ad 407–485, by Jill Harries,” International Journal of the Classical Tradition 3, pp. 246250.Google Scholar
Mathisen, R.W. (1997) “Les Barbares intellectuels dans l’Antiquité tardive,” Dialogues d’histoire ancienne 23, pp. 139145.Google Scholar
Mathisen, R.W. (2001) “The Letters of Ruricius of Limoges and the Passage from Roman to Frankish Gaul,” in Society and Culture in Late Antique Gaul: Revisiting the Sources, Mathisen, R.W and Shanzer, D. (eds) (Aldershot, Ashgate), pp. 101115.Google Scholar
Mathisen, R.W. (2003a) People, Personal Expression, and Social Relations in Late Antiquity, Volume I (Ann Arbor, University of Michigan Press).Google Scholar
Mathisen, R.W. (2003b) People, personal expression, and social relations in Late Antiquity, Volume II (Ann Arbor, University of Michigan Press).Google Scholar
Mathisen, R.W. (2005) “Bishops, Barbarians and the “Dark Ages”: The Fate of Late Roman Educational Institutions in Late Antique Gaul,” in Medieval Education, Begley, R.B. and Koterski, J.W. (eds) (New York, Fordham University Press), pp. 319.Google Scholar
Mathisen, R.W. (2009a) “Provinciales, Gentiles, and Marriages between Romans and Barbarians in the Late Roman Empire,” Journal of Roman Studies 99, pp. 140155.Google Scholar
Mathisen, R.W. (2009b) “The Use and Misuse of Jerome in Fifth Century Gaul,” in Jerome of Stridon: His Life, Writings and Legacy, Cain, A. and Lössl, J. (eds) (Farnham, Ashgate), pp. 191208.Google Scholar
Mathisen, R.W. (2013) “Dating the Letters of Sidonius,” in New Approaches to Sidonius Apollinaris, van Waarden, J. A. and Kelly, G. (eds) (Leuven, Peters), pp. 221248.Google Scholar
Mathisen, R.W. (2014) “La creation et l’utilisation de «dossiers» dans les lettres de Sidoine Apollinaire,” in Présence de Sidoine Apollinaire, Poignault, R. and Stoehr-Monjou, A. (eds) (Clermont-Ferrand, Centre de Recherches A. Piganiol – Présence de l’Antiquité), pp. 205214.Google Scholar
Mathisen, R.W. and Sivan, H. (eds) (1996) Shifting Frontiers in Late Antiquity (Aldershot, Variorum).Google Scholar
Mathisen, R.W. and Sivan, H. (1999) “Forging a New Identity: The Kingdom of Toulouse and the Frontiers of Visigothic Aquitania (418–507),” in The Visigoths: Studies in Culture and Society, Ferreiro, A. (ed.) (Leiden, Brill), pp. 162.Google Scholar
Matthews, J. (1971) “Gallic Supporters of Theodosius,” Latomus 30, pp. 10731099.Google Scholar
Matthews, J. (1975) Western Aristocracies and the Imperial Court, A.D. 364–425 (Oxford, Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Matthews, J. (2000) “Roman Law and Barbarian Identity in the Late Roman West,” in Ethnicity and Culture in Late Antiquity, Mitchell, S. and Greatrex, G. (eds) (London, Duckworth and the Classical Press of Wales), pp. 3144.Google Scholar
Max, G E. (1979) “Political Intrigue During the Reigns of the Western Roman Emperors Avitus and Majorian,” Historia: Zeitschrift für Alte Geschichte 28, pp. 225237.Google Scholar
McCutcheon, R.W. (2016) “A Revisionist History of Cicero’s Letters,” Mouseion: Journal of the Classical Association of Canada 13.1, pp. 3563.Google Scholar
McDonough, C.J. (1986) “Hugh Primas 18: A Poetic Glosula on Amiens, Reims, and Peter Abelard,” Speculum 61, pp. 806835.Google Scholar
McEvoy, M. (2014) “Between the Old Rome and the New: Imperial Co-Operation ca. 400–500 ce,” in Byzantium, its Neighbours and its Cultures, Dzino, D. and Parry, K. (eds) (Brisbane, Australian Association for Byzantine Studies), pp. 245268.Google Scholar
McKay, A.G. (1975) Houses, Villas and Palaces in the Roman World (Baltimore, Johns Hopkins University Press).Google Scholar
McLynn, N.B. (1993) “Review: Fifth-Century Gaul: A Crisis of Identity? by John F. Drinkwater and Hugh Elton,” Classical Review, New Series 43, pp. 352354.Google Scholar
Merrills, A. and Miles, R. (2010) The Vandals (Malden, Wiley-Blackwell).Google Scholar
Miles, R. (2005) “The Anthologia Latina and the Creation of Secular Space in Vandal Carthage,” Antiquité Tardive 13, pp. 305320.Google Scholar
Miles, R. (2008) “‘Let’s (Not) Talk About It’: Augustine and the Control of Epistolary Dialogue,” in The End of Dialogue in Antiquity, Goldhill, S. (ed.) (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press), pp. 139147.Google Scholar
Militello, C. (2005) “I Symmetika Zêtêmata di Porfirio, fonte del De statu animae di Claudiano Mamerto,” Auctores Nostri 2, pp. 141159.Google Scholar
Mitchell, S. (2014) A History of the Later Roman Empire, ad 284–641: The Transformation of the Ancient World (Chichester, Wiley Blackwell).Google Scholar
Mohrmann, C. (1955) Latin Vulgaire, latin des Chrétiens, latin medieval (Paris, Klincksieck).Google Scholar
Mommsen, T. (1887) “Praefatio in Sidonium,” in Gai Solii Apollinaris Sidonii Epistulae et Carmina, Luetjohann, C. (ed.) (Berlin, Weidmann), pp. xliv–liii.Google Scholar
Mondin, L. (2008) “La misura epigrammatica nella tarda latinità,” in Epigramma longum. Da Marziale alla tarda antichità. From Martial to Late Antiquity, Atti del Convegno internazionale, Cassino, 29–31 maggio 2006, Morelli, A.M. (ed.) (Cassino, Università degli Studi di Cassino), pp. 397494.Google Scholar
Montone, F. (2017) “Vita e svaghi di un aristocratico del V secolo. Il secondo libro dell’epistolario di Sidonio Apollinare,” Salternum 21, pp. 2345.Google Scholar
Moorhead, J. (2007) “Clovis’ Motives for Becoming a Catholic Christian,” Journal of Religious History 13, pp. 329339.Google Scholar
Morgan, L. (2010) Musa Pedestris: Metre and Meaning in Roman Verse (Oxford, Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Morello, R. (2015) “Pliny’s Book 8: Two Viewpoints and the Pedestrian Reader,” in Pliny the Book-Maker: Betting on Posterity in the Epistles, Marchesi, I (ed.) (Oxford, Oxford University Press), pp. 149182.Google Scholar
Moss, J.R (1973) “The Effects of the Policies of Aetius on the History of Western Europe,” Historia 22, pp. 711731.Google Scholar
Mratschek, S. (2008) “Identitätsstiftung aus der Vergangenheit: Zum Diskurs über die trajanische Bildungskultur im Kreis des Sidonius Apollinaris,” in Die christlich-philosophischen Diskurse der Spätantike: Texte, Personen, Institutionen, Akten der Tagung vom 22.-25. Februar 2006 am Zentrum der Antike und Moderne der Albert-Ludwigs-Universität Freiburg, Fuhrer, T (ed.) (Stuttgart, Philosophie der Antike Band 28), pp. 363380.Google Scholar
Mratschek, S. (2013) “Creating Identity from the Past: The Construction of History in the Letters of Sidonius,” in New Approaches to Sidonius Apollinaris, Van Waarden, J.A. and Kelly, G. (eds) (Leuven, Peters), pp. 249272.Google Scholar
Mratschek, S. (2016) “The Letter Collection of S.A.,” in Late Antique Letter Collections, di Sogno, C., Storin, B., Watts, E. (eds) (Berkeley, California Press 2016), pp. 309336.Google Scholar
Muhlberger, S. (1990) The Fifth-Century Chroniclers, Prosper, Hydatius, and the Gallic Chronicler of 452 (Leeds, Francis Cairns).Google Scholar
Mullen, A. (2015) “‘In Both our Languages’: Greek-Latin Code-Switching in Roman Literature,” Language and Literature 24, pp. 213232.Google Scholar
Müller, C. (2013) Kurialen und Bischof, Bürger und Gemeinde – Untersuchungen zu Kontinuität von Ämtern, Funktionen und Formen der ‘Kommunikation’ in der gallischen Stadt des 4.-6. Jahrhunderts, Dissertation (Freiburg).Google Scholar
Müller, G. (1948) “Erzählzeit und erzählte Zeit,” Festschrift für P. Kluckhorn, repr. in Müller, G. (1968) Morphologische Poetik, Müller, E. (ed.) (Tübingen, M. Niemeyer), pp. 269286.Google Scholar
Murray, O. (1965) “The ‘Quinquennium Neronis’ and the Stoics,” Historia: Zeitschrift für Alte Geschichte 14, pp. 4161.Google Scholar
Myers, K.S. (2000) “Miranda Fides, Poet and Patrons in Paradoxographical Landscapes in Statius’ Silvae,” Materiali e discussioni per l’analisi dei testi classici 44, pp. 103138.Google Scholar
Myers, K.S. (2005) “Docta Otia: Garden Ownership and Configurations of Leisure in Statius and Pliny,” Arethusa 38, pp. 103129.Google Scholar
Nathan, G. (2000) The Family in Late Antiquity: The Rise of Christianity and the Emergence of Tradition (London, Routledge).Google Scholar
Nauta, R.R. (2006) “The Recusatio in Flavian Poetry,” in Flavian Poetry, Nauta, R.R., Van Dam, H.-J. and Smolenaars, J.J.L. (eds) (Leiden, Brill), pp. 2140.Google Scholar
Neger, M. (2015) “Pliny’s Martial and Martial’s Pliny: the Intertextual Dialogue between the Letters and the Epigrams,” in Autour de Pline Le Jeune. En hommage à Nicole Méthy, Devillers, O. (ed.) (Bordeaux, Ausonius Éditions), pp. 131144.Google Scholar
Nehlsen, H. (1978) “Der Grabfrevel in den germanischen Rechtsaufzeichnungen,” in Zum Grabfrevel in vor- und frühgeschichtlicher Zeit, Jankuhn, H., Nehlsen, H., Roth, H. (eds) (Göttingen, Vandenhoeck und Ruprecht), pp. 107168.Google Scholar
Newlands, C. (1991) “Silvae 3.1 and Statius’ Poetic Temple,” Classical Quarterly 41, pp. 438452.Google Scholar
Newlands, C. (2013) “Architectural Ecphrasis in Roman Poetry,” in Generic Interfaces in Latin Literature, Papanghelis, T.D. et al. (eds) (Berlin, de Gruyter), pp. 5578.Google Scholar
Nickisch, R.M.G. (1991) Brief (Stuttgart, J.B. Metzler).Google Scholar
Noreña, C. (2007) “The Social Economy of Pliny’s Correspondence with Trajan,” American Journal of Philology 128, pp. 239277.Google Scholar
Norton, P. (2007) Episcopal Elections 250–600: Hierachy and Popular Will in Late Antiquity (Oxford, Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Obermaier, A. (1999) The History and Anatomy of Auctorial Self Criticism in the European Middle Ages (Amsterdam, Rodopi).Google Scholar
O’Daly, G. (1987) Augustine’s Philosophy of Mind (Berkeley, University of California Press).Google Scholar
O’Flynn, J.M. (1983) Generalissimos of the Western Roman Empire (Edmonton, University of Alberta Press).Google Scholar
O’Flynn, J.M. (1991) “A Greek on the Roman Throne: The Fate of Anthemius,” Historia: Zeitschrift für Alte Geschichte 40, pp. 122128.Google Scholar
O’Sullivan, J.F. (1947) The Writings of Salvian, the Presbyter (Washington, the Catholic University of America Press).Google Scholar
Ogilvy, J.D.A. (1963) “Mimi, Scurrae, Histriones: Entertainers of the Early Middle Ages,” Speculum 38, pp. 603619.Google Scholar
Oost, S.I. (1964) “Aëtius and Majorian,” Classical Philology 59, pp. 2329.Google Scholar
Oost, S.I. (1970) “D. N. Libivs Severvs P. F. AVG,” Classical Philology 65, pp. 228240.Google Scholar
Oppedisano, F. (2017) “L’insediamento di Antemio (467 d.C.),” Aevum 91.1, 123.Google Scholar
Overwien, O. (2009) “Kampf um Gallien. Die Briefe des Sidonius Apollinaris zwischen Literatur und Politik,” Hermes 137, pp. 93117.Google Scholar
Pagán, V. (2010) “The Power of the Epistolary Preface from Statius to Pliny,” Classical Quarterly 60, pp. 194201.Google Scholar
Paschoud, F. (1967) Roma Aeterna (Geneva, Institute Suisse).Google Scholar
Patterson, D.J. (2013) “Adversus Paganos: Disaster, Dragons, and Episcopal Authority in Gregory of Tours,” Comitatus: A Journal of Medieval and Renaissance Studies 44, pp. 128.Google Scholar
Pavlovskis, Z. (1962) The Influence of Statius upon Latin Literature before the Tenth Century, Dissertation (Cornell University).Google Scholar
Pavlovskis, Z. (1973) Man in an Artificial Landscape, the Marvels of Civilisation in Imperial Roman Literature (Leiden, Brill).Google Scholar
Pensabene, P. (2004) “Amministrazione dei marmi e sistema distributive nel mondo Romano,” in Marmi Antichi, Borghini, G. (ed.) (Roma, De Luca Editori d’Arte), pp. 4354.Google Scholar
Percival, J. (1997) “Desperately Seeking Sidonius: the Realities of Life in Fifth-century Gaul,” Latomus 56, pp. 279292.Google Scholar
Pérez Sánchez, D. (1997) “Realidad social, asentamiento bárbaro y prejuicios ideológicos en la Galia del siglo V a través de la obra de Sidonio Apolinar,” Gerión 15, pp. 223241.Google Scholar
Perkins, K.L.P (2007) The Education of Princess Mary Tudor, Dissertation (Louisiana State University).Google Scholar
Peter, H. (1901) Der Brief in der römischen Literatur, litterargeschichtliche Untersuchungen und Zusammenfassungen (Hildesheim, Olms).Google Scholar
Pietrini, S. (2015) “Il processo di Arvando. Il racconto di Sidonio Apollinare,” in Ravenna Capitale, Guidizi, Giudici e norme processuali in Occidente nei secoli IV-VIII, Bassanelli, G. (ed.) (Santarcangelo di Romagna, Maggioli Editore), pp. 301322.Google Scholar
Pohl, W. (2006) “Telling the Difference: Signs of Ethnic Identity,” in From Roman Provinces to Medieval Kingdoms, Noble, T.F.X. (ed.) (London, Routledge), pp. 99138.Google Scholar
Poignault, R. and Stoehr-Monjou, A. (eds) (2014) Présence de Sidoine Apollinaire (Clermont-Ferrand, Centre de Recherches A. Piganiol – Présence de l’Antiquité).Google Scholar
Postel, V. (2011) “Libertas und Litterae: Leitbegriffe der Selbstdarstellung geistlicher und weltlicher Eliten im frühmittelalterlichen Gallien und Italien,” in Théorie et pratiques des élites au Haut Moyen Âge, Bougard, F. (ed.) (Turnhout, Brepols) pp. 169186.Google Scholar
Potter, D.S. (1999) Literary Texts and the Roman Historian (London, Routledge).Google Scholar
Prévot, F. (1993) “Deux fragments de l’épitaphe de Sidoine Apollinaire découverts à Clermont-Ferrand,” Revue de l’Antiquité Tardive 1, pp. 223229.Google Scholar
Prévot, F. (1999) “Sidoine Apollinaire et l’Auvergne,” in L’Auvergne de Sidoine Apollinaire à Grégoire de Tours: Histoire et archéologie. 13e Journées internationales d’archéologie mérovingienne, Clermont-Ferrand, 3–6 oct. 1991, Fizellier-Sauget, B. (ed.) (Clermont-Ferrand, Presses Université Blaise-Pascal), pp. 6380.Google Scholar
Pricoco, S. (1965) “Studi su Sidonio Apollinare,” Nuovo Didaskaleion 11, pp. 70150.Google Scholar
Prosopography of the Later Roman Empire (1971–1992) vol. 1, ed. Jones, A. H. M. et al. (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 1971); vols 2 and 3, ed. Martindale, J. R. (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 1980–1992) (abbreviated PLRE).Google Scholar
Raffaelli, R. (2007) “Die Metrische Präsentation des Terenztexts in der Antike: der Codex Bembinus,” in Terentius Poeta, Kruschwitz, P., Ehless, W.-W., and Felgentreu, F. (eds) (Munich, Verlag C.H. Beck), pp. 7391.Google Scholar
Raga, E. (2014) “L’influence chrétienne sur le modèle alimentaire classique: la question de l’alternance entre banquets, nutrition et jeûne,” in L’empreinte chrétienne en Gaule, du IVe au IXe siècle, Gaillard, M. (ed.) (Turnhout, Brepols), pp. 6187.Google Scholar
Rehling, B. (1898) De Fausti Reiensis, Epistula Tertia, Dissertation (Oldenburg).Google Scholar
Reich, H. (1903) Der Mimus, ein litterar-entwickelungsgeschichtlicher Versuch (Berlin, Weidmannsche Buchhandlung).Google Scholar
Reiff, A. (1959) Interpretatio, imitatio, aemulatio, Begriff und Vorstellung literarischer Abhängigkeit bei den Römern, Dissertation (Cologne).Google Scholar
Reydellet, M. (1981) La Royauté dans la Littérature Latine De Sidoine Apollinaire à Isidore de Séville (Rome, École française de Rome).Google Scholar
Ricœur, P. (1980) “Narrative Time,” Critical Inquiry 7, pp. 169190.Google Scholar
Ricœur, P. (1985) Time and Narrative, Volume 2, trans. K. McLaughlin and D. Pellauer (Chicago, University of Chicago Press).Google Scholar
Ricœur, P. (1996) “The Time of Narrating (Erzählzeit) and Narrated time (Erzählte Zeit),” in Narratology: An Introduction, Onega, S. and García Landa, J.A. (eds) (London, Longman), pp. 129144.Google Scholar
Riggsby, A.M. (1995) “Pliny on Cicero and Oratory: Self-fashioning in the Public Eye,” The American Journal of Philology 116, pp. 123135.Google Scholar
Rimell, V. (2015) “Seneca and Neronian Rome: In the Mirror of Time,” in The Cambridge Companion to Seneca, Bartsch, S. and Schiesaro, A. (eds) (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press), pp. 122134.Google Scholar
Risselada, R. (2013) “Applying Text Linguistics to the Letters of Sidonius Apollinaris,” in New Approaches to Sidonius Apollinaris, Van Waarden, J.A. and Kelly, G. (eds) (Leuven, Peeters), pp. 273304.Google Scholar
Robert, R. (2011) “La description du Burgus de Pontius Leontius entre réalité et objet de memoire littéraire (Sidoine Apollinaire, Carm. 22),” in Decór et Architecture en Gaule, Balmelle, C., Eristov, H. and Monier, F. (eds) (Bordeaux, Aquitania), pp. 377390.Google Scholar
Roberto, U. (2017) “Dépouiller Rome? Genséric, Avitus et les statues en 455,” Revue historique 684, pp. 775801.Google Scholar
Roberts, D.H. (1997) “Ending and Aftermath in Ancient and Modern Narrative,” in Classical Closure: Reading the End in Greek and Latin Literature, Roberts, D., Dunn, F. and Fowler, D. (eds) (Princeton, Princeton University Press), pp. 251274.Google Scholar
Roberts, M. (1984) “The Mosella of Ausonius: An Interpretation,” Transactions of the American Philological Association 114, pp. 343353.Google Scholar
Roberts, M. (1989) The Jeweled Style: Poetry and Poetics in Late Antiquity (Ithaca, Cornell University Press).Google Scholar
Roberts, M. (1995) “Martin Meets Maximus: The Meaning of a Late Roman Banquet,” Revue des Études Augustiniennes 41, pp. 91111.Google Scholar
Roberts, M. (2001) “Rome Personified, Rome Epitomized: Representations of Rome in the Poetry of the Early Fifth Century,” American Journal of Philology 122, pp. 533541.Google Scholar
Rochette, B. (2010) “Greek and Latin Bilingualism,” in A Companion to the Greek Language, Bakker, E.J. (ed.) (Malden, MA, Wiley-Blackwell), pp. 281294.Google Scholar
Rochette, B. (2013) “Traces du bilinguisme dans la correspondance de Pline le Jeune,” in Polyphonia Romana. Hommages à Frédérique Biville 2, Garcea, A., Vallat, D. and Lhommé, M-K (eds) (Hildesheim, Olms), pp. 469481.Google Scholar
Rosén, H. (1980) “Exposition und Mitteilung – the Imperfect as a Thematic Tense-Form in the Letters of Pliny,” in On Moods and Tenses of the Latin Verb: Two Essays, Rosén, H. and Rosén, H.B (eds) (Munich, William Fink Verlag), pp. 2748.Google Scholar
Ross, A. (2016) Ammianus’ Julian, Narrative and Genre in the Res Gestae (Oxford, Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Rousseau, P. (1976) “In Search of Sidonius the Bishop,” in Historia: Zeitschrift für Alte Geschichte 25, pp. 356377.Google Scholar
Rousseau, P. (2000) “Sidonius and Majorian: The Censure in Carmen V,” Historia: Zeitschrift für Alte Geschichte 49, pp. 251257.Google Scholar
Rowan, C. and Swan, D. (2015) “Victory, Torcs and Iconology in Rome and Britain,” Journal of the Numismatic Association of Australia 26, pp. 7190.Google Scholar
Roymans, N. (2009) “Hercules and the Construction of a Batavian Identity in the Context of the Roman Empire,” in Ethnic Conflicts in Antiquity: The Role of Power and Tradition, Derks, T. and Roymans, N. (eds) (Amsterdam, Amsterdam University Press), pp. 219238.Google Scholar
Russell, J.C. (1994) The Germanization of Early Medieval Christianity: A Sociohistorical Approach to Religious Transformation (Oxford, Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Salmon, P. (1961) “The Wild Man in “Iwein” and Medieval Descriptive Technique,” The Modern Language Review 56, pp. 520528.Google Scholar
Salzman, M.R. (2004) “Travel and Communication in The Letters of Symmachus,” in Travel, Communication and Geography in Late Antiquity, Ellis, L. and Kidner, F.L. (eds) (Aldershot, Ashgate Publishing), pp. 8194.Google Scholar
Salzman, M.R. and Roberts, M.. (2011) The Letters of Symmachus: Book 1 (Atlanta, Society of Biblical Literature).Google Scholar
Santos, D. (1997) “Sidonio Apolinar y la descomposición del poder imperial en la Galia,” Anales de historia antigua y medieval 30, pp. 93106.Google Scholar
Santos, D. (2011) “La Importancia Política de Ejército Renano durante el Siglo IV,” Studia Historia. Historia Antigua, 29, pp. 277291.Google Scholar
Sarti, L. (2011) Perceiving War and the Military in Early Christian Gaul (ca. 400–700 A.D) (Leiden, Brill).Google Scholar
Schaff, P. and Wace, H. (1892) A Select Library of Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers of the Christian Church, Volume 3: Theodoret, Jerome, Gennadius, Rufinus (Michigan, W M. B. Eerdmans).Google Scholar
Schirok, E. (2005) “Ecce altera quaestio, quomodo hominibus sit utendum: Seneca über den Umgang mit Menschen,” in Seneca: Philosophus et Magister. Festschrift für Eckard Lefevre zum 70. Geburtstag, Baier, T. and Manuwald, G. (eds) (Berlin, Rombach Verlag), pp. 225254Google Scholar
Schröder, B.J. (2007) Bildung und Briefe im 6. Jahrhundert. Studien zum Mailänder Diakon Magnus Felix Ennodius (Berlin, De Gruyter).Google Scholar
Schuster, M. (1940) “Die Hunnenbeschreibungen bei Ammianus, Sidonius und Iordanis,” Wiener Studien 58, pp. 119130.Google Scholar
Schwitter, R. (2015) Umbrosa Lux, Obscuritas in der lateinischen Epistolographie der Spätantike (Stuttgart, Franz Steiner Verlag).Google Scholar
Scourfield, D. (1993) Consoling Heliodorus: A Commentary on Jerome, Letter 60 (Oxford, Clarendon Press).Google Scholar
Shanzer, D. and Wood, I. (2002) Avitus of Vienne, Letters and Selected Prose (Liverpool, Liverpool University Press).Google Scholar
Sharrock, A. (2000) “Intratextuality: Parts and (W)holes in Theory,” in Intratextuality: Greek and Roman Textual Relations, Sharrock, A. and Morales, H. (eds) (Oxford, Oxford University Press), pp. 139.Google Scholar
Shotter, D.C.A. (1968) “Tacitus, Tiberius and Germanicus,” Historia: Zeitschrift für Alte Geschichte 17, pp. 194214.Google Scholar
Simonetti, M. (1976) “Le Fonti del De Spiritu Sancto di Fausto di Riez,” Siculorum Gymnasium 29, pp. 413425.Google Scholar
Sirks, A.J.B. (1996) “Shifting Frontiers in the Law: Romans, Provincials, and Barbarians,” in Shifting Frontiers in Late Antiquity, Mathisen, R. W. and Sivan, H. S. (eds) (Aldershot, Variorum), pp. 146157.Google Scholar
Sirks, A.J.B. (2013) “The episcopalis audentia in Late Antiquity,” Les justices alternatives et leurs avatars, Droit et Cultures, Revue Internationale interdisplinaire 65, pp. 7988.Google Scholar
Sivan, H.S. (1989) “Sidonius Apollinaris, Theodoric II, and Gothic-Roman Politics from Avitus to Anthemius,” Hermes 117, pp. 8594.Google Scholar
Sivan, H.S. (1993) Ausonius of Bordeaux (London, Routledge).Google Scholar
Sivonen, P. (1997) “The Good and the Bad, the Civilised and the Barbaric: Images of the East in the Identities of Ausonius, Sidonius, and Sulpicius,” Studies in Latin Literature and Roman History 8, pp. 417440.Google Scholar
Sivonen, P. (2006) Being a Roman Magistrate: Office-holding and Roman Identity in Late Antique Gaul (Helsinki, Suomalaisen Kirjallisuuden Seura).Google Scholar
Sogno, C. (2014) “The Ghost of Cicero’s Letters: Epistolography and Historiography in Senatiorial Letter Writing,” Journal of Late Antiquity 7, pp. 201222.Google Scholar
Soler, J. (2005) Écrituees du Voyage, Héritages et inventions sans la littérature latine tardive (Paris, Institut d’Études Augustiniennes).Google Scholar
Squatriti, P. (1992) “Marshes and Mentalities in Early Medieval Ravenna,” Viator 23, pp. 116.Google Scholar
Squillante, M. (2007–08) “La felicità e il potere: l’exemplum di Damocle nella rielaborazione tardoantica,” Incontri triestini di filologia classica 7, pp. 249260.Google Scholar
Squillante, M. (2008) “Scrittori della tarda latinità: identità culturale e difesa della persona,” in Ebraismo e Letteratura, Manferlotti, S. and Squillante, M. (eds) (Naples, Liguori), pp. 3556.Google Scholar
Squillante, M. (2009) “La bibliotheca di Sidonio Apollinare,” Voces 20, pp. 139159.Google Scholar
Squillante, M. (2014) “… tanta curiositate discusserat atque intellexerat, ut … paratum haberet competens sine aliqua dilatione responsum: l’uomo di cultura tra V e VI sec.,” in Il miglior fabbro. Studi offerti a Giovanni Polara, De Vivo, A. and Perrelli, R. (eds) (Amsterdam, Hakkert), pp. 273286.Google Scholar
Stanley, L. (2011) “The Epistolary Gift, the Editorial Third-Party, Counter-Epistolaria: Rethinking the Epistolarium,” Life Writing 8, pp. 135152.Google Scholar
Staubach, N. (1983) “Germanisches Königtum und lateinische Literatur,” Frühmittelalterliche Studien 17, pp. 154.Google Scholar
Stein, E. (1959) Histoire du Bas-Empire, I-II (Paris, Desclée de Brouwer).Google Scholar
Stevens, C.E. (1933) Sidonius Apollinaris and his Age (Oxford, Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Stickler, T. (2002) Aëtius: Gestaltungsspielräume eines Heermeisters im ausgehenden Weströmischen Reich (Munich, C.H Beck).Google Scholar
Stirling, L.M. (2005) The Learned Collector: Mythological Statuettes and Classical Taste in Late Antique Gaul (Ann Arbor, University of Michigan Press).Google Scholar
Stroheker, K.F. (1965) Germanentum und Spätantike (Zürich, Artemis Verlag).Google Scholar
Stroheker, K.F. (1970) Der senatorische Adel im spätantiken Gallien (Darmstadt, Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft).Google Scholar
Strunk, T.E. (2013) “Domitian’s Lightning Bolts and Close Shaves in Pliny,” The Classical Journal 109, pp. 88113.Google Scholar
Styka, J. (2008) “Życie literackie w Arles (Arelate) na podstawie twórczości Sydoniusza Apollinarisa,” Symbolae Philologorum Posnaniensium Graecae et Latinae 18, pp. 4969.Google Scholar
Styka, J. (2011) “Cursus honorum im Spätantiken Gallien im Lichte der Briefe Sidonius Apollinaris,” Classica Cracoviensia 14, pp. 303318.Google Scholar
Sundwall, J. (1915) Weströmische Studien (Berlin, Mayer and Müller).Google Scholar
Swain, S. (2002) “Bilingualism in Cicero? The Evidence of Code-Switching,” in Bilingualism in Ancient Society: Language Contact and the Written Word, Adams, J.N., Janse, M. and Swain, S. (eds) (Oxford, Oxford University Press), pp. 128167.Google Scholar
Szidat, J. (2010) Usurpator tanti nominis, Kaiser und Usurpator in der Spätantike (337–476 n. Chr.) (Stuttgart, Franz Steiner Verlag).Google Scholar
Tarrant, R.J. (1997) “Aspects of Virgil’s Reception in Antiquity,” in The Cambridge Companion to Virgil, Martindale, C. (ed.) (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press), pp. 5672.Google Scholar
Teitler, H.C. (1992) “Un-Roman Activities in Late Antique Gaul: The Cases of Arvandus and Seronatus,” in Fifth Century Gaul: A Crisis of Identitity?, Drinkwater, J. and Elton, H. (eds) (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press), pp. 309318.Google Scholar
Teske, R.J. (2001) “Augustine’s Theory of Soul,” in Cambridge Companion to Augustine, Kretzmann, N. and Stump, E. (eds) (Oxford, Oxford University Press), pp. 116123.Google Scholar
Thébert, Y. (2003) Romain D’Afrique du Nord et Leur Contexte Méditerranéen (Rome, École Française de Rome).Google Scholar
Thierry, J.J. (1963) “The Date of the Dream of Jerome,” Vigilae Christianae 17, pp. 2840.Google Scholar
Thome, G. (1993) Vorstellungen vom Bösen in der lateinischen Literatur. Begriffe, Motive, Gestalten (Stuttgart, Franz Steiner Verlag).Google Scholar
Thraede, K. (1970) Grundzüge griechisch-römischer Brieftopik (Munich, Verlag C.H. Beck).Google Scholar
Tibiletti, C. (1979) “Libero arbitrio e grazia in Fausto di Riez,” Augustinianum 19, pp. 259285.Google Scholar
Tomassi, C.O. (2015) “Teo-teleologia in Sidonio Apollinare: tra modulo encomiastico e provvidenzialità dell’impero,” in Poesia e teologia nella produzione Latina dei secoli IV–V, Gasti, F. and Cutino, M. (eds) (Pavia, Pavia University Press), pp. 73105.Google Scholar
Traub, H.W. (1955) “Pliny’s Treatment of History in Epistolary Form,” Transactions of the American Philological Association 86, pp. 213232.Google Scholar
Twyman, B.L. (1970) “Aetius and the Aristocracy,” Historia: Zeitschrift für Alte Geschichte 19, pp. 480503.Google Scholar
Uden, J. (2012) “Love Elegies of Late Antiquity,” in A Companion to Roman Love Elegy, Gold, B.K. (ed.) (Oxford, Blackwell), pp. 459475.Google Scholar
Uden, J. (2014) “The Smile of Aeneas,” American Journal of Philology 144, pp. 7196.Google Scholar
Uytterhoeven, I. (2007) “Housing in Late Antiquity: Thematic Perspectves,” in Housing in Late Antiquity, from Palaces to Shops, Lavan, L. et al. (eds) (Leiden, Brill), pp. 2566.Google Scholar
Van Andel, G.K. (1976) The Christian Concept of History in the Chronicle of Sulpicius Severus (Amsterdam, Adolf M. Hakkert).Google Scholar
Van Dam, R. (1985) Leadership and Community in Late Antique Gaul (Berkeley, University of California Press).Google Scholar
Van Dam, R. (1992) “The Pirenne Thesis and Fifth-Century Gaul,” in Fifth-Century Gaul: A Crisis of Identity (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press) pp. 321–34.Google Scholar
Van Dam, R. (1998) Leadership and Community in Late Antique Gaul (Berkeley, University of California Press).Google Scholar
Van Waarden, J.A. (2010) Writing to Survive: A Commentary on Sidonius Apollinaris Letters Book 7 Volume 1: The Episcopal Letters 1–11 (Leuven, Peeters).Google Scholar
Van Waarden, J.A. (2011a) “Episcopal Self-Presentation: Sidonius Apollinaris and the Episcopal Election in Bourges ad 470,” in Episcopal Elections in Late Antiquity, Leemans, J. et al. (eds) (Berlin, Walter De Gruyter), pp. 555561.Google Scholar
Van Waarden, J.A. (2011b) “Sidonio Apollinare, poeta e vescovo,” Vetera Christianorum 48, pp. 99113.Google Scholar
Van Waarden, J.A. (2013a) “Sidonius in the 21st Century,” in New Approaches to Sidonius Apollinaris, van Waarden, J.A. and Kelly, G. (eds) (Leuven, Peeters), pp. 322.Google Scholar
Van Waarden, J.A. (2013b) “Review: Jesús Hernández Lobato, J.M. Vel Apolline muto: estética y poética de la Antigüedad tardía,” Bryn Mawr Classical Review 2013.02.20.Google Scholar
Van Waarden, J.A. and Kelly, G. (eds) (2013) New Approaches to Sidonius Apollinaris (Leuven, Peters).Google Scholar
Van Wageningen, J. (1905) “De Damoclis gladio,” Mnemosyne New Series 33, pp. 317329.Google Scholar
Vessey, D. (1972) “Aspects of Statius’ Epithalamion,” Mnemosyne 25, pp. 172187.Google Scholar
Visser, J. (2014) “Sidonius Apollinaris Ep. II.2. The Man and his Villa,” Journal of Late Antique Religion and Culture 8, pp. 2645.Google Scholar
Vitiello, M. (2002) “Fine di una magna potestae. La prefettura dell’ Annona nei secoli quinto e sesto,” Klio 84, pp. 491523.Google Scholar
Ward-Perkins, B. (2005) The Fall of Rome and the End of Civilization (Oxford, Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Ward-Perkins, J.B. (1992) Marble in Antiquity: Collected Papers of J.B. Ward-Perkins (London, British School at Rome).Google Scholar
Ware, C. (2012) Claudian and the Roman Epic Tradition (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press).Google Scholar
Watson, F. (1912) Vives and the Renascence Education of Women (New York, Green and Co, and London, Arnold).Google Scholar
Watson, Lindsay. (2003) A Commentary on Horace’s Epodes (Oxford, Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Watson, Lynette. (1998) “Representing the Past, Redefining the Future: Sidonius Apollinaris’ Panegyrics of Avitus and Anthemius,” in The Propaganda of Power: The Role of Panegyric in Late Antiquity, Whitby, M. (ed.) (Boston, Brill), pp. 177198.Google Scholar
Webb, R. (2008) Demons and Dancers: Performance in Late Antiquity (Cambridge MA, Harvard University Press).Google Scholar
Weigel, G. (1938) Faustus of Riez, An Historical Introduction (Philadelphia, The Dolphin Press).Google Scholar
Wessel, S. (2008) Leo the Great and the Spiritual Rebuilding of Rome (Leiden, Brill).Google Scholar
Whitby, M. (1995) “Review: Good Friends in Late Antiquity, Symmaque ou le rituel épistolaire de l’amitié littéraire. Recherches sur le premier livre de la correspondance by P. Bruggisser,” The Classical Review 45, pp. 4244.Google Scholar
White, H.G.E. (1921) Ausonius, II (London, William Heinemann and G.P. Putnam’s sons).Google Scholar
White, P. (2010) Cicero in Letters: Epistolary Relations of the Late Republic (Oxford, Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Whittaker, D. (1993) “Landlords and Warlords in the Later Roman Empire,” in War and Society in the Roman World, Rich, J. and Shipley, G. (eds) (London, Routledge), pp. 277302.Google Scholar
Whitton, C. (2013a) Pliny the Younger, Epistles Book II (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press).Google Scholar
Whitton, C. (2013b) “Quintilian in Brief: Modes of Intertextuality in Pliny’s Epistles,” Working Papers on Nervan, Trajanic and Hadrianic Literature 1.6, pp. 119.Google Scholar
Whitton, C. (2013c) “Trapdoors: The Falsity of Closure in Pliny’s Epistles,” in The Door Ajar: False Closure in Greek and Roman Literature and Art, F. Grewing, B. Acosta-Hughes, and A. Kirchenko (eds) (Heidelberg, Universitätsverlag Winter), pp. 4361.Google Scholar
Whitton, C. (2015) “Grand Designs: Unrolling Epistles 2,” in Pliny the Book-Maker: Betting on Posterity in the Epistles, Marchesi, I. (ed.) (Oxford, Oxford University Press), pp. 109143.Google Scholar
Wickham, C. (2005) Framing the Early Middle Ages: Europe and the Mediterranean, 400–800 (Oxford, Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Wijnendaele, J.W.P (2016) “Stilicho, Radagaisus and the So-Called ‘Battles of Faesulae’ (406CE),” Journal of Late Antiquity 9, pp. 267284.Google Scholar
Wijnendaele, J.W.P (2017) “The Early Career of Aëtius and the Murder of Felix (c. 425–430 ce),” Historia: Zeitschrift für Alte Geschichte 66.4, 468482.Google Scholar
Wilcox, A. (2012) The Gift of Correspondence in Classical Rome: Friendship in Cicero’s Ad Familiares and Seneca’s Moral Epistles (Madison, University of Wisconsin Press).Google Scholar
Williams, J. (2014) “Letter Writing, Materiality, and Gifts in Late Antiquity: Some Perspectives on Material Culture,” Journal of Late Antiquity 7, pp. 351359.Google Scholar
Wilson, M. (1987) “Seneca’s Epistles to Lucilius: A Revaluation,” Ramus 16, pp. 102121.Google Scholar
Wolff, É. (2012) “La description par Sidoine de son voyage à Rome (Lettres I, 5),” Itineraria 11, pp. 111.Google Scholar
Wolff, É. (2014a) “Quelques jalons dans l’histoire de la reception de Sidoine Apollinaire,” in Décadence, “Decline and Fall” or “Other Antiquity”?, Formisano, M. and Fuhrer, T. (eds) (Heidelberg, Universitätsverlag Winter), pp. 249262.Google Scholar
Wolff, É. (2014b) “Sidoine Apollinaire et la poésie épigraphique,” in Memoria poetica e poesia della memoria. La versificazione epigrafica dall’antichità all’umanesimo, Pistellato, A. (ed.) (Venice, Edizioni Ca’Foscari), pp. 207218.Google Scholar
Wolff, É. (2014c) “Sidoine Apollinaire lecteur de Martial,” in Présence de Sidoine Apollinaire, Poignault, R. and Stoehr-Monjou, A. (eds) (Clermont-Ferrand, Centre de Recherches A. Piganiol – Présence de l’Antiquité), pp. 295304.Google Scholar
Wolff, É. (2015a) “La lettre VIII, 11 de Sidoine Apollinaire sur le rhéteur Lampridius,” in Caritatis scripta: Mélanges de littérature et de patristique offerts à Patrick Laurence, Collection des Études augustiniennes – Série Antiquité 199, Canellis, Aline et al. (eds) (Paris, Institut d’Études Augustiniennes), pp. 191197.Google Scholar
Wolff, É. (2015b) “Martial dans l’Antiquité tardive (IVe-VIe siècles),” in Il calamo della memoria. Riuso di testi e mestiere letterario nella Tarda Antichità 6 (Collection of Papers Given at the 6th International Conference at Triest, 25–27 September 2014), Cristante, L. and Mazzoli, T. (eds) (Trieste, Edizioni Università di Trieste), pp. 81100.Google Scholar
Wolff, É. (2017) “Agir par lettres: le cas de Sidoine Apollinaire,” in Conseiller, diriger par lettre, Epistulae antiquae 9, Gavoille, É. and Guillaumont, F. (eds) (Tours, Presses Universitaire François-Rabelais), pp. 7183.Google Scholar
Wolfram, H. (1990) Das Reich und die Germanen, Zwischen Antike und Mittelalter (Berlin, Siedler).Google Scholar
Wood, I.N. (1992) “Continuity or Calamity: the Constraints of Literary Models,” in Fifth Century Gaul: A Crisis of Identitity?, Drinkwater, J. and Elton, H. (eds) (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press), pp. 918.Google Scholar
Woolf, G. (1998) Becoming Roman: The Origins of Provincial Civilization in Gaul (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press).Google Scholar
Yates, J. (1843) Textrinum Antiquorum: An Account of the Art of Weaving Among the Ancients, Part 1: On the Raw Materials Used for Weaving (London, Taylor and Walton).Google Scholar
Zaliznjak, A.A and Shmelev, A.D (2007) “Sociativity, Conjoining, Reciprocity, and the Latin Prefix Com-,” in Reciprocal Constructions, Nedjalkov, V.P. (ed.) (Amsterdam, John Benjamins), pp. 209230.Google Scholar
Zecchini, G. (1985) “L’Imitatio Caesaris di Aezio,” Latomus 44, pp. 124142.Google Scholar
Zeller, J. (1905) “Das concilium der Septem provinciae in Arelate,” Westdeutsche Zeitschrift für Geschichte und Kunst 24, pp. 119.Google Scholar
Ziolkowski, J. (1984) “Avatars of Ugliness in Medieval Literature,” The Modern Language Review 79, pp. 120.Google Scholar
Zimmermann, F. (1914) “Des Claudianus Mamertus Schrift De statu animae libri tres,” Divus Thomas 2, pp. 238256, 333368, 470495.Google Scholar

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure no-reply@cambridge.org is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

  • Bibliography
  • M. P. Hanaghan, Australian Catholic University, Melbourne
  • Book: Reading Sidonius' <I>Epistles</I>
  • Online publication: 01 February 2019
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108554305.012
Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

  • Bibliography
  • M. P. Hanaghan, Australian Catholic University, Melbourne
  • Book: Reading Sidonius' <I>Epistles</I>
  • Online publication: 01 February 2019
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108554305.012
Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

  • Bibliography
  • M. P. Hanaghan, Australian Catholic University, Melbourne
  • Book: Reading Sidonius' <I>Epistles</I>
  • Online publication: 01 February 2019
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108554305.012
Available formats
×