Изменить стиль страницы

Pagden, A., 2001,

Peoples and Empires: A Short History of European Migration, Exploration and Conquest from Greece to the Present

(London: Modern Library, 2001).

*Palagia, O., and Tracy, S. (eds.), 2003,

The Macedonians in Athens, 322–229

BC

(Oxford: Oxbow).

Paspalas, S., 2005, “Philip Arrhidaios at Court—An Ill-Advised Persianism? Macedonian Royal Display in the Wake of Alexander,”

Klio

87, 72–101.

*Pollitt, J. J., 1986,

Art in the Hellenistic Age

(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press).

Pomeroy, S., 1977, “

Technikai kai Mousikai

: The Education of Women in the Fourth Century and in the Hellenistic Period,”

American Journal of Ancient History

2, 51–68.

*Potter, D., 2003, “Hellenistic Religion,” in Erskine 2003, 407–30.

Potts, D., 1990,

The Arabian Gulf in Antiquity

, vol. 2:

From Alexander the Great to the Coming of Islam

(Oxford: Oxford University Press).

Von Reden, S., 2001, “The Politics of Monetization in Third-Century

BC

Egypt,” in A. Meadows and K. Shipton (eds.),

Money and Its Uses in the Ancient Greek World

(Oxford: Oxford University Press), 65–76.

Von Reden, S., 2007,

Money in Ptolemaic Egypt from the Macedonian Conquest to the End of the Third Century

BC

(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press).

Ridgway, B., 2001,

Hellenistic Sculpture

, vol. 1:

The Styles of ca. 331–200

BC

(Madison: University of Wisconsin Press).

Robert, L., 1966/2007, “Sur un décret d’Ilion et sur un papyrus concernant des cultes royaux,” in A. Samuel (ed.),

Essays in Honor of C. B. Welles

(New Haven: American Society of Papyrologists), 175–210 (repr. in id.,

Choix d’écrits

, ed. D. Rousset (Paris: Les Belles Lettres), 569–601).

Robertson, M., 1993, “What Is “‘Hellenistic’ about Hellenistic Art?,” in Green 1993, 67–90 (with a response by J. J. Pollitt, 90–103).

Rodgers, W., 1937,

Greek and Roman Naval Warfare: A Study of Strategy, Tactics, and Ship Design from Salamis (480

BC

) to Actium (31

BC

)

(Annapolis: Naval Institute Press).

Roisman, J. (ed.), 2003,

Brill’s Companion to Alexander the Great

(Leiden: Brill).

*Romm, J., 2011,

Ghost on the Throne: The War for the Corpse, Crown and Empire of Alexander the Great

(New York: Simon & Schuster).

Rostovtzeff, M., 1941,

The Social and Economic History of the Hellenistic World

, 3 vols. (London: Oxford University Press).

Rowlandson, J., 2003, “Town and Country in Ptolemaic Egypt,” in Erskine 2003, 249–63.

Roy, J., 1998, “The Masculinity of the Hellenistic King,” in L. Foxhall and J. Salmon (eds.),

When Men Were Men: Masculinity, Power and Identity in Classical Antiquity

(London: Routledge), 111–35.

Saatsoglou-Paliadeli, C., 2007, “La peinture de la chasse de Vergina,” in S. Deschamps-Lequime (ed.),

Peinture et couleur dans le monde grec antique

(Paris: Musée de Louvre), 47–55.

Sabin, P., 2007, “Land Battles,” in P. Sabin et al. (eds.),

The Cambridge History of Greek and Roman Warfare

(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press), 399–433.

Samuel, A., 1993, “The Ptolemies and the Ideology of Kingship,” in Green 1993, 168–92 (with a response by D. Delia, 192–204).

Sanders, L., 1991, “Dionysius I of Syracuse and the Origins of Ruler Cult in the Greek World,”

Historia

40, 275–87.

Scharfe, H., 1971, “The Maurya Dynasty and the Seleucids,”

Zeitschrift für vergleichende Sprachforschung

85, 211–25.

Schep, L., 2009, “The Death of Alexander the Great: Reconsidering Poison,” in Wheatley/Hannah 2009, 227–36.

Schlumberger, D., 1969, “Triparadisos,”

Bulletin du Musée de Beyrouth

22, 147–49.

Schober, L., 1981,

Untersuchungen zur Geschichte Babyloniens und der oberen Satrapien von 323–303 v. Chr

. (Frankfurt: Lang).

Scullard, H., 1974,

The Elephant in the Greek and Roman World

(Ithaca: Cornell University Press).

Seibert, J., 1983,

Das Zeitalter der Diadochen

(Darmstadt: Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft).

Seyrig, H., 1988, “Seleucus I and the Foundation of Hellenistic Syria,” in W. A. Ward (ed.),

The Role of the Phoenicians in the Interaction of Mediterranean Civilizations

(Beirut: American University of Beirut), 53–63.

Sfameni Gasparro, G., 1997, “

Daimôn

and

Tuchê

in the Hellenistic Religious Experience,” in P. Bilde et al. (eds.),

Conventional Values of the Hellenistic Greeks

(Aarhus: Aarhus University Press), 67–109.

Sharples, I., 1994, “Curtius’ Treatment of Arrhidaeus,” in Connor 1994, 53–60.

Sharples, R., 2006, “Philosophy for Life,” in Bugh 2006a, 223–40.

Shear, T. L., 1978,

Kallias of Sphettos and the Revolt of Athens in 286

BC

(Princeton: American School of Classical Studies at Athens =

Hesperia

supp. 17).

Sherwin-White, S., and Kuhrt, A., 1993,

From Samarkhand to Sardis: A New Approach to the Seleucid Empire

(Berkeley: University of California Press).

*Shipley, G., 2000,

The Greek World after Alexander, 323–30

BC

(London: Routledge).

Shipley, G., and Hansen, M., 2006, “The Polis and Federalism,” in Bugh 2006a, 52–72.

*Smith, R. R. R., 1988,

Hellenistic Royal Portraits

(Oxford: Oxford University Press).

De Souza, P., 2007, “Naval Battles and Sieges,” in P. Sabin et al. (eds.),

The Cambridge History of Greek and Roman Warfare

(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press), 434–60.

*Spawforth, A., 2007, “The Court of Alexander the Great between Europe and Asia,” in id. (ed.),

The Court and Court Society in Ancient Monarchies

(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press), 82–120.

*Stewart, A., 1993,

Faces of Power: Alexander’s Image and Hellenistic Politics

(Berkeley: University of California Press, 1993).

Stewart, A., 2006, “Hellenistic Art: Two Dozen Innovations,” in Bugh 2006a, 158–85.

Stoneman, R., 1991,

The Greek Alexander Romance

(London: Penguin).

Taylor, M., 1998, “When the Peiraieus and the City Are Reunited,”

Zeitschrift für Papyrologie und Epigraphik

123, 207–12.

*Thompson, D., 1997, “The Infrastructure of Splendour: Census and Taxes in Ptolemaic Egypt,” in Cartledge et al. 1997, 242–57.

*Thompson, D., 2001, “Hellenistic Hellenes: The Case of Ptolemaic Egypt,” in I. Malkin (ed.),

Ancient Perceptions of Greek Ethnicity

(Washington, DC: Center for Hellenic Studies), 301–22.

*Thompson, D., 2003, “The Ptolemies and Egypt,” in Erskine 2003, 105–20.

Tuplin, C., 2008, “The Seleucids and Their Achaemenid Predecessors: A Persian Inheritance?,” in S. Darbandi and A. Zournatzi (eds.),

Ancient Greece and Ancient Iran: Cross-Cultural Encounters

(Athens: National Hellenic Research Foundation), 109–36.

Turner, E., 1984, “Ptolemaic Egypt,” in Walbank et al. 1984, 118–74.

*Van der Spek, R., 2007, “The Hellenistic Near East,” in W. Scheidel et al. (eds.),

The Cambridge Economic History of the Greco-Roman World

(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press), 409–33.

Van Straten, F., 1994, “Images of Gods and Men in a Changing Society: Self-Identity in Hellenistic Religion,” in Bulloch et al. 1994, 248–64.