Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Corinna
View through CrossRef
In the controversy over the date of Corinna, the following points may be taken as agreed:1. An edition was made in Boeotia about the end of the third or beginning of the second century B.C.2. The texts of Corinna current in the late Hellenistic and Roman periods were all descended from that Boeotian edition.3. Before its dissemination, Corinna was unknown in Greece at large. If she wrote at an earlier period, she must have been remembered only locally.The difference between Boeotian spelling of the fifth century and that of the fourth is very great: but the difference in this respect between the mid-fourth century and the late third or early second is comparatively slight. It is therefore tenable that whereas there would be a good reason for the re-spelling of fifth-century Boeotian into the later convention of any period, there would be no obvious or adequate reason for re-spelling Boeotian of the fourth century into the orthography of the third, or that of the third into that of the second. Even those features of fourth-century spelling which have ceased to preponderate are by no means unknown or even uncommon at the end of the third century.
Title: Corinna
Description:
In the controversy over the date of Corinna, the following points may be taken as agreed:1.
An edition was made in Boeotia about the end of the third or beginning of the second century B.
C.
2.
The texts of Corinna current in the late Hellenistic and Roman periods were all descended from that Boeotian edition.
3.
Before its dissemination, Corinna was unknown in Greece at large.
If she wrote at an earlier period, she must have been remembered only locally.
The difference between Boeotian spelling of the fifth century and that of the fourth is very great: but the difference in this respect between the mid-fourth century and the late third or early second is comparatively slight.
It is therefore tenable that whereas there would be a good reason for the re-spelling of fifth-century Boeotian into the later convention of any period, there would be no obvious or adequate reason for re-spelling Boeotian of the fourth century into the orthography of the third, or that of the third into that of the second.
Even those features of fourth-century spelling which have ceased to preponderate are by no means unknown or even uncommon at the end of the third century.
Related Results
‘Divine Corinna’: Pre-Twentieth Century Receptions of an Artistic Authority
‘Divine Corinna’: Pre-Twentieth Century Receptions of an Artistic Authority
Based on evidence that is very rarely considered together in scholarship, this paper argues that Corinna of Tanagra has been associated with an idea of artistic authority in antiqu...
ECR Spotlight – Corinna Gebehart
ECR Spotlight – Corinna Gebehart
ECR Spotlight is a series of interviews with early-career authors from a selection of papers published in Journal of Experimental Biology and aims to promote not only the diversity...
Introduction
Introduction
Portsmouth, New Hampshire, natives Corinna Brown (b. 1812) and Ellen Brown (b. 1814) moved to Mandarin, Florida, in 1835, to Key West in 1849, and to New York in 1850. As documente...
Rezension von: Müller, Corinna, Um Kopf und Kragen
Rezension von: Müller, Corinna, Um Kopf und Kragen
Corinna Müller, Um Kopf und Kragen – Historische Kriminalfälle der frühen Neuzeit im heutigen Württemberg, verlag regionalkultur, 2012...
US surrogacy: An interview with Zsuzsa Berend
US surrogacy: An interview with Zsuzsa Berend
This paper is a partial transcription of a long conversation between the sociologist Zsuzsa Berend (University of California, Los Angeles) and the anthropologist Corinna Sabrina Gu...
Künstlerbuch von Corinna Krebber
Künstlerbuch von Corinna Krebber
Das Hölderlin-Archiv besitzt eine Vielzahl von Künstlerbüchern, die eine große Bandbreite an künstlerischen Techniken enthalten. Zumeist fi ndet man diverse druckgraphische Technik...
Dating Corinna
Dating Corinna
In CQ 20 (1970), 277–87, 1 argued for dating Corinna to the third century B.C. In my Greek Metre (1982), p. 141, I continued to assume this date, observing that not everyone accept...
Elizabeth Thomas (1675-1731)
Elizabeth Thomas (1675-1731)
Abstract
Elizabeth was the daughter of Emmanuel Thomas of the Inner Temple, and Elizabeth Osborne. Her father died when she was 2, and she was brought up by her m...

