I. Prolegomena, II. Achaeis, or, The ethnology of the Greek races

Bibliographic Information

I. Prolegomena, II. Achaeis, or, The ethnology of the Greek races

Willian Ewart Gladstone

(Cambridge library collection, . Classics . Studies on Homer and the Homeric age / Willian Ewart Gladstone ; v. 1)

Cambridge University Press, 2010

  • : pbk

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Note

Original t.p. reads: Studies on Homer and the Homeric age : I. Prolegomena, II. Achæis: or, The ethnology of the Greek races

Reprint. Originally published: Oxford : At the University Press, 1858

Includes bibliographical references

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Four-time prime minister William Ewart Gladstone (1809-1898) was also a prolific author and enthusiastic scholar of the classics. Gladstone had spent almost two decades in politics prior to his writing the three-volume Studies on Homer and the Homeric Age. This work and the preceding 'On the place of Homer in classical education and in historical inquiry' (1857), reflect Gladstone's interest in the Iliad and the Odyssey, which he read with increasing frequency from the 1830s onward and which he viewed as particularly relevant to modern society. As he relates, he has two objects in the Studies: 'to promote and extend' the study of Homer's 'immortal poems' and 'to vindicate for them ... their just degree both of absolute and, more especially, of relative critical value'. Volume 1 establishes Homer's contemporary relevance and provides an extensive 'ethnography of Greek races' related to Homer's works.

Table of Contents

  • Part I. Prolegomena: 1. On the state of the Homeric question
  • 2. The place of Homer in classical education
  • 3. On the historic aims of Homer
  • 4. On the probable date of Homer
  • 5. The probable trustworthiness of the text of Homer
  • 6. Place and authority of Homer in historical inquiry
  • Part II. Achaeis. Ethnology of the Greek Races: 1. Scope of the inquiry
  • 2. On the Pelasgians, and cognate races
  • 3. The Pelasgians, and certain states naturalized of akin to Greece
  • 4. On the Phoenicians and the outer geography of the Odyssey
  • 5. On the Catalogue
  • 6. On the Hellenes of Homer
  • 7. On the respective contributions of the Pelasgian and Hellenic factors to the compound of the Greek nation
  • 8. On the three greater Homeric appellatives
  • 9. On the Homeric title of
  • 10. On the connection of the Hellenes and Achaeans with the east
  • Addenda.

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