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  1. 10 de jun. de 2010 · 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 ...

  2. Studies on Homer and the Homeric age by Gladstone, W. E. (William Ewart), 1809-1898. Publication date 1858 Topics Homer, Homer, Homer, Civilization, Homeric, Civilization, Homeric Publisher Oxford : University Press Collection americana Book from the collections of unknown library Language

  3. 10 de dic. de 2020 · Studies on Homer and the Homeric Age are a comprehensive 3-volume work that features the history of the ancient Greek literature, focusing on the Homeric Question – concerning by whom, when, where and under what circumstances the Iliad and Odyssey, its foundational works, were composed.

  4. Full text of "Studies on Homer and the Homeric age" See other formats Google This is a digital copy of a book that was preserved for generations on library shelves before it was carefully scanned by Google as part of a project to make the world’s books discoverable online.

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  6. I think that the things said about Odysseus outnumber the things he experienced – all because of Homer, the one with the sweet words, whose falsehoods [pseudea] and winged inventiveness have a kind of majesty hovering over them; poetic craft [sophia], misleading by way of its myths [muthoi], is deceptive.Blind in heart are most men. For if they could have seen the truth [alētheia], never ...

  7. 7 de sept. de 2009 · Extract. This paper began as a lecture to an extramural weekend course on the Greek Dark Age, organized in Oxford by the Department of External Studies in December 1983. It was intended to suggest that the world of the Homeric poems, insofar as it had any relationship with reality, was more likely to reflect the conditions of the Dark Age than ...