The Encyclopedia of Ancient Natural Scientists: The Greek tradition and its many heirs

(Ron) #1

H.M. Parker, “Women Doctors in Greece, Rome, and the Byzantine Empire,” in L.R. Furst, ed.,
Women healers and physicians: climbing a long hill (Lexington KY 1997) 131–150.
L. Pearson, Lost Histories of Alexander (New York 1960).
P. Pédech, Historiens compagnons d’Alexandre (Paris 1984).
J. Pigeaud, “Les fondements théoriques du méthodisme,” in Mudry and Pigeaud (1991) 7–50.
J.R. Pinault, Hippocratic Lives and Legends (Leiden 1992) = SAM 4.
D.E. Pingree, “Classical and Byzantine Astrology in Sassanian Persia,” DOP 43 (1989) 227–239.
Idem, Yavanaja ̄taka of Sphujidhvaja 2 vv. (Harvard 1978).
Paul Potter, Hippocrates v.8: Places in Man. Glands. Fleshes. Prorrhetic I. Prorrhetic II. Physician. Use of Liquids.
Ulcers. Haemorrhoids. Fistulas (Cambridge, MA: Loeb 1995).
R. Rashed, Les catoptriciens grecs I: Les mirroirs ardents (CUF 2000).
E. Rawson, Intellectual Life in the Late Roman Republic (London and Baltimore 1985).
A. Rehm, Parapegmastudien = Abhandlungen der Bayerischen Akademie der Wissenschaften. Philosophisch-historische
Abt. N.F., Heft 19 (1941).
M. Riley, “A Survey of Vettius Valens,” ANRW 2.37.5 (forthcoming), cf.: http://www.csus.edu/indiv/
r/rileymt/pdf_folder/VettiusValens.pdf
C.A. Robinson, The History of Alexander the Great, v. 1 (Providence 1953).
D.W. Roller, Scholarly Kings: The Writings of Juba II of Mauretania, Archelaos of Kappadokia, Herod the Great and
the Emperor Claudius (Chicago 2004).
M. Roueché, “The Definitions of Philosophy and a New Fragment of Stephanus the Philosopher,”
JÖByz 40 (1990) 107–128.
G. Sabbah, ed., Mémoires VIII. Études de Médecine romaine (Saint-Étienne 1988) = Mémoires (Centre Jean
Palerne) 8.
H.-D. Saffrey, “Historique et description du Marcianus Graecus 299” in Kahn and Matton (1995) 1–10.
S.M.R. Sala, Lexicon nominum Semiticorum quae in papyris Graecis in Aegypto repertis ab anno 323 a. Ch. n. usque
ad annum 70 p. Ch. n. laudata reperiuntur (Milan 1974).
B. Salway, “What’s in a Name? A Survey of Roman Onomastic Practice from c. 700 B.C. to A.D.
700,” JRS 84 (1994) 124–145.
J. Scarborough, “Roman Pharmacy and the Eastern Drug Trade: Some Problems Illustrated by the
Example of Aloe,” PhH 24 (1982) 135–143.
Idem, ed., Symposium on Byzantine Medicine (1985) = DOP 38.
Idem, “Early Byzantine Pharmacology,” in Idem (1985a) 213–232.
Idem, “Criton, Physician to Trajan: Historian and Pharmacist,” in J.W. Eadie and J. Ober, edd., The
Craft of the Ancient Historian: Essays in Honor of Chester G. Starr (1985) 387–405.
Idem, “The Opium Poppy in Hellenistic and Roman Medicine,” in R. Porter and M. Teich, edd., Drugs
and Narcotics in History (1995) 4–23.
Idem and V. Nutton, “The Preface of Dioscorides’ Materia Medica: Introduction, Translation, Commen-
tary,” Transactions and Studies of the College of Physicians of Philadelphia 4.3 (1982) 187–227.
I. Schlereth, De Plutarchi quae feruntur parallelis minoribus (Freiburg i. Br. 1931).
Wilh. Schulze, Zur Geschichte lateinischer Eigennamen (Berlin 1904; repr. 1966).
S.M. Sherwin-White, Ancient Cos: an historical study from the Dorian settlement to the imperial period (Göttingen
1978).
P.N. Singer, trans., Galen: Selected Works (Oxford 1997).
Wesley D. Smith, The Hippocratic Tradition (Ithaca and London 1979).
Idem, ed. and trans., Hippocrates: Pseudepigraphic Works (1990) = SAM 2.
H. Solin, Die griechischen Personennamen in Rom: ein Namenbuch 2nd ed., 3 vv. (Berlin and New York 2003).
Fr. Solmsen, “Greek philosophy and the discovery of the nerves,” MusH 18 (1961) 150–197, repr. in his
Kleine Schriften 1 (1968) 536–582.
Speranza (1971): see “editions,” above.
Fr. Staab, “Ostrogothic geographers at the Court of Theodoric the Great,” Viator 7 (1976) 27–58.
H. von Staden, Herophilus (Cambridge 1989).


INTRODUCTION
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