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P. Ovidii Nasonis Ibis
Ex novis codicibus edidit scolia vetera commentarium cum prolegomenis, appendice, indice
This 1881 edition of Ovid's little-known invective poem, edited by classical scholar Robinson Ellis (1834–1913), illuminates nineteenth-century scholarly traditions.
Ovid (Author), Robinson Ellis (Edited by)
9781108051026, Cambridge University Press
Paperback / softback, published 6 May 2013
274 pages
21.6 x 14 x 1.6 cm, 0.35 kg
Classical scholar Robinson Ellis (1834–1913) studied at Balliol College, Oxford, under Benjamin Jowett, before becoming a Fellow of Trinity and, in 1893, Corpus Professor of Latin. His 1876 Commentary on Catullus (also reissued in this series) publicised the Codex Oxoniensis but overlooked its significance and was criticised by other scholars in the field. Nevertheless, his commentaries became standard texts, including this 1881 publication of Ovid's Ibis. A vitriolic invective poem, written in exile, aimed at an enemy whose identity remains unclear, and invoking Callimachus' lost poem of the same name, it is probably Ovid's least-known work. This edition, including text, scholia, and Ellis's prolegomena and critical apparatus, illuminates nineteenth-century traditions of classical scholarship.
Praefatio
Prolegomena
Ibis
Scholia
Commentarius
Excursus
Index.
Subject Areas: Classical history / classical civilisation [HBLA1]