Würzburg studies of classical studies

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Würzburg Studies on Classical Studies were a series of monographs edited by Carl Hosius . From 1931 to 1941, 14 booklets appeared in irregular succession in which students of Hosius and his colleague Heinrich Bulle published their first works. There were also two commemorative publications for Hosius and Bulle.

List of booklets

No. author title year Remarks
1 Wilhelm Fiedler Ancient weather magic 1931 Dissertation from 1930
2 Karl Keyßner Concept of God and conception of life in the Greek hymn 1932 extended dissertation from 1930
3 Rosa Söder The apocryphal stories of the Apostles and the fictional literature of antiquity 1932
4th Viktor Burr Nostrum mare: origin and history of the names of the Mediterranean Sea and its sub-seas in antiquity 1932
5 Barbara Förtsch The Political Role of Women in the Roman Republic 1935
6th Joseph Vogt Cicero's belief in Rome 1935
7th Konrad Bilz The politics of Fr. Cornelius Scipio Aemilianus 1935
8th Erwin Mederer The Alexander legends among the oldest Alexander historians 1936
9 Hildebrecht Hommel , Karl Keyßner, Josef Martin , Friedrich Pfister , Joseph Vogt Studies on Tacitus: Carl Hosius on his 70th birthday on March 21, 1936 1936
10 Otto Foerster Handwritten studies on Seneka's Epistulae Morales and Naturales Quaestiones 1936
11 Hans Friedel The murder of tyrants in legislation and popular opinion of the Greeks 1937 Dissertation from 1937
12 Eberhard Schmähling The Moral Supervision of the Censors: A Contribution to the Moral History of the Roman Republic 1938
13 Würzburger Festgabe: Heinrich Bulle presented on his 70th birthday on December 11, 1937 1938
14th Joseph-Hans Kühn Hypsos: An investigation into the history of the development of the upswing idea from Plato to Poseidonios 1941