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Back Matter Source: The Journal of Roman Studies, Vol. 62 (1972) Published by: Society for the Promotion of Roman Studies Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/298999 . Accessed: 09/05/2014 12:55 Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at . http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp . JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected]. . Society for the Promotion of Roman Studies is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to The Journal of Roman Studies. http://www.jstor.org This content downloaded from 194.29.185.122 on Fri, 9 May 2014 12:55:59 PM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
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Page 1: Back Matter

Back MatterSource: The Journal of Roman Studies, Vol. 62 (1972)Published by: Society for the Promotion of Roman StudiesStable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/298999 .

Accessed: 09/05/2014 12:55

Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at .http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp

.JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range ofcontent in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new formsof scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected].

.

Society for the Promotion of Roman Studies is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extendaccess to The Journal of Roman Studies.

http://www.jstor.org

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Page 2: Back Matter

Plutarch and Rome C. P. JONES Plutarch is one of the great ambassadors between the ancient world and the modern. This book places Plutarch clearly against his background, the Roman Empire of the Flavians and their successors. It assembles all that is known of his biography and reviews his social circle, and examines the attitude to Rome revealed in his works, notably the Parallel Lives. 2 * 75

The Senatorial Aristocracy in

the Later Roman Empire M. T. W. ARNHEIM Was the Later Roman Empire an absolute monarchy? That is the main question tackled in this book, which analyses the position of the senatorial aristocracy to that of the emperor in the period between the accession of Diocletian and the death of Theodosius (284-395). 3 genealogical tables ?5-25

Antioch City and Imperial Administration in the Later Roman Empire J. H. W. G. LIEBESCHUETZ In this book the writings of Libanius are used to illustrate trends in the public life of Antioch in the fourth century. Under the impact of the centralizing reforms of the emperors Diocletian and Constantine, civil institutions were caught in a vicious circle. Failures of the curial oligarchy provoked the interference on the part of the imperial governors. This in turn weakened the machinery of civic self-government until eventually the council lost all authority, and the city developed patterns of political behaviour adapted to the new situation. 2 maps C5

Essays on Religion and the Ancient World ARTHUR DARBY NOCK Selected and edited by Zeph Stewart The essays and book reviews of Arthur Darby Nock, scattered through many different publications, are a unique contribution to classical scholarship and the history of religion, especially to the study of the relationship of paganism to early Christianity and Judaism. In these two volumes, the most important of them have been collected. Two volumes frontispiece C15

OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS

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Page 3: Back Matter

SWANS SPECIALISED CRUISES & TOURS SWANS HELLENIC CRUISES

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MOSCOW & LENINGRAD Visiting Moscow, Fili, Archangel'skoe, Ostankino, Kuskovo, Vladimir, Suzdal, Zagorsk, Petrodvorets, Pushkin, Pavlovsk, Novgorod, Leningrad. 15 days ?235 DEPARTURES: May 18; June 1,15; Aug. 31; Sept. 14.

FAR EAST Visiting Bangkok,Ayudhya, Chiangmai, Lampoon, Pasang, Hong Kong, Macau, Kota Kinabalu, Tuaran, Kuching, Singapore, Johore Bahru, Bali, Jogjakarta, Borobudur, Prambanan, Djakarta. 29 days ?825 DEPARTURES: Jan. 29; Oct. 29. Each Tour is accompanied by a specialist Guest Lecturer.

Above are twelve of Swans Specialised Cruises end Tours. In addition there are the following:

Art Treasures Tour of Southern Italy; Art Treasures Tour of Central Asia Et Transcaucasia;

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Page 4: Back Matter

Catullus : An Interpretation KENNETH QUINN In this important and controversial study the author argues that, contrary to popular belief, the poems of Catullus are not a random collection by some editor who gathered together all that was extant, but a collection put together by Catullus himself. Professor Quinn shows that the fundamental unity is that of a major theme - the poet's passionate love for a worthless mistress. ?4 * 50

The Rise of Rome: to 264 B.C.

JACQUES HEURGON A concise introduction to early Roman history in the context of the peopling and development of the western Mediterranean. The origins of the Etruscans, the chronology of Greek colonisation and the treaties between Rome and Carthage are among the contentious issues discussed. A classified bibliography completes the book. To be published March 1973 ?4 50

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Divus Julius STEFAN WEINSTOCK This book is about Roman religion in the age of Caesar, beginning with the ancestral cults of the Gens lulia at Bovillae and ending with the new cult of Divus Julius all over the Roman Empire. It deals with the old gods, politico-religious ideas, and the ruler cult. Caesar is at the centre, as religious reformer rather than modern rationalist. 31 plates ?9

Virgil: Aeneid Book I With a commentary by R. G. AUSTIN There has been no detailed English commentary on the first book of the Aeneid since R. S. Conways' edition of 1935. The present editor has tried to take account of the many developments in Virgilian scholarship since that date, and of the changed conception of what is needed in a commentary. The book will be useful to sixth formers and undergraduates as well as to professional scholars. f2

Tertullian A Historical and Literary Study TIMOTHY DAVID BARNES The Christian Tertullian lived and wrote in Roman Carthage during the reigns of Septimius Severus and Caracalla. This book provides the framework without which Tertullian's writings cannot fully be understood, and inter- prets his intellectual development, his reaction to the society in which he lived, and his place in Latin literature. f6

Rome in Etruria and Umbria W. V. HARRIS This book sets out to describe and explain Roman policies in two adjacent areas of Italy from the fourth century B.C. to the beginning of the Empire. The author examines the credibility of the surviving accounts of the wars of conquest, the local political and social conditions to which Rome responded, the forms and realities of Roman control, and the process of Romanization. 2 maps C6 50

INVS mu OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS

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Page 6: Back Matter

THE LOEB CLASSICAL LIBRARY NEW VOLUMES 1972-3

?1 75 each volume

458 ARISTIDES I Translated by C. A. Behr

457 SENECA Naturales Quaestiones 11 Translated by T. H. Corcoran

74 BOETHIUS Theological Tractates and Consolation of Philosophy Revised and re-translated by S. J. Tester

462 CICERO XXVIII Commentariolum Petitionis and Epistula ad Octavianum Two 'Ciceronian' works, translated by Mary I. Henderson, have been added to Letters to Quintus and Brutus

WILLIAM HEINEMANN HARVARD UNIVERSITY PRESS

Religion and Society in the Age of St Augustine

PETER BROWN 'The articles, furnished with abundant footnotes and references, express of course the author's historical scholarship and extensive reading. But Peter Brown's writing is far from being simply a matter of scholarship and erudition. He demands of the historian an insight into the relation between men')s inner lives and their external expression and environment.' -FREDERICK COPLESTON, The Spectator. ' Anyone interested in the late Roman world, its thought, religion and social structure, will be grateful for this collection, so diverse in scope, yet so consistent in its vision.' -R. A. MARKUS, Theology. ?3 * 25

Faber & Faber 3 QUEEN SQUARE LONDON WC1

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Page 7: Back Matter

UNIVERSITY OF LONDION

INSTITUTE OF CLASSICAL STUDIES 31-34 Gordon Square, London, W.C. 1

PUBLICATION S BULLETIN NUMBER 19 (1972) Price ?3 -00.

BULLETIN SUPPLEMENTS

No. 4 CATALOGUE OF THE MSS OF OVID'S METAMORPHOSES By Franco Munari (1957). Pp. iii + 74. Price ?0L50.

No. 6 THE TEXTUAL CRITICISM OF DOCUMENTARY PAPYRI-PROLEGO- MENA By Herbert C. Youtie (1958). Pp. iii + 70. Price ?050.

No. 10 STUDIES IN THE SIGNARIES OF SOUTH-WESTERN CYPRUS By T. B. Mitford (1961). Pp. v + 55 + 28 pls. Price ?1 -25.

No. 12 MYCENAEAN CIVILIZATION, PUBLICATIONS 1956-60 A bibliography compiled by Brenda E. Moon (1961). Pp. xxv + 130. Price ?1 00.

No. 17 NEW FRAGMENTS OF THE MISOUMENOS OF MENANDER Edited by Eric G. Turner (1965). Pp. v + 73 + 9 pls. Price ?1 -25.

No. 18 MERTON PAPYRI VOL. III By J. David Thomas (1967). Pp. xii + 109 + 4 pls. Price ?1E 50.

No. 19 PHLYAX VASES Second edition revised and enlarged By A. D. Trendall (1967). Pp. xv + 116 + 14 pls. Price ?1E 50.

No. 20 MONUMENTS ILLUSTRATING TRAGEDY AND SATYR PLAY Revised edition with appendix illustrating particular plays By T. B. L. Webster (1967). Pp. xii + 190 + 8 pls. Price ?2 00.

No. 21 *1 METRICAL ANALYSES OF TRAGIC CHORUSES-1 By A. M. Dale (1971). Pp. ix + 101. Price ?1 -50.

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No. 22 NEW FRAGMENTS OF THE DIS FXAPATON OF MENANDER By E. W. Handley In preparation

No. 23 MONUMENTS ILLUSTRATING OLD AND MIDDLE COMEDY Second edition revised and enlarged By T. B. L. Webster (1969). Pp. xii + 100 + 10 pls. Price ?1 * 50.

No. 24 MONUMENTS ILLUSTRATING NEW COMEDY Second edition revised and enlarged By T. B. L. Webster (1969). Pp. xix + 335 + 8 pls. Price ?3 - 50.

No. 25 PROBLEMS IN QUINTILIAN By Michael Winterbottom (1970). Pp. xi + 225. Price ?2-75.

No. 26 THE RED-FIGURED VASES OF LUCANIA CAMPANIA AND SICILY (First Supplement) By A. D. Trendall (1970). Pp. xiv + 144 + 28 pls. Price ?2 25.

No. 27 CORINTHIAN KOMOS VASES By Axel Seeberg (1971). Pp. xv + 107 + 15pls. Price ?2 50.

No. 28 NOTES ON THE LA WS OF PLATO By Trevor J. Saunders (1 972). Pp. xvii + 148. Price ?1 * 75.

STUDIES IN MYCENAEAN INSCRIPTIONS AND DIALECT XVI-1970. Price ?0L75.

A SURVEY OF PERIODICALS RELEVANT TO BYZANTINE STUDIES IN SEVERAL LONDON LIBRARIES (1968). Price ?O 37.

Publications distributed by International University Booksellers, 39 Store Street, London WC1E 7DD

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Page 8: Back Matter

Oxford Latin Dictionary FASCICLE III: DEMIURGUS-GORGONEUS Latin-English dictionaries have hitherto been largely translated or adapted from continental dictionaries, which have themselves been in part derivative. The O.L.D. is independent of all other dictionaries, being the first on its scale to be based on a fresh and thorough reading of all the available sources. It is designed to give a full account of the meaning and use of words occur- ring in Latin from the beginnings to about A.D. 200. The work will be complete in eight fascicles. Paper covers k5

The German Policy of Augustus An Examination of the Archaeological Evidence C. M. WELLS This book examines Augustus' policy towards the Germans in the context of Roman imperialism and the tribal situation on the Rhine and in Germany. The evidence suggests that the conquest of Germany was more systematic and complete than is generally assumed, and that Augustus' aim was not so much the establishment of a defensible frontier as the acquisition of military glory. I 5 text figures I map $6

Codices Latini Antiquiores A Palaeographical Guide to Latin Manuscripts Prior to the Ninth Century A Supplement Edited by E. A. LOWE The Supplement to the Codices Latini Antiquiores contains items hitherto unknown to scholars and inevitably omitted in the eleven volumes of the series. There are samples of nearly every pre-Caroline script, and the schools of Luxeuil, Corbie, and Lorsch are particularly well represented. 46 plates DI5

Palaeographical Papers 1907-1965 E. A. LOWE Edited by Ludwig Bieler This representative selection of Dr Lowe's most important palaeographical papers is intended to be a companion to his monumental Codices Latini Antiquiores and other of his books. The two volumes contain over forty papers with all the original plates, as well as the preface and introduction to The Beneventan Script and The Palaeography of the Bobbie Missal. I 5 I plates (including frontispiece) I folding chart ? i 6

ELL MA | OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS

4w

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Page 9: Back Matter

vv Waker de Gruyter Gi Berlin NewYork

Hildegard Aufstieg und Niedergang

(Editor) der romischen Welt Geschichte und Kultur Roms im Spiegel der neueren Forschung 3 Divisions in several single Vols. and i Index Large-Octavo. Cloth

Already published; Division I, Vol. I

Von den Anfangen Roms bis zum Ausgang der Republik (Politische Geschichte) XX, 997 pp. with 3 tables and I supplement. 1972. DM I8o,- ISBN 3 ii OOI885 3.

Division I, Vol. z

Von den Anfangen Roms bis zum Ausgang der Republik (Recht, Religion, Sprache und Literatur bis zum Eende des 2. Jhs. v. Chr.) XII, I259 pp. and I4 Tables. 1972. DM 260,- ISBN 3 II 004250 9

In Preparation: Division I, Vol. 3

Von den Anfangen Roms bis zum Ausgang der Republik (Sprache und Literatur 1I, Jh. v. Chr.] Philosophie, Kunste) Appears early in 1973.

Division II. Prinzipat (The first z Vols. of this division will appeal in the middle of I973)

Division III. Spitantike und Nachleben

Division IV. Index. This work, the product of international co-operation, aims at presenting all important aspects of the ancient Roman World, together with its sequel and continued influence in medieval and modern times. The individual contributions provide this in the light of the present state of research. Initiated on the occasion of the 75th birthday of Joseph Vogt (23rd June, I970), this work will appear in three major divisions, each comprising several separate volumes. As a work for study and reference, AUFSTIEG UND NIEDERGANG DER ROMISCHEN WELT is an indispensable tool for research and academic teaching in all disciplines that deal with the Roman World of Antiquity and its impact upon neighbouring and following civilizations.

P/ease ask for detailedprospectus (40 pp.)

For USA and Canada: Please send all orders to Wlalter de Gruyter Inc., I62 Fifth Avenuie, Newr York, N. Y. IOOIO.

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Page 10: Back Matter

The Society for the Promotion of Helienic Studies 31-34 Gordon Square, London WC1H OPP President: Professor K. J. Dover, F.B.A.

THE Society, founded in 1879 to advance the study of Greek language, literature, history and art, maintains conjointly with the Society for the Promotion of Roman Studies and in association with the Institute of Classical Studies of the University of London

1. A Library of some 42,000 volumes, containing many costly works and rare periodicals. 2. Some 15,000 lantern slides covering the whole domain of ancient life and art. Besides the general

collection, there are sets of slides with lecture texts.

Books and slides can be sent to Members by post. Communications about books and slides should be addressed to the Librarian at the above address.

Four general meetings, with lectures, are held in London annually and there are other meetings in different parts of the country.

Subscribers receive free the Society's two annual publications: The Journal of Hellenic Studies, one of the foremost British periodicals in the field of Greek scholarship, containing articles, illustrations, and book reviews; Archaeological Reports, a fully illustrated account of fresh discoveries in Greece and Greek lands, with bulletins announcing important new acquisitions by museums in Britain.

These two periodicals are on sale to the general public at ?4.50 and 75p respectively. The Annual Subscription to the Society is ?3. The Composition Fee for life-membership is ?15 for those

over 65 years of age after 5 years membership. The subscription for Libraries and Student Associates is ?4.63 and ?1.50 respectively. There is no entrance fee.

Applications for membership or inquiries about the Society should be addressed to the Secretary at the above address. Telephone: 01-387 7495.

The Classical Association THE main aims of the Classical Association are to promote and sustain interest in classical studies, to maintain their rightful position in universities and schools, and to give scholars and teachers opportunities of meeting and discussing their problems. It organizes an annual conference, lasting four or five days, in a university centre, and sponsors thirty-one branches, most of which hold Greek and Latin Reading Competitions for Schools. Its activities are fully reported in its annual Proceedings, issued free to all members.

The present membership of the Association is approximately 4,500. Membership is open both to individuals and to institutions at an annual subscription of 25p (life composition for individual members, ?5.25). Members may obtain the Classical Review and Classical Quarterly at reduced prices (Review, ?4.25; Quarterly, ?4; combined subscription, ?7.75). Greece and Rome may also be obtained through the Association for an annual subscription of ?2.25. Applications for membership and subscriptions for the journals (which should normally be received by 31st January in each year) should be addressed to the Hon. Treasurer, Mr. G. R. Watson, Dept. Classics & Archaeology, The University, Nottingham.

The Association can also supply copies of the Index to the First Series of the Classical Review (price ?1E* 25 for members, ?1 * 50 for non-members, post free) and of the last two issues of The Year's Work in Classical Studies, covering the years 1939-45 and 1945-47 (price 30p each volume, post free). These publications and details of the various occasional publications of the Association are obtainable from the Hon. Treasurer. Inquiries should be sent to either of the Hon. Secretaries Mr. C. Collard, Rutherford College, The University, Canterbury, Kent, and Miss Elizabeth Tucker, Christ's Hospital, Hertford, Herts.

Binding for the Journal of Roman Studies The Kemp Hall Bindery, Ltd., 9 Green Street, Oxford, will undertake to bind volumes in brown

buckram, laced on boards, with title and year lettered in gold on spine to match the former standard binding, at an approximate cost of ?3.35 per volume (wrappers and advertisements removed or bound in at customer's request), or in brown Art Vellum, otherwise as above, at ?3.08 per volume. No extra charge for two volumes bound together. Postage chargeable extra.

Reprinting of Journal of Roman Studies Kraus Reprint have now reprinted Volumes I to LV of the JOURNAL OF ROMAN STUDIES

at $1149.00 (clothbounld) and $1045.00 (paperbound), Single volumes priced at $19.00 each. Inquiries to: Kraus Reprint, FL-9491 Nendeln, Liechtenstein.

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Page 11: Back Matter

REVIEWS AND NOTICES OF PUBLICATIONS

REVIEWS

PAGE Acta of the Fifth International Congress of Greek

and Latin Epigraphy, Cambridge, 1967 (by A. R. Birley) . 189

Traute Adam, ClementiaPrincipis (by B. Walker) 199 J. P. V. D. Balsdon, Rome: The Story of an

Empire (by J. M. Carter) . . 174 H. Bardon, ed., Catulli Carmina (by T. P.

Wiseman) . 215 H. Bardon, Propositions sur Catulle (by T. P.

Wiseman) . . . . 215 Gerhard Binder, Aeneas und Augustus: Interpre-

tationen zum 8. Buch der Aeneis (by P. T. Eden) 221 D. M. Brinkerhoff, A Collection of Sculpture in

Classical and Early Christian Antioch (by Malcolm A. R. Colledge) . . . 203

Peter Brown, The World of Late Antiquity from Marcus Aurelius to Muhammad (by John Percival) . . . . . . 175

R. Browning, Justinian and Theodora(by M.T. W. Arnheim) . . . . . 186

P. A. Brunt, Italian Manpower 225 B.C.-A.D. 14 (by Keith Hopkins) . . . . . 192

P. A. Brunt, Social Conflicts in the Roman Republic (by R. Seager) . . 182

M. C. Calvi, I Vetri romani del Museo di Aquileia (by Jennifer Price) . . 204

Catullus, The Poems, ed. Kenneth Quinn (by Niall Rudd) . . . . . 212

J. P. Chausserie-Lapree, L'Expressioni narrative chezleshistorienslatins (by R. H. Martin) . 210

Elena Colonna di Paolo and Giovanni Colonna, Castel d'Asso (by David Ridgway) . . 201

Heinz Cuippers, Die Trierer Romerbriicken (by E. M. Wightman) . . . . 208

Charles Daniels, The Garamantes of Southern Libya (by I. M. Barton) . . 207

T. A. Dorey and D. R. Dudley, Rome against Carthage (by F. W. Walbank) . . 181

D. R. Dudley, The Romans (by A. F. Norman) 171 W. Eck, Senatoren von Vespasian bis Hadrian

(by G. P. Burton) . . . . . 183 Lothar Eckhart, Das romische Donaukastell

Schlogen in Oberosterreich (by Olwen Brogan). 210 John Ferguson, The Religions of the Roman

Empire (by M. J. Boyd) . 197 Robert 0. Fink, Roman Military Records on

Papyrus (by R. W. Davies) . . 190 Fondation Hardt. Entretiens sur l'antiquite

classique, XV. Lucain (by Mark Morford) . 223 G. K. Galinsky, Aeneas, Sicily and Rome (by

A. Drummond) . . . 218 J. Harmand, Les Celtes au second age dufer (by

T. G. E. Powell) . . 206 Jacques Heurgon, Rome et la Mediterranie occi-

dentale jusqu'aux guerres puniques (by A. H. McDonald) . . . . . 172

Tonio H6lscher, Victoria Romana: archdologische Untersuchungen zur Geschichte und Wesensart der romischen Siegesgottin (by A. R. Birley) . 195

PAGE Joachim Jahn, Interregnum und Wahldiktatur

(by John Briscoe) . 187 A. H. M. Jones, ed., A History of Rome through

the Fifth Century, 2. The Empire (by Roger Tomlin) . . . . . 174

A. H. M. Jones, J. R. Martindale and J. Morris, The Prosopography of the Later Roman Empire (by A. R. Birley) . . 185

C. P. Jones, Plutarch and Rome (D. A. Russell) 226 Peter Kneissl, Die Siegestitulatur der romischen

Kaiser (by A. R. Birley) . . 195 Legio VII Gemina (by R. W. Davies) 195 John H. Lenaghan, A Commentary on Cicero's

Oration De Haruspicum Responso (by A. E. Douglas) . . . . 216

Lucretius, De Rerum Natura, Book iii, ed. E. J. Kenney (by David West) . . 211

Alexander G. McKay, Vergil's Italy (by Kenneth Wellesley) . . 220

Rene Martin, Recherches sur les agronomes latins et leur conceptions sociales et 6conomiques (by K. D. White) . . . 194

E. Meise, Untersuchungen zur Geschichte der Julisch-Claudischen Dynastie (by Miriam Griffin) . . . . . 184

MosaiciAntichi in Italia (Baccano: Villa Romana) (by Elisabeth Waywell) . . . 202

Dante Nardo, Il Commentariolum Petitionis: la Propaganda elettorale nella Ars di Quinto Cicerone (by A. W. Lintott) . 218

R. E. A. Palmer, The Archaic Community of the Romans and The Kintg and the Comitium (by A. Drummond) . . . . 176

J. Poucet, Recherches sur la l'gende sabine des origines de Rome (by John Pinsent) 178

Sir Dennis Proctor, Hannibal's March in History (by Gavin de Beer) . . . . 180

Marguerite Rachet, Rome et les Berberes: un probleme militaire d'Auguste a DioclMtien (by I. M. Barton) . . . 207

G. Rickman, Roman Granaries and Store Buildings (by W. Bulmer) . . . 205

W. Ries, Gerucht, Gerede, offentliche Meinung (by D. C. A. Shotter) . . . 224

H. Rolland, Le Mausolde de Glanum (by A. L. F. Rivet) . . . . 207

D. 0. Ross, Jr., Style and Tradition in Catullus (by K. W. Mills) . . . 214

E. T. Salmon, Roman Colonization under the Republic (by John Pinsent) . 179

D. R. Shackleton Bailey, Cicero (by Elizabeth Rawson) . . . . . . 216

John C. Shelton, Papyri from the Michigan Collection (by J. David Thomas) . 190

Ralph Urban, Historische Untersuchungen zum Domitiansbild des Tacitus (by K. H. Waters) . 225

L. Vidman, Isis und Sarapis bei den Griechen und Romern (by R. E. Witt) . . 198

Joachim Ziegler, Zur religiosen Haltung der Gegenkaiser im 4. Jh. n. Chr. (by T. D. Barnes) 200

NOTICES

PAGE Barry Cunliffe, Roman Bath Discovered (by

Aileen Fox) 229 Matthias Gelzer, Cicero: ein biographischer

Versuch (by A. E. Douglas) 228 Sybille Haynes, Etruscan Sculpture (by F. R.

Serra Ridgway) . . 227

List of Works Received . . . 231 Proceedings of the Society . . 241

PAGE

A. H. M. Jones, Augustus (by A. S. Hall) . 230 B. Liou, Praetores Etruriae X VPopulorum: Etude

d'epigraphie (by R. P. Duncan-Jones) . . 228 P. Vergili Maronis Aeneidos Liber i, ed. R. G.

Austin (by W. A. Camps) . . . . 230

Indexes: (i) Names and Subjects . 243 (ii) Literary Authorities . 246

(iii) Inscriptions . 247

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