Part 4
Foucart (P.) (_Bulletin de Corresp. Hellénique_, 14) 1890
—— Sur les sculptures et la date de quelques edifices d’Epidaure
Furtwaengler (A.) Epidauros (_Berliner Philolog. Wochenschrift_, 1888)
Gaidoz (H.) A propos des chiens d’Epidaure (_Revue Archéologique, 3^e série_, 4)
Ganneau (C.) Esculape et le chien (_Revue Archéologique_, 1884)
Gardner (P.) New chapters in Greek history 8^o., Lond., 1892
Girard (P.) L’Asklépieion d’Athènes d’après de récentes découvertes 1881
Herlich (S.) Epidaurus, eine Heilstätte 1898
Herold ( .) (_Zeitschrift für Bauwesen_, 1893)
Kjellberg (L.) Asklepios. Mythologisch-archäologische Studien (_Särtryck ur Sprâkvetensk. Sällsk. förhandl._ 1894-97)
Koehler (G.) (_Athenische Mittheilungen_, 1877)
Koepp (F.) (_Athenische Mittheilungen_, 1885)
Merriam (A. C.) Dogs of Æsculapius (_American Antiquarian_, vol. 7) Chicago, 1885
—— Marvellous cures at Epidauros (_American Antiquarian_, vol. 6) Chicago, 1884
Panofka (T.) Asklepios und die Asklepiaden (_Abh. d. Berl. Akad._, 1845)
Pausanius, _Periegetes_. Description of Greece, trans. with a commentary by J. G. Frazer 6 voll.; 8^o., Lond., 1898
—— Mythology and monuments of ancient Athens, being a trans. of the _Attica_ of Pausanias by M. de Verrall, with intro. by J. E. Harrison 8^o., Lond., 1890
Petersen (C.) Athenastatuen von Epidauros (_Mitth._, vol. xi)
Reinach (S.) Les chiens dans le culte d’Esculape (_Revue Archéologique_, 1884)
—— Chronique d’Orient (_Revue Archéologique_, 1884)
—— La seconde stèle des guérisons miraculeuses (_Revue Archéologique_, 1885)
Staïs (V.) Ἐφηµερίς. 1892
—— Monuments d’Epidaure (Ἐφηµερὶς Ἀρχαιολογική, 1886)
Vercoutre ( .) (_Revue Archéologique_, 1884-85)
Walton (A.) The cult of Asklepios (_Cornell Studies_, No. III)
Wilamowitz-Möllendorff (U. von) Isyllus von Epidaurus
Footnotes
[1]About one-third of the lantern slides are here reproduced.
[2]Montfaucon (L’Antiq. Explic. 1 ii 289) quotes a curious story to the effect that Dionysios, the Tyrant of Syracuse, visiting Epidauros, stole the massive golden beard from the figure of the god. He excused the theft on the ground that it was unseemly for Asklepios to wear a beard when his father Apollo had none!
[3]Lib. II cap. xxvii § 1.
[4]Lib. II cap. xxvii § 5.
[5]_Modern Painters_, V, Part ix, Ch. 5, § 3.
[6]An American friend suggests another explanation, viz., that the statue, although “set up by Epidauros,” was paid for and the inscription inspired by Philippos of Pergamos himself. Though St. John, in the Apocalypse (II. 13) speaks unfavourably of that city ὅπου ὁ Σατανᾶς κατοικεῖ one feels unwilling to accuse one of its inhabitants of so astute a form of advertising.
[7]This slab has accidentally been reversed in the process of reproduction.
Transcriber’s Notes
—Silently corrected a few typos.
—Retained publication information from the printed edition: this eBook is public-domain in the country of publication.
—In the text versions only, text in italics is delimited by _underscores_.