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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Les deux versions démotiques du Décret de Canope textes, étude comparative, traduction, commentaires historiques et philologiques,

Groff, William N., January 1888 (has links)
Thèse--École de Louvre. / Autographed.
2

De Ptolemaei philadelphi pompa Bacchica

Kamp, Iosephus. January 1864 (has links)
Diss. / Vita. Filmed with: Lengnick, Bernhard / Ad emendandos explicandosque Ciceronis libros De natura deorum : quid ex Philodemi scriptione [peri eusebias] redundet -- Lindner, Ferdinand Gustav / De M. Porcio Latrone -- Loew, Otto / [Charis] -- Lenting, Johannes / Observationes criticae in Aristophanis comici fabulas -- Leo, Friedrich / Tacitus -- Leo, Friedrich / Analecta Plautina de figuris sermonis II -- Leisner, Johann Friedrich / Rituum antiquorum investigatorem non esse exlegem -- Hyperides ; Levi, Lionello / L'Euxenippea d'Iperide -- Leiste, Anton Friedrich Wilhelm / De Hor. Od. I.I. v. 29 ss. -- Leitschuh, Johann Alois / Was die Römer unter dubito verstanden und wie sie dasselbe konstruierten -- Leitschuh, Johann Alois / Wie die Römer I. das Datum, II. die deutschen indirecten Fragesätze ob nicht - oder ob nicht nach den Wörtern fragen, erwarten und andern der Art bezeichneten -- Meierotto, Johann Heinrich Ludwig / De Titi Livii arte narrandi et artificio historico -- Liedloff, Kurt / Die Nachbildung griechischer und römischer Muster in Seneca's Troades und Agamemnon -- Lichtenauer, A / Des Euripides Phönissen nach ihrem Inhalte, dann ästhetischen und moralischen Gehalte beleuchtet -- Lentz, Hermann / Der Epitaphios pseudepigraphus des Demosthenes : erste Hälfte -- Leidenroth, Franz Bernhard / Indicis grammatici ad Scholia Veneta A exceptis locis Herodiani specimen II -- Leidenroth / Neue Erklärung und Begrundung der Homerischen Sprache -- Kayser, Karl Ludwig / De pinacotheca quadam nepolitana -- Linde, Sven / De Iano summo Romanorum deo -- Lipsius, Carl Heinrich Adelbert / De Themistoclis Plutarchei locis quibusdam commentatio -- Lössl, Johann Chrysostom / Entwicklung der römischen Dichtkunst bis auf Horaz -- Lobeck, Christian August / De morte Bacchi partem secundam -- Lobeck, Christian August / De nominibus Graecorum verbalibus dissertatio prima -- Lobeck, Christian August / Lobeckii dissertationis de diis veterum adspectu corporum exanimum non prohibitis iterum editae pars altera. Includes bibliographical references.
3

Observationes criticae in Aristophanis comici fabulas

Lenting, Johannes, January 1839 (has links)
Diss. / Filmed with: Lengnick, Bernhard / Ad emendandos explicandosque Ciceronis libros De natura deorum : quid ex Philodemi scriptione [peri eusebias] redundet -- Lindner, Ferdinand Gustav / De M. Porcio Latrone -- Loew, Otto / [Charis] -- Lenting, Johannes / Observationes criticae in Aristophanis comici fabulas -- Leo, Friedrich / Tacitus -- Leo, Friedrich / Analecta Plautina de figuris sermonis II -- Leisner, Johann Friedrich / Rituum antiquorum investigatorem non esse exlegem -- Hyperides ; Levi, Lionello / L'Euxenippea d'Iperide -- Leiste, Anton Friedrich Wilhelm / De Hor. Od. I.I. v. 29 ss. -- Leitschuh, Johann Alois / Was die Römer unter dubito verstanden und wie sie dasselbe konstruierten -- Leitschuh, Johann Alois / Wie die Römer I. das Datum, II. die deutschen indirecten Fragesätze ob nicht - oder ob nicht nach den Wörtern fragen, erwarten und andern der Art bezeichneten -- Meierotto, Johann Heinrich Ludwig / De Titi Livii arte narrandi et artificio historico -- Liedloff, Kurt / Die Nachbildung griechischer und römischer Muster in Seneca's Troades und Agamemnon -- Lichtenauer, A / Des Euripides Phönissen nach ihrem Inhalte, dann ästhetischen und moralischen Gehalte beleuchtet -- Lentz, Hermann / Der Epitaphios pseudepigraphus des Demosthenes : erste Hälfte -- Leidenroth, Franz Bernhard / Indicis grammatici ad Scholia Veneta A exceptis locis Herodiani specimen II -- Leidenroth / Neue Erklärung und Begrundung der Homerischen Sprache -- Kayser, Karl Ludwig / De pinacotheca quadam nepolitana -- Linde, Sven / De Iano summo Romanorum deo -- Lipsius, Carl Heinrich Adelbert / De Themistoclis Plutarchei locis quibusdam commentatio -- Lössl, Johann Chrysostom / Entwicklung der römischen Dichtkunst bis auf Horaz -- Lobeck, Christian August / De morte Bacchi partem secundam -- Lobeck, Christian August / De nominibus Graecorum verbalibus dissertatio prima -- Lobeck, Christian August / Lobeckii dissertationis de diis veterum adspectu corporum exanimum non prohibitis iterum editae pars altera. Includes bibliographical references.
4

Schedae historicae quibus de rebus Ptolemaeorum agitur

Drumann, Wilhelm Karl August, January 1900 (has links)
Inaug.-dis.--Kn̲igsberg. / Includes bibliographical references.
5

Beitrag zur Interpretation des Steuergesetzes von Ptolemaios Philadelphos ...

Steiner, Alfons, January 1910 (has links)
Inaug-Diss.--Heidelberg. / Lebenslauf. "Literatur": p. [41].
6

Ptolemaeus II. Philadelphus als Gesetzgeber

Müller, Bernd-Jürgen, January 1900 (has links)
Inaug.-Diss.--Cologne. / Vita. Bibliography: p. vi-xxii.
7

Ptolemy’s Planetary Theory: An English Translation of Book One, Part A of the Planetary Hypotheses with Introduction and Commentary

Hamm, Elizabeth 19 January 2012 (has links)
This study comprises a translation and commentary of Book I of the Planetary Hypotheses by the second century A.D. Greco-Roman astronomer, Claudius Ptolemy. It closely examines the Planetary Hypotheses on its own and in relation to Ptolemy’s other writings. Where necessary I rely on astronomical, philosophical, and technological works by other writers in order to better situate Ptolemy’s ideas into the context of Greco-Roman science. The dissertation is organized into three sections. Section I consists of an extended introduction to the Planetary Hypotheses. I offer a synopsis of the Planetary Hypotheses and a history of the text in Sections I.1 and I.2. Section I.3 consists of a brief introduction to notation and sexagesimal numbers while Section I.4 analyzes the aim and function of Ptolemy’s planetary models. Section II is a translation of the existing Greek text of the Planetary Hypotheses, namely Book I Part A, and a précis of Book I, Part B. The translation is made from J.L. Heiberg’s edited Greek text and the précis relies on the English translation by Bernard Goldstein, the French translation by Regis Morelon, and the Arabic Manuscripts found in the British Library (Arabic-A) and the Library at the University of Leiden (Arabic-B). The footnotes include variant readings from the different Greek and Arabic Manuscripts. A list of all existing manuscripts of the Planetary Hypotheses can be found in Section I.2 Section III is a commentary of the entirety of Book I (Parts A and B). This section is arranged so that it loosely follows the order of topics found in the Planetary Hypotheses. Section III.1 examines the Planetary Hypotheses in terms of instrument-making. Section III.2 discusses the geometric models that Ptolemy presents along with a discussion of the changes that he makes. I give an overview of the period relations and mean motions presented in the Planetary Hypotheses in Section III.3 and III.4 and the new frame of reference in Section III.5. Section III.6 briefly examines Book II of the Planetary Hypotheses and Section III.7 addresses the relationship of Book I and Book II and contextualizes this work in the history of Greco-Roman science. Finally, Section III.8 examines the role the Planetary Hypotheses played in developments within Medieval Islamic astronomy. While I focus on the changes that Ptolemy made to the models in the Planetary Hypotheses from his theories in the Canobic Inscription, Handy Tables, and the Almagest, this work aims to explore the motivations behind these changes. Additionally, I contextualize the Planetary Hypotheses within Greco-Roman and Islamic astronomy and technology. What emerges from this dissertation is a consideration of Ptolemy’s ideas about the practice of science and an analysis of how he modeled astronomical observations.
8

Ptolemy’s Planetary Theory: An English Translation of Book One, Part A of the Planetary Hypotheses with Introduction and Commentary

Hamm, Elizabeth 19 January 2012 (has links)
This study comprises a translation and commentary of Book I of the Planetary Hypotheses by the second century A.D. Greco-Roman astronomer, Claudius Ptolemy. It closely examines the Planetary Hypotheses on its own and in relation to Ptolemy’s other writings. Where necessary I rely on astronomical, philosophical, and technological works by other writers in order to better situate Ptolemy’s ideas into the context of Greco-Roman science. The dissertation is organized into three sections. Section I consists of an extended introduction to the Planetary Hypotheses. I offer a synopsis of the Planetary Hypotheses and a history of the text in Sections I.1 and I.2. Section I.3 consists of a brief introduction to notation and sexagesimal numbers while Section I.4 analyzes the aim and function of Ptolemy’s planetary models. Section II is a translation of the existing Greek text of the Planetary Hypotheses, namely Book I Part A, and a précis of Book I, Part B. The translation is made from J.L. Heiberg’s edited Greek text and the précis relies on the English translation by Bernard Goldstein, the French translation by Regis Morelon, and the Arabic Manuscripts found in the British Library (Arabic-A) and the Library at the University of Leiden (Arabic-B). The footnotes include variant readings from the different Greek and Arabic Manuscripts. A list of all existing manuscripts of the Planetary Hypotheses can be found in Section I.2 Section III is a commentary of the entirety of Book I (Parts A and B). This section is arranged so that it loosely follows the order of topics found in the Planetary Hypotheses. Section III.1 examines the Planetary Hypotheses in terms of instrument-making. Section III.2 discusses the geometric models that Ptolemy presents along with a discussion of the changes that he makes. I give an overview of the period relations and mean motions presented in the Planetary Hypotheses in Section III.3 and III.4 and the new frame of reference in Section III.5. Section III.6 briefly examines Book II of the Planetary Hypotheses and Section III.7 addresses the relationship of Book I and Book II and contextualizes this work in the history of Greco-Roman science. Finally, Section III.8 examines the role the Planetary Hypotheses played in developments within Medieval Islamic astronomy. While I focus on the changes that Ptolemy made to the models in the Planetary Hypotheses from his theories in the Canobic Inscription, Handy Tables, and the Almagest, this work aims to explore the motivations behind these changes. Additionally, I contextualize the Planetary Hypotheses within Greco-Roman and Islamic astronomy and technology. What emerges from this dissertation is a consideration of Ptolemy’s ideas about the practice of science and an analysis of how he modeled astronomical observations.
9

Philosophy and physics in book one of The Mathematical Syntaxis : an examination of the "Aristotelianism" of Ptolemy /

Taub, Liba Chaia, January 1987 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Oklahoma, 1987. / Bibliography: leaves 235-253.
10

Die offiziellen Grundlagen der Alexanderüberlieferung und das Werk des Ptolemäus quellenkritische Studien zur Alexandergeschichte /

Endres, Heinrich, January 1913 (has links)
Thesis (doctoral)--Julius-Maximilians-Universität Würzburg, 1912.

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