A history of classical scholarship ... / by John Edwin Sandys.
- Sandys, John Edwin, 1844-1922.
- Date:
- 1903-08
Licence: Public Domain Mark
Credit: A history of classical scholarship ... / by John Edwin Sandys. Source: Wellcome Collection.
689/708 (page 657)
![571, 583; (4) verbal, 32, no, 128, 160 f; 172, 187, 202, 219, 252, 287-90, 317 Cues, 626, 635 n. 1; Nicolas Cusanus, 628 Curtius, Q., 635; (2) Curtius Vale- rianus, 252 Cyclic poets, 24 b 372 Cyprian (St), 205; (2) of Toulon, 234 Damascius, 367 Damascus, John of, 383 f, 395, 536, 553 Damasus, library of pope, 220 Damiani, Petrus, 500 Dante, 590 f; 243 ; his precursors, the Visions of Wettin, 467, and Anti- Claudianus, 532; statistics of his references to Latin literature and Latin translations, 591; Dante and Cicero, 625; Virgil, 610 f; Horace, 613; Ovid, 616; Lucan, 617; Sta¬ tius, 592 f, 618; ‘Dionysius the Areopagite ’, 369; Aristotle, Avi¬ cenna and Averroes, 591; Thomas Aquinas and Albertus Magnus, 592 ; Siger, 564; Brunetto Latini, 590; Del Virgilio, 589; Dante as a pre¬ cursor of the Renaissance, 590 ‘Dark Ages’, the, 483; 594-6 n. David the Armenian, 338, 365 n. 4, 475 n- 4 David the ‘Scot’, 535 De Causis, De Mundo, De Plantis; see ‘ A ristotle ’ ad fin. De Modis Significandi, 641 f Deinarchus, 278 Demetrius Cydones, 473; (2) De¬ metrius of Phaleron, 101, 106; (3) of Scepsis, 153, 161; (4) De¬ metrius irepl epp.r] velas, 312 Democritus, 26, 67, 92 Demosthenes, mss, 319; Lept., 292, 305, 353; 01., De Chers., De Cor., 353; Fals. Leg., 294; Dem. and Ar. Rhet., 81, 274; Dion. Hal. 274-7; ‘ Longinus ’ (Dem. and Cicero etc.), 283-5; Aristides, 306; Libanius, 348 ; Julian, 353; Isidore of Pelusium, 362; Choricius, 375; ‘Lantern of’, 412; (2) Demos¬ thenes Philalethes, 460 n. 1 Denis, St, abbey of, 415, 471, 474, 481, 502> 534’ 598- 612, 635 Desiderius, (1) of Vienne, 432; (2) of Monte Cassino, 500, 636 n. ro Dexippus, 344 Diagoras of Rhodes, 46 Dialectic, course of reading in, 528 n. 9; Alcuin on, 458 Dicaearchus, 100 Diceto, Radulfus de, 637 ; 524 Dictamen, 582, 648 n. 2 Dictionarii, 528, 539 f Dictys and Dares, 623 Dicuil, 449 Didascaliae, 64 f Didymus, 139 f; 129, 373 Diodes of Magnesia, 333 Diodorus, (1) Siculus, 117, 273; (2) son of Val. Pollio, 317 Diogenes Laertius, 332 Diogenianus, 288, 370 Diomedes, 206, 218, 453, 467 n. 2 Dion Cassius, 407, 426 Dion Chrysostom, 291 f; 358, 360, 362 Dionysius, Aelius, 316; (2) ‘Diony¬ sius, the Areopagite’, 369, 415, 474> 5°5> 53L 548, 553’ 560; (3) Dionysius Exiguus, 250; (4) Diony¬ sius of Halicarnassus, 273 f; 156; (5) Dionysius Thrax, 7 f, 43, 137 f, 355 Dominicans, Order of, 551; their Latin style, 559; their study of Greek, 561, 585; William of Moer- beke, 563; Geoffrey of Waterford, 565; Vincent of Beauvais, 557, and Albertus Magnus, 558, ignorant of Greek; Thomas Aquinas, interested in Greek, 561 f Dominico Marengo, 501 Domnulus, 230, 635 Donatus, Aelius, 184, 218, 219; on Terence, 470; Grammar of, 453, 458, 462, 468, 500, 574, 638, 649 ; Remi(gius) on, 478, 639; Greek version of, 417, 536; (2) Tib. Claudius Donatus, 184; (3) Irish monk, 463 Dositheus (c. iv a.d.), author of a Greek version of a Latin Grammar, used at St Gallen and Bobbio, 138, 479 (Teuffel, § 431, 7) Doxopatres, John, 407 Drama, Greek; early study of, 59 f; criticism of, 52 f, 61-4; ‘canon’ of, 130 Ducas, 422 Duris, 42, and frontispiece Dudo of St Quentin (c. 1020), 502 Dungal, 440 n. 4, 463 n. 2, 479 Duns Scotus, 576 f, 642 Dunstan (St), 483, 492, 616 S. 42](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b31360166_0691.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)