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STUDIES ON HOMER AND THE HOMERIC AGE. I. PROLEGOMENA. II. ACHÆIS: OR, THE ETHNOLOGY OF THE GREEK RACES.
THE CONTENTS.
I. PROLEGOMENA.[1]
Sect. 1.—On the State of the Homeric question.
Sect. 2.—The Place of Homer in Classical Education.
Sect. 3.—On the Historic Aims of Homer.
Sect. 4.—The probable Date of Homer.
Sect. 5.—The Probable Trustworthiness of the Text of Homer.
Sect. 6.—The Place and Authority of Homer in Historical Inquiry.
II. ETHNOLOGY.
SECT. I. Scope of the Inquiry.
SECT. II.
The Arcadians in Homer.
The Ionians.
Egypt.
SECT. III. Pelasgians continued: and certain States naturalised or akin to Greece.
SECT. IV. On the Phœnicians, and the Outer Geography of the Odyssey.
The Siceli and Sicania.
Epirus and the Thesproti.
Cadmeans.
SECT. V. On the Catalogue.
SECT. VI. On the Hellenes of Homer; and with them, Hellas; Panhellenes; Cephallenes; Helli or Selli.
SECT. VII. On the respective contributions of the Pelasgian and Hellenic factors to the compound of the Greek nation.
Class I.—Elementary objects of inanimate Nature.
Class II.—Elementary objects of animated Nature.
Class III.—Articles immediately related to elementary wants and to labour.
Class IV.—The constituent parts of the human body, the family, society, and general ideas.
Class V.—Adjectives of constant use in daily life.
SECT. VIII. On the three greater Homeric appellatives.
The Achæans.
SECT. IX. On the Homeric title ἄναξ ἀνδρῶν.
Case of Agamemnon.
The Cases of Anchises and Æneas.
IV. Case of Augeias.
V. Case of Euphetes.
VI. Case of Eumelus.
SECT. X. On the connection of the Hellenes and Achæans with the East.
ADDENDA.
FOOTNOTES
Transcriber's Note
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