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1. The Origins of Scholiastic Corpora 1. The Origins of Scholiastic Corpora
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2. Greek Mythography in Scholia 2. Greek Mythography in Scholia
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3. Scholia to Homer 3. Scholia to Homer
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4. Scholia to Pindar 4. Scholia to Pindar
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5. Scholia to Euripides 5. Scholia to Euripides
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6. Scholia to Apollonius Rhodius 6. Scholia to Apollonius Rhodius
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7. Conclusions 7. Conclusions
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Further Reading Further Reading
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References References
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18 Greek Mythography and Scholia
Get accessNereida Villagra is Associate Professor at the Classics Department of the University of Lisbon, and member of the research Centre for Classical Studies of the same University. She obtained her PhD at the Autonomous University of Barcelona in 2012 and has published papers or chapters on mythography, textual criticism and Greek literature. She has just recently published a a co-edited volume (with Joan Pàges) Myths on the Margins of Homer for Trends in Classics (De Gruyter) She is currently preparing a commented edition of the Mythographus Homericus in collaboration with Joan Pagès.
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Published:20 October 2022
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Abstract
The chapter gives a description of the mythographical material that can be found in four corpora of scholia—the scholia to Homer, Pindar, Euripides, and Apollonius Rhodius—from a synchronic perspective. A formal classification is proposed, following two criteria: the function of the mythographical scholia in relation to the main poetic text they comment on (scholia can provide additional information to the main text, an explanation, or a comparison) and the structure or mode of the scholia (they can be narratives, Zittatennester, or lists). The chapter first describes the origin of scholiastic corpora and the relationship between mythography and scholia, and then discusses each corpus of scholia separately.
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