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Searched all Perseus collections for "Late Archaic/Early Classical" 592 results in 4 categories
Results summary (items)
Art objects (566)
Reference articles (3)
Source citations (2)
Texts (21)
566 Art objects
  1. Athens, NM 943, Finial of a Rectangular Grave Stele: Late Classical; Marble; Funerary; Tall palmette [Sculpture] (8.48)

  2. Munich GL DV 34, Lekythos of a woman: Late Classical; Marble; Funerary; Lekythos with scene of three figures [Sculpture] (8.48)

  3. RISD 26.166: Late Classical; Apulian Red Figure; Plastic rhyton; Bull's head rhyton [Vase] (7.37)

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3 Reference articles
  1. Art periods [Reference article in Perseus Encyclopedia] (43.61)

  2. Delian Late Classical Frieze [Reference article in Perseus Sculpture Catalog] (4.32)

  3. Dreros: Crete; Fortified city; Early Iron Age settlement and later a Classical city-state. [Site] (1.84)

2 Source citations
  1. Bernard Ashmole; Late archaic and early classical Greek sculpture in Sicily and South Italy: Ashmole 1936 [Source citation] (3.80)

  2. R. R. Holloway; Influences and Styles in the Late Archaic and Early Classical Greek Sculpture of Sicily and Magna Graecia: Holloway 1975 [Source citation] (3.49)

21 Texts
  1. Lucinda Hinsdale Stone, her life story and reminiscences. By Belle McArthur Perry ... Introduction by Ellen M. Henrotin: (in English) This is a collection of reminiscences of and about Lucinda Hinsdale Stone (1814-1900), one of Michigan's foremost spokespersons for coeducation and equal educational rights for women during the late nineteenth century. Born in Hinesburg, Vermont, she received a classical education as the first female graduate of Hinesburg Academy. After teaching at Burlington Seminary and, later, as a private tutor on a Mississippi plantation, she married James Andrus Blinn Stone, a Baptist minister. In 1843, Lucinda Stone took over a fledgling branch of the University of Michigan in Kalamazoo. There she began to teach women through a separate female department until she resigned in 1863 in a controversy over exposing students to literature considered inappropriate for ladies. She continued to teach most of her students out of her own home and eventually escorted women on guided study tours of Europe. As part of her efforts to educate women, she helped found the Ladies Library Association of Kalamazoo. In 1873, influenced by various New England women's clubs, she organized the first full-fledged women's club in Michigan. There are few details here about her later life, but there are abundant testimonials about her importance as a public speaker, journalist, and charter member of the Michigan Woman's Press Association. The book also includes abundant excerpts from Stone's writings about eminent people she encountered abroad and at home. [Text] (8.24)

  2. Land, M. C.; Particles and Events in Classical Off-Shell Electrodynamics: Despite the many successes of the relativistic quantum theory developed by Horwitz, et. al., certain difficulties persist in the associated covariant classical mechanics. In this paper, we explore these difficulties through an examination of the classical Coulomb problem in the framework of off-shell electrodynamics. As the local gauge theory of a covariant quantum mechanics with evolution parameter $\tau$, off-shell electrodynamics constitutes a dynamical theory of spacetime events, interacting through five $\tau$-dependent pre-Maxwell potentials. We present a straightforward solution of the classical equations of motion, which is seen to be unsatisfactory, and reveals the essential difficulties in the formalism at the classical level. We then offer a new model of the particle current -- as a certain distribution of the event currents on the worldline -- which eliminates these difficulties and permits comparison of classical off-shell electrodynamics with the standard Maxwell theory. In this model, the fixed'' event induces a Yukawa-type potential, permitting a semi-classical identification of the pre-Maxwell time scale $\lambda$ with the inverse mass of the intervening photon. Numerical solutions to the equations of motion are compared with the standard Maxwell solutions, and are seen to coincide when $\lambda \gtrsim 10^{-6}$ seconds, providing an initial estimate of this parameter. It is also demonstrated that the proposed model provides a natural interpretation for the photon mass cut-off required for the renormalizability of the off-shell quantum electrodynamics., Comment: 21 pages, Latex, 3 Postscript figures [Text] [View with Perseus links] (3.59)

  3. Enk | Petrus Johannes | 1885-1960 | Professor of Latin; ENK, Professor Petrus Johannes (1885-1960): Papers of Enk, mainly comprising notebooks, relating to his work in school and college on classical texts and Latin literature, (predominantly 1894-1907), including notes on and partial translations into Dutch of the Annals of Publius Cornelius Tacitus, the Metamorphoses of Publius Ovidius Naso, the works of Marcus Tullius Cicero, the Elegiae of Sextus Propertius, the Carmina of Giovanni Pascoli; working papers, 1876-1923, of Enk's former teacher, Professor Jacobus Johannes Hartman of Leiden (1851-1924), mainly comprising notebooks and partial translations into Dutch, of the Adelphoe, Andria, and Hecyra of Publius Terentius Afer, the Epistulae Ex Ponto of Publius Ovidius Naso, the Aeneid of Publius Vergilius Maro, the Seven against Thebes of Aeschylus; notebook by Hartman entitled 'Adversaria Lucianen', 1876; manuscript topographical notebook by Hartman entitled 'Romeinsche Antiquiteiten', 1905; press cuttings and obituaries of Hartman (predominantly 1924); correspondence of Enk and Hartman with Dutch, English and German scholars of Latin, [1920s and 1930s]; photographs and illustrations of classical sculpture and architectural sites; typescript inventories of Enk's library of classical texts and pamphlets as at 1 Jun 1960. With bound manuscript of the Thebais by Publius Papinius Statius, in an Italian humanistic script of the late 15th century. [Text] [View with Perseus links] (2.77)

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