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  1. The Great Dionysia and the End of the Peloponnesian War.Johanna Hanink - 2014 - Classical Antiquity 33 (2):319-346.
    Scholars have disagreed about whether the Great Dionysia was celebrated in 404 BCE, despite the grim circumstances in Athens on the eve of the city's surrender to Sparta. This article reconsiders the problem and reviews the positive documentary evidence for the festival's celebration. The evidence indicates that the festival was indeed held, which speaks to the centrality of the Great Dionysia to Athenian civic life. The article then re-examines the conditions in Athens in the spring of 404, the practical consequences (...)
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  • Aristophanes and the events of 411.Alan H. Sommerstein - 1977 - Journal of Hellenic Studies 97:112-126.
  • Alexander the Great’s Route to Gaugamela and Arbela.Tomasz Pirowski, Marcin Sobiech & Michal Marciak - 2020 - Klio 102 (2):536-559.
    Summary The aim of this paper is to analyse the chronology and itinerary of the march of the Macedonian army during the last days (September 18–October 1) of the Gaugamela campaign in 331 BC in the light of literary sources, cuneiform data, topographic and archaeological data, and GIS capabilities. The overall aim of this analysis is to contribute to the topographical enigma of the identification of Gaugamela as either (in the vicinity of) Tell Gomel or Karamleis/qaraqosh. The cuneiform data allows (...)
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  • Demochronos: The political time of the Athenian democracy.Mykolas Gudelis - 2020 - Constellations 27 (3):375-384.