Description
Review "[...] it is good to have so many of his articles collected in one volume. There is plenty here to benefit all those who work at an advanced level on Greek history in general, as well as those who are devoted to Athenian public documents, and it is to be hoped that they will disseminate the results in their teaching and writing." P.J. Rhodes in Scripta Classica Israelica, Vol. 31, 2012"This volume is a valuable contribution to Classical scholarship in its own right. But the true value of this volume will be as a complement to Lambert's forthcoming fascicule of IG II3 . It is hard to imagine any serious scholar working on Athenian inscriptions from the last thirty years of Classical democracy picking up IG II3 without also taking up this volume." Andrew Bayliss, Sehepunkte 13 (2013), Nr 2."The usefulness of the book lies in how it pulls together these studies and presents them as a whole, a "one-stop-shopping" option for scholars interested in the inscriptions of mid-fourth century Attica. And this is not a negligible thing." AHB Online Reviews 3 (2013) 48-50"Das sorgfältig edierte Buch kann vor allem Spezialisten der athenischen Geschichte und Epigraphikern empfohlen werden." Historischen Zeitschrift Heft 297/1 Product Description This collection of eighteen papers makes wide-ranging original contributions to the study of the inscribed laws and decrees of the city of Athens, 352/1-322/1 BC, laying the groundwork for the author’s new edition of these inscriptions, IG II³ 1, 2. About the Author Stephen D. Lambert, D. Phil. (1987) in Ancient History, University of Oxford, is Reader in Ancient History at Cardiff University. He has published extensively on the history and epigraphy of ancient Athens and is editor of Inscriptiones Graecae II³ 1, 2.