Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-2plfb Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-28T04:21:26.428Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Bibliography

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 July 2023

Courtney Ann Roby
Affiliation:
Cornell University, New York
Get access

Summary

Image of the first page of this content. For PDF version, please use the ‘Save PDF’ preceeding this image.'
Type
Chapter
Information
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2023

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

“Heron” of Byzantium, (2000) Siegecraft: Two tenth-century instructional manuals. Edited by Sullivan, D.. Washington, DC: Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection.Google Scholar
Acerbi, F. (2011) “The language of the ‘Givens’: Its forms and its use as a deductive tool in Greek mathematics,” Archive for History of Exact Sciences, 65(2), pp. 119–53.Google Scholar
Adler, A. (1971) Suidae lexicon. Stuttgart: Teubner (Sammlung wissenschaftlicher Commentare).Google Scholar
al-Jazarī, Ismāʻīl ibn al-Razzāz (1974) The book of knowledge of ingenious mechanical devices. Dordrecht: Reidel.Google Scholar
al-Nadīm, Abū al-Faraj Muḥammad Ibn Isḥāq (1970) The Fihrist of al-Nadīm: A tenth-century survey of Muslim culture. New York: Columbia University Press.Google Scholar
al‐Nayrīzī, Abū al‐ʿAbbās al‐Faḍl ibn Ḥātim (2003) The commentary of Al-Nayrizi on Book I of Euclid’s elements of geometry, with an introduction on the transmission of Euclid’s Elements in the Middle Ages. Translated by A. Lo Bello. Boston: Brill Academic Publishers.Google Scholar
al‐Nayrīzī, Abū al‐ʿAbbās al‐Faḍl ibn Ḥātim (2009) The Commentary of al-Nayrizi on Books II–IV of Euclid’s elements of Geometry: With a translation of that portion of Book I missing from MS Leiden Or. 399.1 but present in the newly discovered Qom Manuscript. Translated by A. Lo Bello. Boston: Brill Academic Publishers.Google Scholar
Anderson, E. R. (2020) “Printing the bespoke book: Euclid’s Elements in early modern visual culture,” Nuncius: Journal of the History of Science, 35(3), pp. 536–60.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Anderson, G. (1993) The second sophistic: A cultural phenomenon in the Roman Empire. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Apollodorus, (2010) Apollodorus Mechanicus, siege-matters = Poliorketika. Edited by Whitehead, D.. Stuttgart: Steiner.Google Scholar
Archimedes, and Eutocius, (2004) The works of Archimedes: Translated into English, together with Eutocius’ commentaries, with commentary, and critical edition of the diagrams. Edited by Netz, R.. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Argoud, G. (ed.) (1994a) Science et vie intellectuelle à Alexandrie (Ier–IIIe siècle après J.-C.). Saint-Étienne: Publications de l’Université de Saint-Étienne.Google Scholar
Argoud, G. (1994b) “Héron d’Alexandrie, mathématicien et inventeur,” in Science et vie intellectuelle à Alexandrie (Ier–IIIe siècle après J.-C.). Saint-Étienne: Publications de l’Université de Saint-Étienne, pp. 5365.Google Scholar
Argoud, G. (1998) “Héron d’Alexandrie et les Pneumatiques,” in Guillaumin, J.-Y. and Argoud, G. (eds.), Sciences exactes et sciences appliquées à Alexandrie. Saint-Étienne: Publications de l’Université de Saint-Étienne, pp. 127–45.Google Scholar
Argoud, G. (2000) “Utilisation de la dioptre en hydraulique,” in Argoud, G. and Guillaumin, J.-Y. (eds.), Autour de “La Dioptre” d’Héron d’Alexandrie. Saint-Étienne: Publications de l’Université de Saint-Étienne, pp. 233–56.Google Scholar
Argoud, G. and Guillaumin, J.-Y. (eds.) (1998) Sciences exactes et sciences appliquées à Alexandrie. Saint-Étienne: Publications de l’Université de Saint-Étienne.Google Scholar
Ariño Gil, E. and Gurt, J. M. (2001) “La inscripción catastral de Ilici. Ensayo de interpretación,” Pyrenae: Revista de Prehistòria i Antiguitat de la Mediterrània Occidental, 31–32, pp. 223–26.Google Scholar
Aristotle, (2000) Problemi meccanici. Edited by Bottecchia Dehò, M. E.. Soveria Mannelli: Rubbettino.Google Scholar
Armisen-Marchetti, M. (1989) Sapientiae facies: Étude sur les images de Sénèque. Paris: Les Belles Lettres.Google Scholar
Armisen-Marchetti, M. (2001) “L’imaginaire analogique et la construction du savoir dans les Questions Naturelles de Sénèque,” in Courrént, M. and Thomas, J. (eds.), Imaginaire et modes de construction du savoir antique dans les textes scientifiques et techniques. Perpignan: Presses Universitaires de Perpignan, pp. 155–74.Google Scholar
Asper, M. (2001a) “Dionysios (Heron, Def. 14. 3) und die Datierung Herons von Alexandria,” Hermes, 129(1), pp. 135–37.Google Scholar
Asper, M. (2001b) “Stoicheia und Gesetze: Spekulationen zur Entstehung mathematischer Textformen in Griechenland,” in Antike Naturwissenschaft und ihre Rezeption. Trier: Wissenschaftlicher Verl. Trier, pp. 73106.Google Scholar
Asper, M. (2007) Griechische Wissenschaftstexte: Formen, Funktionen, Differenzierungsgeschichten. Stuttgart: Steiner.Google Scholar
Asper, M. (2013) “Explanation between nature and text: Ancient Greek commentators on science,” Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A, 44(1), pp. 4350.Google Scholar
Asper, M. (2019) “Personae at play. ‘Men of Mathematics’ in commentary,” Historia Mathematica, 47, pp. 415.Google Scholar
Athenaeus, (2004) On machines = Peri mēchanēmatōn. Translated by D. Whitehead and P. H. Blyth. Stuttgart: Steiner.Google Scholar
Bagnall, R. S. (2002) “Alexandria: Library of dreams,” Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society, 146(4), pp. 348–62.Google Scholar
Bagnall, R. S. (2009) Early Christian books in Egypt. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Baird, D. (2004) Thing knowledge: A philosophy of scientific instruments. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Baker, P., Helmrath, J., and Kallendorf, C. (eds.) (2019) Beyond reception: Renaissance humanism and the transformation of classical antiquity. Berlin: De Gruyter.Google Scholar
Balbus, (1996) Présentation systematique de toutes les figures. Translated by J.-Y. Guillaumin. Naples: Jovene.Google Scholar
Baldasso, R. (2009) “La stampa dell’editio princeps degli Elementi di Euclide (Venezia, Erhard Ratdolt, 1482),” in Pon, L. and Kallendorf, C. (eds.), Il libro Veneziano – The books of Venice. Venice: La Musa Talìa, pp. 61100.Google Scholar
Banu Musa Bin Shakir, (1978) The book of ingenious devices. Translated by D. R. Hill. New York: Springer.Google Scholar
Barker, A. (2006) Scientific method in Ptolemy’s Harmonics. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Bedini, S. A. (1964) “The role of automata in the history of technology,” Technology and Culture, 5(1), pp. 2442.Google Scholar
Bensaude-Vincent, B. and Newman, W. R. (2007) The artificial and the natural: An evolving polarity. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.Google Scholar
Bergemann, L. et al. (2011) “Transformation: Ein Konzept zur Erforschung kulturellen Wandels,” in Böhme, H. et al. (eds.), Transformation: Ein Konzept zur Erforschung kulturellen Wandels. Paderborn: Fink, pp. 3956.Google Scholar
Bergemann, L. et al. (2019) “Transformation: A concept for the study of cultural change,” in Baker, P., Helmrath, J., and Kallendorf, C. (eds.), Beyond reception: Renaissance humanism and the transformation of classical antiquity. Berlin: De Gruyter, pp. 925.Google Scholar
Berrey, M. (2017) Hellenistic science at court. Berlin: De Gruyter.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Berryman, S. (2009) The mechanical hypothesis in ancient Greek natural philosophy. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Berryman, S. (2011) “The evidence for Strato in Hero of Alexandria’s Pneumatics,” in Desclos, M.-L. and Fortenbaugh, W. W. (eds.), Strato of Lampsacus: Text, translation, and discussion. New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers, pp. 277–91.Google Scholar
Bertoloni Meli, D. (1992) “Guidobaldo dal Monte and the Archimedean revival,” Nuncius: Journal of the History of Science, 7(1), pp. 334.Google Scholar
Biagioli, M. (1989) “The social status of Italian mathematicians, 1450–1600,” History of Science, 27(1), pp. 4195.Google Scholar
Birkenmajer, A. (1922) Vermischte Untersuchungen zur Geschichte der mittelalterlichen Philosophie. Münster: Aschendorff.Google Scholar
Blackburn, B. and Lowinsky, E. E. (1993) “Luigi Zenobi and his letter on the perfect musician,” Studi Musicali, 22, pp. 61114.Google Scholar
Bliquez, L. and Oleson, J. P. (1994) “The origins, early history, and applications of the pyoulkos (syringe),” in Argoud, G. (ed.), Science et vie intellectuelle à Alexandrie: (Ier–IIIe siècle après J.-C.). Saint-Étienne: Publications de l’Université de Saint-Étienne, pp. 83119.Google Scholar
Blum, R. (1991) Kallimachos: The Alexandrian Library and the origins of bibliography. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press (Wisconsin Studies in Classics).Google Scholar
Blyth, P. H. (1992) “Apollodorus of Damascus and the Poliorcetica,” Greek, Roman, and Byzantine Studies, 33(2), pp. 127–58.Google Scholar
Boas, M. (1949) “Hero’s Pneumatica: A study of its transmission and influence,” Isis, 40(1), pp. 3848.Google Scholar
Böhme, H. et al. (eds.) (2011) Transformation: ein Konzept zur Erforschung kulturellen Wandels. Paderborn: Fink.Google Scholar
Borg, B. E. (2008) “Glamorous intellectuals: Portraits of pepaideumenoi in the second and third centuries ad,” in Paideia: The world of the Second Sophistic. Berlin/Boston: De Gruyter, pp. 157–78.Google Scholar
Boutot, A. (2012) “Modernité de la catoptrique de Héron d’Alexandrie,” Philosophie Antique, 12, pp. 157–96.Google Scholar
Bowie, E. (2013) “Libraries for the Caesars,” in König, J., Oikonomopoulou, A., and Woolf, G. (eds.), Ancient libraries. Cambridge/New York: Cambridge University Press, pp. 237–60.Google Scholar
Brunt, P. A. (1994) “The Bubble of the Second Sophistic,” Bulletin of the Institute of Classical Studies, 39, pp. 2552.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bur, T. C. D. (2016) Mechanical miracles: Automata in ancient Greek religion. Thesis. Available at: https://ses.library.usyd.edu.au/handle/2123/15398 (accessed June 27, 2022).Google Scholar
Butler, S. (2016) Deep classics: Rethinking classical reception. London: Bloomsbury Academic.Google Scholar
Callebat, L. (1994) “Rhétorique et architecture dans le ‘De Architectura’ de Vitruve,” in Gros, P. (ed.), Le projet de Vitruve: objet, destinataires et réception du De architectura. Rome: Ecole française de Rome, pp. 3146.Google Scholar
Cameron, A. (2005) “Isidore of Miletus and Hypatia: On the editing of mathematical texts,” Greek, Roman, and Byzantine Studies, 31(1), pp. 103–27.Google Scholar
Cancik, H. and Schneider, H. (eds.) (1996) Der Neue Pauly: Enzyklopädie Der Antike. Stuttgart: J.B. Metzler.Google Scholar
Canfora, L. (1990) The vanished library. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Carpinato, C. (2014) “Studiare la lingua greca (antica e moderna) in Italia. Retrospettiva e prospettive future,” in Carpinato, C. and Tribulato, O. (eds.), Storia e storie della lingua greca, 1st edition. Venezia: Edizioni Ca’ Foscari (Antichistica. Filologia e letteratura, 1).Google Scholar
Cavalieri-Manasse, G. (2000) “Un document cadastral du complexe capitolin de Vérone,” Dialogues d’histoire ancienne, 26(1), pp. 198200.Google Scholar
Cerquiglini, B. (1989) Eloge de la variante: histoire critique de la philologie. Paris: Editions du Seuil.Google Scholar
Chouquer, G. (2010) La terre dans le monde romain: anthropologie, droit, géographie. Paris: France.Google Scholar
Chouquer, G. and Favory, F. (2001) L’arpentage romain: histoire des textes, droit, techniques. Paris: France.Google Scholar
Ciccolella, F. (2020) “Maximos Margounios (c.1549–1602), his Anacreontic Hymns, and the Byzantine revival in early modern Germany,” Brill’s Studies in Intellectual History, 303, pp. 215–32.Google Scholar
Clayman, D. L. (2014) Berenice II and the golden age of Ptolemaic Egypt. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Collins, H. M. (2010) Tacit and explicit knowledge. Chicago/London: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Coqueugniot, G. (2013) “Where was the royal library of Pergamum? An institution found and lost again,” in König, J., Oikonomopoulou, A., and Woolf, G. (eds.), Ancient libraries. Cambridge/New York: Cambridge University Press, pp. 109–23.Google Scholar
Corcoran, S. (1995) “The Praetorian Prefect Modestus and Hero of Alexandria’s ‘Stereometrica,’” Latomus, 54(2), pp. 377–84.Google Scholar
Creese, D. E. (2010) The monochord in ancient Greek harmonic science. Cambridge/New York: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Crowley, T. J. (2005) “On the use of ‘stoicheion’ in the sense of ‘element’,” Oxford Studies in Ancient Philosophy, 29, pp. 367–94.Google Scholar
Cuomo, S. (1998) “Collecting authorities, constructing authority in Pappus of Alexandria’s Synagōgē,” in Kullmann, W., Althoff, J., and Asper, M. (eds.), Gattungen wissenschaftlicher Literatur in der Antike. Tübingen: G. Narr, pp. 219–38.Google Scholar
Cuomo, S. (2000) Pappus of Alexandria and the mathematics of late antiquity. Cambridge/New York: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Cuomo, S. (2001) Ancient mathematics. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Cuomo, S. (2002) “The machine and the city: Hero of Alexandria’s Belopoeica,” in Tuplin, C. and Rihll, T. E. (eds.), Science and mathematics in ancient Greek culture. Oxford/New York: Oxford University Press, pp. 165–77.Google Scholar
Cuomo, S. (2007) Technology and culture in Greek and Roman antiquity. Cambridge/New York: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Cuomo, S. (2016) “Tacit knowledge in Vitruvius,” Arethusa, 49(2), pp. 125–43.Google Scholar
Damerow, P. (2004) Exploring the limits of preclassical mechanics: A study of conceptual development in early modern science: Free fall and compounded motion in the work of Descartes, Galileo, and Beeckman. New York: Springer.Google Scholar
Daston, L. (1998) “The nature of nature in early modern Europe,” Configurations, 6(2), p. 149.Google Scholar
Davies, R. B. (2018) Troy, Carthage and the Victorians: The drama of classical ruins in the nineteenth-century imagination. Cambridge/New York: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
De Groot, J. (2014) Aristotle’s empiricism: Experience and mechanics in the fourth century bc. Las Vegas: Parmenides Press.Google Scholar
Dear, P. (ed.) (1991) The literary structure of scientific argument: Historical studies. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press.Google Scholar
Decorps-Foulquier, M. (2000) “Remarques liminaires sur le texte de la ‘Dioptre’ de Héron d’Alexandrie et ses sources,” in Argoud, G. and Guillaumin, J.-Y. (eds.), Autour de “La Dioptre” d’Héron d’Alexandrie. Saint-Étienne: Publications de l’Université de Saint-Étienne, pp. 3743.Google Scholar
Delisle, L. (1868) Le cabinet des manuscrits de la Bibliothèque impériale: étude sur la formation de ce dépôt comprenant les éléments d’une histoire de la calligraphie de la miniature, de la reliure, et du commerce des livres à Paris avant l’invention de l’imprimerie. Paris: Imprimerie impériale.Google Scholar
Desclos, M.-L. and Fortenbaugh, W. W. (eds.) (2011) Strato of Lampsacus: Text, translation, and discussion. New Brunswick: Transaction Publishers.Google Scholar
Diels, H. (1893) “Über das physikalische System des Straton,” in Sitzungsberichte der Preussischen Akademie der Wissenschaften. Berlin: Preussische Akademie der Wissenschaften, pp. 101–27.Google Scholar
Dijksterhuis, E. J. (1959) “The origins of classical mechanics from Aristotle to Newton,” in Institute for the History of Science and Clagett, M. (eds.), Critical problems in the history of science. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, pp. 163–96.Google Scholar
Dilke, O. A. W. (1961) “Maps in the treatises of Roman land surveyors,” Geographical Journal, 127(4), pp. 417–26.Google Scholar
Dilke, O. A. W. (1971) The Roman land surveyors: An introduction to the agrimensores. Newton Abbot: David and Charles.Google Scholar
Doody, A. (2009) “Pliny’s Natural History: Enkuklios Paideia and the ancient encyclopedia,” Journal of the History of Ideas, 70, pp. 121.Google Scholar
Drachmann, A. G. (1932) Ancient oil mills and presses. Kobenhavn: Levin & Munksgaard.Google Scholar
Drachmann, A. G. (1948) Ktesibios, Philon and Heron; a study in ancient pneumatics. Copenhagen: Munksgaard.Google Scholar
Drachmann, A. G. (1950) “Heron and Ptolemaios,” Centaurus, 1(2), pp. 117–31.Google Scholar
Drake, S. and Drabkin, I. E. (trans.) (1969) Mechanics in sixteenth-century Italy: Selections from Tartaglia, Benedetti, Guido Ubaldo, & Galileo. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press.Google Scholar
Dueck, D. (2000) Strabo of Amasia: A Greek man of letters in Augustan Rome. London/New York: Routledge.Google Scholar
Eisenstein, E. L. (1979) The printing press as an agent of change: Communications and cultural transformations in early modern Europe. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
El-Abbadi, M. (2004) “The Alexandria Library in history,” in Hirst, A. and Silk, M. S. (eds.), Alexandria, real and imagined. Aldershot/Burlington: Ashgate (Centre for Hellenic Studies, King’s College, London: publications, 5), pp. 167–83.Google Scholar
Epiphanius (1935) Epiphanius’ Treatise on weights and measures: The Syriac version. Edited by Dean, J. E.. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Eshleman, K. (2008) “Defining the Circle of Sophists: Philostratus and the construction of the Second Sophistic,” Classical Philology, 103(4), pp. 395413.Google Scholar
D’Evelyn, M. M. (2012) Venice & Vitruvius: Reading Venice with Daniele Barbaro and Andrea Palladio. New Haven: Yale University Press.Google Scholar
Feke, J. (2014) “Meta-mathematical rhetoric: Hero and Ptolemy against the philosophers,” Historia Mathematica, 41(3), pp. 261–76.Google Scholar
Feke, J. (2018) Ptolemy’s philosophy: Mathematics as a way of life. Princeton: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Feyel, M. (2000) “Comment restituer la dioptra d’Héron d’Alexandrie?” in Argoud, G. and Guillaumin, J.-Y. (eds.), Autour de “La Dioptre” d’Héron d’Alexandrie. Saint-Étienne: Publications de l’Université de Saint-Étienne, pp. 191225.Google Scholar
Ferriello, G. (1998) Il sapere tecnico-scientifico fra Iran e Occidente, una ricerca nelle fonti. Naples: Università degli Studi di Napoli “L’Orientale.”Google Scholar
Fiocca, A. (2020) “Le facoltà delle arti e le accademie a Padova e Ferrara al tempo di Federico Commandino,” Bollettino di Storia delle Scienze Matematiche, 40(2), pp. 333–65.Google Scholar
Flemming, R. (2007) “Empires of knowledge: Medicine and health in the Hellenistic world,” in A Companion to the Hellenistic world. Hoboken: Wiley-Blackwell, pp. 449–63.Google Scholar
Flemming, R. (2008) “Commentary,” in Hankinson, R. J. (ed.), The Cambridge companion to Galen. Cambridge/New York: Cambridge University Press, pp. 323–54.Google Scholar
Fleury, P. (1993) La mécanique de Vitruve. Caen: Université de Caen, Centre d’études et de recherche sur l’antiquité.Google Scholar
Fleury, P. (1994a) “Héron d’Alexandrie et Vitruve : à propos des techniques dites ‘pneumatiques’,” in Science et vie intellectuelle à Alexandrie (Ier–IIIe siècle après J.-C.). Saint-Étienne: Publications de l’Université de Saint-Étienne, pp. 6781.Google Scholar
Fleury, P. (1994b) “Le De Architectura et les traités de mécanique ancienne,” in Gros, P. (ed.), Le projet de Vitruve: objet, destinataires et réception du De architectura. Rome: Ecole française de Rome, pp. 187212.Google Scholar
Fleury, P. (1998) “Les sources alexandrines d’un ingénieur romain au début de l’Empire,” in Argoud, G. and Guillaumin, J.-Y. (eds.), Sciences exactes et sciences appliquées à Alexandrie. Saint-Étienne: Publications de l’Université de Saint-Étienne, pp. 103–14.Google Scholar
Foster, C. L. E. (2020) “Familiarity and recognition: Towards a new vocabulary for classical reception studies,” in de Pourcq, M., de Haan, N., and Rijser, D. (eds.), Framing classical reception studies: Different perspectives on a developing field. Leiden: Brill (Metaforms: Studies in the reception of classical antiquity, volume 19), pp. 3369.Google Scholar
Frank, M. (2012) Guidobaldo dal Monte’s mechanics in context. Pisa: Pisa University. Available at: http://etd.adm.unipi.it/theses/available/etd-04012012-122156/ (accessed August 25, 2021).Google Scholar
Frank, M. (2013) “Mathematics, technics, and courtly life in late Renaissance Urbino,” Archive for History of Exact Sciences, 67(3), p. 305.Google Scholar
Frank, M. (2016) “The curious case of QP.6: The reception of Archimedes’ mechanics by Federico Commandino and Guidobaldo dal Monte,” Revue d’histoire des sciences, 68(2), pp. 419–46.Google Scholar
Fraser, P. M. (1972) Ptolemaic Alexandria. Oxford: Clarendon Press.Google Scholar
Freudenthal, G. (ed.) (2011) Science in medieval Jewish cultures. Cambridge/New York: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Fuhrmann, M. (1960) Das systematische Lehrbuch; ein Beitrag zur Geschichte der Wissenschaften in der Antike. Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht.Google Scholar
Gamba, E. (2005) “Bernardino Baldi e l’ambiente tecnico-scientifico del Ducato di Urbino,” in Nenci, E. (ed.), Bernardino Baldi (1553–1617) studioso rinascimentale: poesia, storia, linguistica, meccanica, architettura: atti del convegno di studi di Milano, 19–21 novembre 2003. Milan: FrancoAngeli, pp. 339–51.Google Scholar
Gamba, E. and Montebelli, V. (1988) Le scienze a Urbino nel tardo Rinascimento. Urbino: QuattroVenti (Biblioteca del Rinascimento).Google Scholar
Gandz, S. (1940) “Heron’s date. A new terminus ante quem (+150),” Isis, 32(2), pp. 263–66.Google Scholar
Gatto, R. (2005) “Bilance e leve nel trattato In mechanica Aristotelis problemata exercitationes di Bernardino Baldi,” in Nenci, E. (ed.), Bernardino Baldi (1553–1617) studioso rinascimentale: poesia, storia, linguistica, meccanica, architettura: atti del convegno di studi di Milano, 19–21 novembre 2003. Milan: FrancoAngeli, pp. 269301.Google Scholar
Gendler, T. S. (2004) “Thought experiments rethought – and reperceived,” Philosophy of Science, 71(5), pp. 1152–63.Google Scholar
Gerstinger, H. and Vogel, K. (1932) Eine stereometrische Aufgabensammlung im Papyrus Graecus Vindobonensis 19996. Vienna: Österreichische Staatsdruckerei (Mitteilung aus der Nationalbibliothek in Wien, Papyrus Erzherzog Reiner, Neue Serie 1).Google Scholar
Gibson, R. K. (1998) “Didactic poetry as ‘popular’ form: A study of imperatival expressions in Latin didactic verse and prose,” in Atherton, C. (ed.), Form and content in didactic poetry. Bari: Levante, pp. 6798.Google Scholar
Gille, B. (1978) Histoire des techniques: technique et civilisations, technique et sciences. Paris: Gallimard.Google Scholar
Gleason, M. (2009) “Shock and awe: The performance dimension of Galen’s anatomy demonstrations,” in Gill, C., Whitmarsh, T., and Wilkins, J. (eds.), Galen and the world of knowledge. Cambridge/New York: Cambridge University Press, pp. 85114.Google Scholar
Gorges, J.-G. (1993) “Nouvelle lecture du fragment de Forma d’un territoire voisin de Lacimurga,” Mélanges de la Casa de Velázquez, 29(1), pp. 723.Google Scholar
Grafton, A. (2007) “The devil as automaton: Giovanni Fontana and the meanings of a fifteenth-century machine,” in Riskin, J. (ed.), Genesis redux: Essays in the history and philosophy of artificial life. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, pp. 4662.Google Scholar
Grafton, A. and Siraisi, N. (eds.) (1999) Natural particulars: Nature and the disciplines in Renaissance Europe. Cambridge: MIT Press.Google Scholar
Grant, E. (1971) “Henricus Aristippus, William of Moerbeke and two alleged mediaeval translations of Hero’s Pneumatica,” Speculum, 46(4), pp. 656–69.Google Scholar
Griffiths, A. (1996) Prints and printmaking: An introduction to the history and techniques, 2nd edition. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Grillo, F. (2019) Hero of Alexandria’s Automata: A critical edition and translation, including a commentary on Book One. Glasgow: University of Glasgow. Available at: http://theses.gla.ac.uk/76774/ (accessed November 2, 2021).Google Scholar
Gros, P. (1996) “Les illustrations du De Architectura de Vitruve: histoire d’un malentendu,” in Nicolet, C. and Gros, P. (eds.), Les littératures techniques dans l’Antiquité romaine. Geneva: Fondation Hardt, pp. 1944.Google Scholar
Grosseteste, R. (1912) Die Philosophischen Werke des Robert Grosseteste, Bischofs von Lincoln. Edited by Baur, L.. Münster: Aschendorff.Google Scholar
Guillaumin, J.-Y. (1992) “La signification des termes contemplatio et observatio chez Balbus et l’influence héronienne sur le traité,” in Guillaumin, J.-Y. (ed.), Mathématiques dans l’Antiquité. Saint-Étienne: Université de Saint-Étienne, pp. 205–14.Google Scholar
Guillaumin, J.-Y. (1997) “L’éloge de la géométrie dans la préface du livre 3 des ‘Metrica’ d’Héron d’Alexandrie,” Revue des études anciennes, 99(1), pp. 9199.Google Scholar
Gurd, S. (2007) “Cicero and editorial revision,” Classical Antiquity, 26(1), pp. 4980.Google Scholar
Gurd, S. A. (2012) Work in progress: Literary revision as social performance in ancient Rome. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Hairie, A. (2000) “Aspects pratiques de la ‘Dioptre’ d’Héron d’Alexandrie: étude théorique et expérimentale de la précision de mesures réalisables,” in Argoud, G. and Guillaumin, J.-Y. (eds.), Autour de “La Dioptre” d’Héron d’Alexandrie. Saint-Étienne: Publications de l’Université de Saint-Étienne, pp. 257–71.Google Scholar
Hammer-Jensen, I. (1913) “Ptolemaios und Heron,” Hermes, 48(2), pp. 224–35.Google Scholar
Handis, M. W. (2013) “Myth and history: Galen and the Alexandrian Library,” in König, J., Oikonomopoulou, A., and Woolf, G. (eds.), Ancient libraries. Cambridge/New York: Cambridge University Press, pp. 364376.Google Scholar
Hannah, R. (2009) Time in antiquity. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Harder, A. (2013) “From text to text: The impact of the Alexandrian Library on the work of Hellenistic poets,” in König, J., Oikonomopoulou, A., and Woolf, G. (eds.), Ancient libraries. Cambridge/New York: Cambridge University Press, pp. 96108.Google Scholar
Hardiman, C. I. (2013) “‘Alexandrianism’ again: Regionalism, Alexandria, and aesthetics,” in Ager, S. L. and Faber, R. (eds.), Belonging and isolation in the Hellenistic world. Toronto: University of Toronto Press (Phoenix. Supplementary volume, 51), pp. 199222.Google Scholar
Hardwick, L. (2020) “Aspirations and mantras in classical reception research: Can there really be dialogue between ancient and modern?” in de Pourcq, M., de Haan, N., and Rijser, D. (eds.), Framing classical reception studies: Different perspectives on a developing field. Leiden: Brill (Metaforms: Studies in the reception of classical antiquity, volume 19), pp. 1532.Google Scholar
Haskins, C. H. (1960) Studies in the history of mediaeval science. New York: Ungar Publishing Company.Google Scholar
Hatzimichali, M. (2013a) “Ashes to ashes? The Library of Alexandria after 48 bc,” in König, J., Oikonomopoulou, A., and Woolf, G. (eds.), Ancient libraries. Cambridge/New York: Cambridge University Press, pp. 167–82.Google Scholar
Hatzimichali, M. (2013b) “Encyclopaedism in the Alexandrian Library,” in König, J. and Woolf, G. (eds.), Encyclopaedism from antiquity to the Renaissance, pp. 64–83.Google Scholar
Heath, T. L. (1921) A history of Greek mathematics. Oxford: Clarendon Press.Google Scholar
Heiberg, J. L. (1892) Les premiers manuscrits grecs de la bibliothèque papale (1 online resource (16 pages) volume). Copenhagen: Bianco Luno (CIC NEH Dittenberger-Vahlen Microfilming Project, v. 21, no. 4).Google Scholar
Henninger-Voss, M. (2000) “Working machines and noble mechanics: Guidobaldo del Monte and the translation of knowledge,” Isis, 91(2), pp. 233–59.Google Scholar
Henninger-Voss, M. (2007) “Comets and cannonballs: Reading technology in a sixteenth-century library,” in Roberts, L., Schaffer, S., and Dear, P. (eds.), The mindful hand: Inquiry and invention from the late Renaissance to early industrialisation. Amsterdam/Bristol: Koninkliijke Nederlandse Akademie van Wetenschappen, pp. 1031.Google Scholar
Herder, J. G. (1889) Herders Werke. Stuttgart: Union deutsche verlagsgesellschaft.Google Scholar
Herder, J. G. (2002) Sculpture: Some observations on shape and form from Pygmalion’s creative dream. Translated by J. Gaiger. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Hero (1851) The pneumatics of Hero of Alexandria, from the original Greek. Translated by B. Woodcroft. London: Taylor, Walton and Maberly.Google Scholar
Hero (1864) Heronis Alexandrini Geometricorum et Stereometricorum reliquiae: accedunt Didymi Alexandrini Mensurae marmorum et anonymi variae collectiones ex Herone, Euclide, Gemino, Proclo, Anatolio aliisque. Edited by Hultsch, F.. Berlin: apud Weidmannos.Google Scholar
Hero (1976a) Heronis Alexandrini opera quae supersunt omnia (vol. 1). Edited by Schmidt, W.. Stuttgart: Teubner.Google Scholar
Hero (1976b) Heronis Alexandrini opera quae supersunt omnia (vol. 2). Edited by Schmidt, W. and Nix, L. L. M.. Stuttgart: Teubner.Google Scholar
Hero (1976c) Heronis Alexandrini opera quae supersunt omnia (vol. 3). Edited by Schöne, H.. Stuttgart: Teubner.Google Scholar
Hero (1976d) Heronis Alexandrini opera quae supersunt omnia (vol. 4). Edited by Heiberg, J. L.. Stuttgart: Teubner.Google Scholar
Hero (1976e) Heronis Alexandrini opera quae supersunt omnia (vol. 5). Edited by Heiberg, J. L.. Stuttgart: Teubner.Google Scholar
Hero (1976f) “Pneumatica,” in Schmidt, W. (ed.), Heronis Alexandrini opera quae supersunt omnia. Stuttgart: Teubner, pp. 2332.Google Scholar
Hero (1976g) “Automata,” in Schmidt, W. (ed.) Heronis Alexandrini opera quae supersunt omnia. Stuttgart: Teubner, pp. 338452.Google Scholar
Hero (1997) Les Pneumatiques d’Héron d’Alexandrie. Edited by Argoud, G. and Guillaumin, J.-Y.. Saint-Étienne: Publications de l’Université de Saint-Étienne.Google Scholar
Hero (2003) Erone di Alessandria: le radici filosofico-matematiche della tecnologia applicata: Definitiones: testo, traduzione e commento. Edited by Giardina, G. R.. Catania: CUECM.Google Scholar
Hero (2014) Metrica. Edited by Acerbi, F. and Vitrac, B.. Pisa: Fabrizio Serra Editore (Mathematica graeca antiqua, 4).Google Scholar
Hero and Qusṭā ibn Lūqā (1988) Les mécaniques, ou l’élévateur des corps lourds. Translated by B. Carra de Vaux. Paris: Les Belles Lettres.Google Scholar
Hero and Qusṭā ibn Lūqā (2016) The Baroulkos and the Mechanics of Heron. Edited by Ferriello, G., Gatto, M., and Gatto, R.. Firenze: L.S. Olschki (Biblioteca di Nuncius, 76).Google Scholar
Hirschfeld, O. (1901) Die Rangtitel der römischen Kaiserzeit (Sitzungsberichte der Königlich Preussischen Akademie der Wissenschaften zu Berlin, 25). Berlin: Verlag der Königlich Akademie der Wissenschaften.Google Scholar
Hogg, D. (2013) “Libraries in a Greek working life: Dionysius of Halicarnassus, a case study in Rome,” in König, J., Oikonomopoulou, A., and Woolf, G. (eds.), Ancient libraries. Cambridge/New York: Cambridge University Press, pp. 137–51.Google Scholar
Hopkins, D. (2010) Conversing with antiquity: English poets and the classics, from Shakespeare to Pope. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Hunt, J. D. (2016) Garden and grove: The Italian Renaissance garden in the English imagination, 1600–1750. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press.Google Scholar
Iulius Africanus (2012) Cesti: The extant fragments. Edited by Wallraff, M. et al. Translated by W. Adler. Berlin/Boston: De Gruyter (Die Griechischen Christlichen Schriftsteller der Ersten Jahrhunderte Ser., N.F. 18).Google Scholar
Jacob, C. (1998) “La bibliothèque, la carte et le traité: Les orms de l’accumulation du savoir à Alexandrie,” in Argoud, G. and Guillaumin, J.-Y. (eds.), Sciences exactes et sciences appliquées à Alexandrie. Saint-Étienne: Publications de l’Université de Saint-Étienne, pp. 1937.Google Scholar
Jacob, C. (2013) “Fragments of a history of ancient libraries,” in König, J., Oikonomopoulou, A., and Woolf, G. (eds.), Ancient libraries. Cambridge/New York: Cambridge University Press, pp. 5784.Google Scholar
Jacobs, J. (1992) Systems of survival: A dialogue on the moral foundations of commerce and politics. New York: Random House.Google Scholar
Jaeger, M. (2002) “Cicero and Archimedes’ tomb,” The Journal of Roman Studies, 92, pp. 4961.Google Scholar
Jaeger, M. (2008) Archimedes and the Roman imagination. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.Google Scholar
Johns, A. (1998) The nature of the book: Print and knowledge in the making. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Jones, A. (2013) “P. Cornell. inv. 69 revisited: A collection of geometrical problems,” in Ast, R. et al. (eds.), Papyrological texts in honor of Roger S. Bagnall. Durham, North Carolina: The American Society of Papyrologists, pp. 159175.Google Scholar
Kanerva, L. (2006) Between science and drawings: Renaissance architects on Vitruvius’s educational ideas. Helsinki: Finnish Academy of Science and Letters.Google Scholar
Katz, J. T. (2016) “Etymological ‘alterity’: Depths and heights,” in Butler, S. (ed.), Deep classics: Rethinking classical reception. London: Bloomsbury Academic, pp. 107–26.Google Scholar
Keller, A. G. (1967) “Pneumatics, automata and the vacuum in the work of Giambattista Aleotti,” The British Journal for the History of Science, 3(4), pp. 338–47.Google Scholar
Keyser, P. (1988) “Suetonius Nero 41.2 and the date of Heron Mechanicus of Alexandria,” Classical Philology, 83, pp. 218–20.Google Scholar
Keyser, P. (1992) “A new look at Heron’s ‘steam engine’,” Archive for History of Exact Sciences, 44(2), pp. 107–24.Google Scholar
Keyser, P. T. (2013) “The name and nature of science: Authorship in social and evolutionary context,” in Asper, M. and Kanthak, A.-M. (eds.), Writing science: Medical and mathematical authorship in ancient Greece. Berlin: De Gruyter, pp. 1761.Google Scholar
Keyser, P. T. (2018) “Science in the 2nd and 3rd centuries ce: An aporetic age,” in Keyser, P. T. and Scarborough, J. (eds.), Oxford handbook of science and medicine in the classical world. Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 829–46.Google Scholar
Keyser, P. T. (2020) Recovering a late-antique edition of Pliny’s Natural History (Online-Ressource, XII, 282 Seiten 13 Illustrationen vol). New York: Peter Lang. Available at: https://doi.org/10.3726/b15521 (accessed April 23, 2021).Google Scholar
Keyser, P. T. and Irby-Massie, G. L. (2008) The encyclopedia of ancient natural scientists: The Greek tradition and its many heirs. London/New York: Routledge.Google Scholar
Kikuchi, C. (ed.) (2018) La Venise des livres: 1469–1530. Ceyzérieu: Champ Vallon (Époques, 0298-4792).Google Scholar
Knorr, W. R. (1978) “Archimedes and the elements: Proposal for a revised chronological ordering of the Archimedean corpus,” Archive for History of Exact Sciences, 19(3), pp. 211–90.Google Scholar
Knorr, W. R. (1989) Textual studies in ancient and medieval geometry. Boston: Birkhäuser.Google Scholar
König, J. and Woolf, G. (2013) “Encyclopaedism in the Roman Empire,” in König, J. and Woolf, G. (eds.), Encyclopaedism from antiquity to the Renaissance. Cambridge/New York: Cambridge University Press, pp. 2363.Google Scholar
Krafft, F. (1970) Dynamische und statische Betrachtungsweise in der antiken Mechanik. Wiesbaden: Steiner.Google Scholar
Krafft, F. (1973) “Kunst und Natur: Die Heronische Frage und die Technik in der klassischen Antike,” Antike und Abendland; Beiträge zum Verständnis der Griechen und Römer und ihres Nachlebens, 19, pp. 119.Google Scholar
Lachmann, K. (ed.) (1848) Die Schriften der römischen Feldmesser. Berlin: G. Reimer.Google Scholar
Laird, W. R. (1991) “Archimedes among the humanists,” Isis, 82(4), pp. 628–38.Google Scholar
Laird, W. R. (2017) “Hero of Alexandria and Renaissance mechanics,” in Mathematical practitioners and the transformation of natural knowledge in early modern Europe. Cham: Springer (Studies in History and Philosophy of Science), pp. 149165.Google Scholar
Landels, J. G. (2000) Engineering in the ancient world, revised edition. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Lang, P. (2011) “Medical and ethnic identities in Hellenistic Egypt,” Apeiron, 37(4), pp. 107–32.Google Scholar
Latour, B. (1986) “Visualisation and cognition: Drawing things together,” Knowledge and Society: Studies in the Sociology of Culture Past and Present, 6, pp. 140.Google Scholar
Lendle, O. (1983) Texte und Untersuchungen zum technischen Bereich der antiken Poliorketik. Wiesbaden: Steiner.Google Scholar
Leventhal, M. (2017) “Eratosthenes’ letter to Ptolemy: The literary mechanics of empire,” American Journal of Philology, 138(1), pp. 4384.Google Scholar
Lévy, T. and Vitrac, B. (2018) “Hero of Alexandria and Mordekhai Komtino: The encounter between mathematics in Hebrew and the Greek metrological corpus in fifteenth-century Constantinople,” Aleph: Historical Studies in Science & Judaism, 18(2), pp. 181262.Google Scholar
Lewis, M. J. T. (2001) Surveying instruments of Greece and Rome. Cambridge/New York: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Lewis, M. J. T. (2012) “Greek and Roman surveying and surveying instruments,” in Talbert, R. J. A. (ed.), Ancient perspectives: Maps and their place in Mesopotamia, Egypt, Greece, and Rome. Chicago/London: University of Chicago Press, pp. 129–62.Google Scholar
Lichius, B. and Ali, R. (2013) Hero of Alexandria #1. San Diego: Ape Entertainment.Google Scholar
Lloyd, G. E. R. (1971) Early Greek science: Thales to Aristotle. New York: Norton.Google Scholar
Lloyd, G. E. R. (1975) “A note on Erasistratus of Ceos,” The Journal of Hellenic Studies, 95, pp. 172–75.Google Scholar
Lowry, M. (1979) The world of Aldus Manutius: Business and scholarship in Renaissance Venice. Ithaca: Cornell University Press.Google Scholar
Maclean, C. (1905) “The principle of the hydraulic organ,” Sammelbände der Internationalen Musikgesellschaft, 6(2), pp. 183236.Google Scholar
Mansfeld, J. (1998) Prolegomena mathematica: From Apollonius of Perga to late Neoplatonism: With an appendix on Pappus and the history of Platonism. Leiden: Brill.Google Scholar
Marasco, G. (1998) “Cléopâtre et les sciences de son temps,” in Argoud, G. and Guillaumin, J.-Y. (eds.), Sciences exactes et sciences appliquées à Alexandrie. Saint-Étienne: Publications de l’Université de Saint-Étienne, pp. 3953.Google Scholar
Marr, A. (2006) “Gentille curiosité’: Wonder-working and the culture of automata in the late Renaissance,” in Marr, A. and Evans, R. J. W. (eds.), Curiosity and wonder from the Renaissance to the Enlightenment. Aldershot: Ashgate, pp. 149–70.Google Scholar
Marr, A. (2011) Between Raphael and Galileo: Mutio Oddi and the mathematical culture of late Renaissance Italy. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Marsden, E. W. (1969) Greek and Roman artillery: Historical development. Oxford: Clarendon Press.Google Scholar
Marsden, E. W. (1971) Greek and Roman artillery: Technical treatises. Oxford: Clarendon Press.Google Scholar
Marshall, C. W. (2003) “Sophocles’ Nauplius and Heron of Alexandria’s mechanical theater,” in Sommerstein, A. H. (ed.), Shards from Kolonos: Studies in Sophoclean fragments. Bari: Levante, pp. 261–79.Google Scholar
Martin, T. H. (1854) Recherches sur la vie et les ouvrages d’Héron d’Alexandrie, disciple de Ctésibius, et sur tous les ouvrages mathématiques grecs, conservés ou perdus, publiés ou inédits, qui ont été attribués à un auteur nommé Héron. Paris: Imprimerie impérial.Google Scholar
Martindale, C. (1993) Redeeming the text: Latin poetry and the hermeneutics of reception. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Martindale, C. (2013) “Reception – A new humanism? Receptivity, pedagogy, the transhistorical,” Classical Receptions Journal, 5(2), pp. 169–83.Google Scholar
Martínez, V. M. and Senseney, M. F. (2013) “The professional and his books: Special libraries in the ancient world,” in König, J., Oikonomopoulou, A., and Woolf, G. (eds.), Ancient libraries. Cambridge/New York: Cambridge University Press, pp. 401–16.Google Scholar
Masià, J. (2015) “On dating Hero of Alexandria,” Archive for History of Exact Sciences, 69(3), pp. 231–55.Google Scholar
Mayer, M. and Olesti Vila, O. (2001) “La sortitio de Ilici. Del documento epigráfico al paisaje histórico,” Dialogues d’histoire ancienne, 27(1), pp. 109–30.Google Scholar
McEwen, I. K. (2003) Vitruvius: Writing the body of architecture. Cambridge: MIT Press.Google Scholar
McEwen, I.K. (2016) “The architectonic book,” in Sanvito, P. (ed.), Vitruvianism: Origins and transformations. Berlin: De Gruyter, pp. 101–11.Google Scholar
Méasson, A. (1994) “Alexandrea ad Aegyptum,” in Argoud, G. (ed.), Science et vie intellectuelle à Alexandrie (Ier–IIIe siècle après J.-C.). Saint-Étienne: Publications de l’Université de Saint-Étienne, pp. 952.Google Scholar
Meißner, B. (1999) Die technologische Fachliteratur der Antike: Struktur, Uberlieferung und Wirkung technischen Wissens in der Antike (ca. 400 v. Chr.–ca. 500 n. Chr.). Berlin: Akademie Verlag.Google Scholar
Micheli, G. (2005) “La traduzione de gli Automata di Erone,” in Nenci, E. (ed.), Bernardino Baldi (1553–1617) studioso rinascimentale: poesia, storia, linguistica, meccanica, architettura: atti del convegno di studi di Milano, 19–21 novembre 2003. Milan: FrancoAngeli, pp. 247–68.Google Scholar
Middleton, F. (2020) “Of mice and manuscripts: Literary reception and the material text,” in de Pourcq, M., de Haan, N., and Rijser, D. (eds.), Framing classical reception studies: Different perspectives on a developing field. Leiden: Brill (Metaforms: Studies in the reception of classical antiquity, volume 19), pp. 7280.Google Scholar
Moatti, C. (1993) Archives et partage de la terre dans le monde romain (IIe siècle avant–Ier siècle après J.-C.). Rome: École française de Rome.Google Scholar
Morgan, L. (2007) Nature as model: Salomon de Caus and early seventeenth-century landscape design. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press.Google Scholar
Murphy, T. M. (2004) Pliny the Elder’s Natural history: The empire in the encyclopedia. Oxford/New York: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Needham, P. (2000) “Concepts of paper study,” in Mosser, D. W., Saffle, M., and Sullivan, E. W. (eds.), Puzzles in paper: Concepts in historical watermarks: Essays from the International Conference on the History, Function and Study of Watermarks, Roanoke, Virginia, 1st edition. New Castle/London: Oak Knoll Press/British Library, pp. 136.Google Scholar
Netz, R. (1998) “Deuteronomic texts: Late antiquity and the history of mathematics,” Revue d’histoire des mathématiques, 4(2), pp. 261–88.Google Scholar
Netz, R. (2009) Ludic proof: Greek mathematics and the Alexandrian aesthetic. New York: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Netz, R. (2011) “The bibliosphere of ancient science (outside of Alexandria),” NTM International Journal of History and Ethics of Natural Sciences, Technology and Medicine, 19(3), pp. 239–69.Google Scholar
Netz, R. (2017) “Mathematical expertise and ancient writing more geometrico,” in König, J. and Woolf, G. (eds.), Authority and expertise in ancient scientific culture. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 374408.Google Scholar
Neugebauer, O. (1938) Über eine Methode zur Distanzbestimmung Alexandria-Rom bei Heron. Copenhagen: Levin and Munksgaard (Historisk-filologiske meddelelser, 26).Google Scholar
Neugebauer, O. (1969) The exact sciences in antiquity. New York: Dover Publications.Google Scholar
Neugebauer, O. (1975) A history of ancient mathematical astronomy. Berlin/New York: Springer-Verlag (Studies in the history of mathematics and physical sciences, v. 1).Google Scholar
Nichols, M. F. (2017) Author and audience in Vitruvius’ De architectura. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Nicolet, C. (1991) Space, geography, and politics in the early Roman Empire. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.Google Scholar
Nicomachus (1972) Introduction to arithmetic. New York: Johnson Reprint Corp.Google Scholar
Nightingale, P. (2009) “Tacit knowledge and engineering design,” in Meijers, A. (ed.), Philosophy of technology and engineering sciences. Amsterdam/London/Boston: Elsevier/North Holland, pp. 351–74.Google Scholar
Noble, J. V. and Price, D. J. de S. (1968) “The water clock in the Tower of the Winds,” American Journal of Archaeology, 72(4), pp. 345–55.Google Scholar
Novara, A. (1994) “Faire œuvre utile: la mesure de l’ambition chez Vitruve,” in Gros, P. (ed.), Le projet de Vitruve: objet, destinataires et réception du De architectura. Rome: Ecole française de Rome, pp. 4761.Google Scholar
Novara, A. (2005) Auctor in bibliotheca: essai sur les textes préfaciels de Vitruve et une philosophie latine du livre. Louvain/Dudley: Peeters (Bibliothèque d’études classiques, 46).Google Scholar
Nutton, V. (2009) “Galen’s authorial voice: A preliminary enquiry,” in Taub, L. C. and Doody, A. (eds.), Authorial voices in Greco-Roman technical writing. Trier: Wissenschaftlicher Verlag Trier, pp. 5362.Google Scholar
Nutton, V. (2012) “Galen and Roman medicine: Or can a Greek become a Latin?European Review; Cambridge, 20(4), pp. 534–42.Google Scholar
Pappus (1986) Book 7 of the collection. Edited by Jones, A.. New York: Springer-Verlag.Google Scholar
Peachin, M. (2004) Frontinus and the curae of the curator aquarum. Stuttgart: Steiner.Google Scholar
Pedersen, O. (1974) A survey of the Almagest. Odense: Odense Universitetsforlag.Google Scholar
Perilli, L. (2006) “‘Il dio ha evidentemente studiato medicina.’ Libri di medicina nelle biblioteche antiche: il caso dei santuari di Asclepio,” in Naso, A. (ed.), Stranieri e non cittadini nei santuari greci: atti del convegno internazionale. Grassina (Firenze): Le Monnier Università, pp. 472510.Google Scholar
Peterson, M. A. (2011) Galileo’s muse: Renaissance mathematics and the arts. Cambridge: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Pfeiffer, R. (1968) History of classical scholarship from the beginnings to the end of the Hellenistic age. Oxford: Clarendon Press.Google Scholar
Philo (1902) Le Livre des appareils pneumatiques et des machines hydrauliques, par Philon de Byzance, édité d’après les versions arabes d’Oxford et de Constantinople, et traduit en français par le Baron Carra de Vaux. Translated by B. Carra de Vaux. Paris: C. Klincksieck.Google Scholar
Philo (1974) Pneumatica: the first treatise on experimental physics, western version and eastern version. Facsimile and transcript of the Latin manuscript, CLM 534, Bayer. Staatsbibliothek, Munich. Translation and illustrations of the Arabic manuscript, A.S. 3713, Aya-Sofya, Istanbul. Translated by F. D. Prager. Wiesbaden: Reichert.Google Scholar
Philo (2001) “Les Pneumatiques de Philon de Byzance,” in Sezgin, F. (ed.), Carra de Vaux, B. (trans.), Archimedes and Philon in the Arabic tradition: Texts and studies. Frankfurt am Main: Institute for the History of Arabic-Islamic Science at the Johann Wolfgang Goethe University.Google Scholar
Piccione, R. M. (2021) Greeks, books and libraries in Renaissance Venice. Berlin: De Gruyter (Transmissisons, 1).Google Scholar
Piganiol, A. (1962) Les documents cadastraux de la colonie romaine d’Orange. Paris: Centre national de la recherche scientifique.Google Scholar
Plato (1940) Plato latinus. Edited by Klibansky, R. et al. Translated by Henricus Aristippus. London: Warburg Institute.Google Scholar
Polanyi, M. (2009) The tacit dimension. Chicago/London: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Pon, L. and Kallendorf, C. (eds.) (2009) Il libro Veneziano – The books of Venice. Venice: La Musa Talìa.Google Scholar
Prou, V. (1884) “Les théâtres d’automates en Grèce au IIe siècle avant l’ère chrétienne d’après les Αὐτοματοποιῖκὰ d’Héron d’Alexandrie,” Mémoires présentés par divers savants étrangers à l’Académie, 9(2), pp. 117274.Google Scholar
Ptolemy (2000) Ptolemy’s Geography: An annotated translation of the theoretical chapters. Edited by Berggren, J. L. and Jones, A.. Princeton: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Renn, J., Damerow, P., and McLaughlin, P. (2003) “Aristotle, Archimedes, Euclid, and the origin of mechanics: The perspective of historical epistemology,” in Montesinos Sirera, J. L. (ed.), Symposium Arquímedes Fundacion Canaria Orotava de Historia de la Ciencia. Berlin: Max-Planck-Inst. für Wissenschaftsgeschichte, pp. 4359.Google Scholar
Riggsby, A. (2019) Mosaics of knowledge: Representing information in the Roman world. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Rihll, T. E. (2007) The catapult: A history. Yardley: Westholme Publishing.Google Scholar
Risselada, R. (1993) Imperatives and other directive expressions in Latin: A study in the pragmatics of a dead language. Amsterdam: J.C. Gieben.Google Scholar
Robbins, F. E. (1923) “A Greco-Egyptian mathematical papyrus,” Classical Philology, 18(4), pp. 328–33.Google Scholar
Roberts, L., Schaffer, S., and Dear, P. (eds.) (2007) The mindful hand: Inquiry and invention from the late Renaissance to early industrialisation. Amsterdam/Bristol: Koninkliijke Nederlandse Akademie van Wetenschappen.Google Scholar
Roby, C. (2013) “Natura machinata: Artifacts and nature as reciprocal models in Vitruvius,” Apeiron, 46(4), pp. 419–45.Google Scholar
Roby, C. (2014a) “Experiencing geometry in Roman surveyors’ texts,” Nuncius: Journal of the History of Science, 29(1), pp. 952.Google Scholar
Roby, C. (2014b) “Seneca’s scientific fictions: Models as fictions in the Natural Questions,” The Journal of Roman Studies, 104, pp. 155–80.Google Scholar
Roby, C. (2016a) Technical ekphrasis in Greek and Roman science and literature: The written machine between Alexandria and Rome. Cambridge/New York: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Roby, C. (2016b) “Embodiment in Latin technical texts,” in Short, W. M. (ed.), Embodiment in Latin semantics. Amsterdam: John Benjamins (Studies in language companion series, 374), pp. 211–38.Google Scholar
Roby, C. (2017) “Framing technologies in Hero and Ptolemy,” in Platt, V. J. and Squire, M. (eds.), The frame in classical art: A cultural history. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 514–43.Google Scholar
Roby, C. (2018) “Geometer, in a landscape: Embodied mathematics in Hero’s Dioptra,” in Sialaros, M. (ed.), Revolutions and continuity in Greek mathematics. Berlin/Boston: De Gruyter, pp. 6788.Google Scholar
Roby, C. (2020) “Popular mechanics: Hero of Alexandria from antiquity to the Renaissance,” in Muñoz Morcillo, J. and Robertson-von Trotha, C. Y. (eds.), Genealogy of popular science: From ancient ecphrasis to virtual reality. Bielefeld: Transcript (History of science and technology, 1), pp. 221–43.Google Scholar
Roby, C. (2021) “Moving wood, man immobile: Hero’s Automata at the Urbino court,” in Hedreen, G. M. (ed.), Material world: The intersection of art, science, and nature in ancient literature and its Renaissance reception. Leiden: Brill (NIKI studies in Netherlandish–Italian art history), pp. 108–32.Google Scholar
Rome, A. (1938) “Review of Über eine Methode zur Distanzbestimmung Alexandria-Rom bei Heron. (K. Danske Videnskabernes Selskab. Hist.-filologisk Meddelelser. XXVI (1938), fasc. 2),” L’Antiquité Classique, 7(2), pp. 460–62.Google Scholar
Rose, P. L. (1975) The Italian Renaissance of mathematics: Studies on humanists and mathematicians from Petrarch to Galileo. Geneva: Librairie Droz.Google Scholar
Rose, P. L. and Drake, S. (1971) “The Pseudo-Aristotelian questions of mechanics in Renaissance culture,” Studies in the Renaissance, 18, pp. 65104.Google Scholar
Rose, V. (1866) “Die Lücke im Diogenes Laërtius und der alte Übersetzer,” Hermes: Zeitschrift für klassische Philologie, 1, pp. 367–97.Google Scholar
Roux, S. (1992) “Le premier livre des Equilibres plans: Réflexions sur la mécanique archimédienne,” in Guillaumin, J.-Y. (ed.), Mathématiques dans l’Antiquité. Saint-Étienne: Université de Saint-Étienne, pp. 95160.Google Scholar
Rudhardt, J. (1978) “Trois Problèmes de Géométrie, Conservés Par Un Papyrus Genevois,” Museum Helveticum, 35(4), pp. 233–40.Google Scholar
Sáez Fernández, P. (1990) “Estudio sobre una inscripción catastral colindante con Lacimurga,” Habis, 21, pp. 205–28.Google Scholar
Saito, K. and Sidoli, N. (2010) “The function of diorism in ancient Greek analysis,” Historia Mathematica, 37(4), pp. 579614.Google Scholar
Sanvito, P. (ed.) (2016) Vitruvianism: Origins and transformations. Berlin: De Gruyter.Google Scholar
Schiefsky, M. (2008) “Theory and practice in Heron’s mechanics,” in Laird, W. R. and Roux, S. (eds.), Mechanics and natural philosophy before the scientific revolution. Dordrecht/London: Springer, pp. 1549.Google Scholar
Schiefsky, M. (2015) “Technē and method in ancient artillery construction: The Belopoeica of Philo of Byzantium,” in Holmes, B. and Fischer, K.-D. (eds.), The Frontiers of ancient science: Essays in honor of Heinrich von Staden. Berlin: De Gruyter, pp. 613–51.Google Scholar
Schipke, R. (2013) Das Buch in der Spätantike: Herstellung, Form, Ausstattung und Verbreitung in der westlichen Reichshälfte des Imperium Romanum. Wiesbaden: Reichert.Google Scholar
Schub, P. (1932) “A mathematical text by Mordecai Comtino (Constantinople, XV century),” Isis, 17(1), pp. 5470.Google Scholar
Schumacher, L. (2018) “Hausgesinde – Hofgesinde: Terminologische Überlegungen zur Funktion der Familia Caesaris im 1. Jh. n. Chr.,” in Historischer Realismus: kleine Schriften zur alten Geschichte. Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, pp. 179202.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schürmann, A. (1991) Griechische Mechanik und antike Gesellschaft: Studien zur staatlichen Förderung einer technischen Wissenschaft. Stuttgart: Steiner.Google Scholar
Schürmann, A. (2002) “Pneumatics on stage in Pompeii: Ancient automatic devices and their social context,” in Castagnetti, G. (ed.), Homo faber: Studies on nature, technology, and science at the time of Pompeii. Rome: “L’Erma” di Bretschneider, pp. 3556.Google Scholar
Serrai, A. (2002) Bernardino Baldi: la vita, le opere, la biblioteca. Milan: S. Bonnard.Google Scholar
Shapin, S. and Schaffer, S. (1985) Leviathan and the air-pump: Hobbes, Boyle, and the experimental life: Including a translation of Thomas Hobbes, Dialogus physicus de natura aeris by Simon Schaffer. Princeton: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Shelton, J. (1981) “Mathematical problems on a papyrus from the Gent Collection (SB III 6951 Verso),” Zeitschrift Für Papyrologie Und Epigraphik, 42, pp. 9194.Google Scholar
Sidoli, N. (2011) “Heron of Alexandria’s date,” Centaurus, 53(1), pp. 5561.Google Scholar
Sidoli, N. (2018) “The concept of given in Greek mathematics,” Archive for History of Exact Sciences, 72(4), pp. 353402.Google Scholar
Silberberg, M. (1905) “Ein handschriftliches hebräisch-mathematisches Werk des Mordechai Comtino (15. Jahrhundert),” Jahrbuch der Jüdisch-Literarischen Gesellschaft, 3, pp. 277292.Google Scholar
Silberberg, M. (1906) “Ein handschriftliches hebräisch-mathematisches Werk des Mordechai Comtino (15. Jahrhundert),” Jahrbuch der Jüdisch-Literarischen Gesellschaft, 4, pp. 214–37.Google Scholar
Slaney, H. (2016) “Perceiving (in) depth: Landscape, sculpture, ruin,” in Butler, S. (ed.), Deep classics: Rethinking classical reception. London: Bloomsbury Academic, pp. 87105.Google Scholar
Souffrin, P. (2000) “Remarques sur la datation de la ‘Dioptre’ d’Héron par l’éclipse de lune de 62,” in Argoud, G. and Guillaumin, J.-Y. (eds.), Autour de “La Dioptre” d’Héron d’Alexandrie. Saint-Étienne: Publications de l’Université de Saint-Étienne, pp. 1317.Google Scholar
von Staden, H. (1989) Herophilus: The art of medicine in early Alexandria: Edition, translation and essays. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
von Staden, H. (1996) “Body and machine: Interactions between medicine, mechanics, and philosophy in early Alexandria,” in J. Paul Getty Center for the History of Art and the Humanities (ed.), Alexandria and Alexandrianism. Malibu: J. Paul Getty Museum, pp. 85106.Google Scholar
von Staden, H. (1999) “Celsus as historian?” in van der Eijk, P. J. (ed.), Ancient histories of medicine, Leiden: Brill (Studies in Ancient Medicine, volume 20), pp. 251–94.Google Scholar
Stein, A. (1912) Griechische Rangtitel in der römischen Kaiserzeit. Vienna: Gerold.Google Scholar
Stone, M. E. (2000) The Armenian texts of Epiphanius of Salamis De mensuris et ponderibus. Leuven: Peeters.Google Scholar
Straton (1944) “Fragmenta,” in Wehrli, F. (ed.), Die Schule des Aristoteles, Texte und Kommentare. Basel: B. Schwabe, pp. 1242.Google Scholar
Stückelberger, A. (1994) Bild und Wort: das illustrierte Fachbuch in der antiken Naturwissenschaft, Medizin und Technik. Mainz am Rhein: P. von Zabern.Google Scholar
Swain, S. (1996) Hellenism and empire: Language, classicism, and power in the Greek world, ad 50–250. Oxford: Clarendon Press.Google Scholar
Taisbak, C. M. and Bülow-Jacobsen, A. (2003) “P. Cornell inv. 69: Fragment of a handbook in geometry,” in Piltz, A. (ed.), For particular reasons: Studies in honour of Jerker Blomqvist. Lund: Nordic Academic Press, pp. 5470.Google Scholar
Takács, S. A. (1995) “Alexandria in Rome,” Harvard Studies in Classical Philology, 97, pp. 263–76.Google Scholar
Tannery, P. (1883) Sciences exactes dans l’antiquité. Toulouse: Edouard Privat.Google Scholar
Taub, L. C. (2008) “Eratosthenes sends greetings to King Ptolemy,” in Dauben, J. W. (ed.), Mathematics celestial and terrestrial: Festschrift für Menso Folkerts zum 65. Geburtstag. Stuttgart: Deutsche Akademie der Naturforscher Leopoldina; Wissenschaftliche Verlagsgesellschaft, pp. 285302.Google Scholar
Tittel, K. (1901) “Heron und seine Fachgenossen,” Rheinisches Museum für Philologie, 56(3), pp. 404–15.Google Scholar
Toneatto, L. (1994) Codices artis mensoriae: i manoscritti degli antichi opuscoli latini d’agrimensura (V–XIX sec.). Spoleto: Centro italiano di studi sull’alto Medioevo.Google Scholar
Too, Y. L. (2010) The idea of the library in the ancient world. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Torello-Hill, G. (2015) “The exegesis of Vitruvius and the creation of theatrical spaces in Renaissance Ferrara,” Renaissance Studies, 29(2), pp. 227–46.Google Scholar
Truitt, E. R. (2015) Medieval robots: Mechanism, magic, nature, and art. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press.Google Scholar
Tybjerg, K. (2003) “Wonder-making and philosophical wonder in Hero of Alexandria,” Studies in the History and Philosophy of Science, 34, pp. 443–66.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tybjerg, K. (2004) “Hero of Alexandria’s mechanical geometry,” Apeiron, 37, pp. 2956.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ugolini, F. (1859) Versi e prose scelte de Bernardino Baldi: Ordinate e annotate. Firenze: Felice Le Monnier.Google Scholar
Vallance, J. (2000) “Doctors in the library: The strange tale of Apollonius the Bookworm and other stories,” in MacLeod, R. M. (ed.), The Library of Alexandria: centre of learning in the ancient world. London: I.B. Tauris, pp. 95115.Google Scholar
Valleriani, M. (2007) “From ‘condensation’ to ‘compression’: How Renaissance Italian engineers approached Hero’s Pneumatics,” in Böhme, H., Rapp, C., and Rösler, W. (eds.), Übersetzung und Transformation. Berlin/New York: De Gruyter, pp. 333–53.Google Scholar
Valleriani, M. (2014) “Ancient pneumatics transformed during the early modern period,” Nuncius: Journal of the History of Science, 29, pp. 127–73.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
van Dyck, M. (2013) “‘Argumentandi modus huius scientiae maxime proprius.’ Guidobaldo’s mechanics and the question of mathematical principles,” in Becchi, A., Meli, D. B., and Gamba, E. (eds.), Guidobaldo del Monte (1545–1607): Theory and practice of the mathematical disciplines from Urbino to Europe. Berlin: Max-Planck-Gesellschaft zur Förderung der Wissenschaften, pp. 934.Google Scholar
van Leeuwen, J. (2013) “The text of the Aristotelian Mechanics,” The Classical Quarterly (New Series), 63(1), pp. 183–98.Google Scholar
van Leeuwen, J. (2014) “Thinking and learning from diagrams in the Aristotelian Mechanics,” Nuncius: Journal of the History of Science, 29(1), pp. 5387.Google Scholar
Vincent, A. J. H. (1858) “Extraits des Manuscrits Relatifs à La Géométrie Pratique des Grecs: Traité de La Dioptre,” in Notices et extraits des banuscrits de la Bibliothèque Impériale et autres bibliothèques, vol. 19. Paris: Imprimerie impériale, pp. 157337.Google Scholar
Vitrac, B. (2003) “Mécanique et Mathématiques à Alexandrie : Le Cas de Héron.” Available at: https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-00175171 (accessed June 15, 2013).Google Scholar
Vitrac, B. (2005) “Les classifications des sciences mathématiques en Grèce ancienne,” Archives de Philosophie, 68(2), pp. 269301.Google Scholar
Vitrac, B. (2008a) “Faut-il réhabiliter Héron d’Alexandrie?” in Faut-il réhabiliter Héron d’Alexandrie? Montpellier: Les Belles Lettres, pp. 281–96.Google Scholar
Vitrac, B. (2008b) “Promenade dans les préfaces des textes mathématiques grecs anciens,” in Radelet-de Grave, P. and Brichard, C. (eds.), Liber amicorum Jean Dhombres. Louvain-la-Neuve/Turnhout: Brepols (Réminisciences, 8), pp. 518–56.Google Scholar
Vitrac, B. (2009) “Mécanique et mathématiques à Alexandrie: le cas de Héron,” in Sciences, mathématiques et philosophie de l’Antiquité à l’Age classique. Paris: Université Paris Diderot – Paris 7 (Oriens-occidens, 7), pp. 155–99.Google Scholar
Vitrac, B. (2010) “Héron d’Alexandrie et le corpus métrologique: état des lieux,” in Géométrie(s), pratiques d’arpentage et enseignement : quels liens et dans quel contexte? Available at: https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-00473981/document (accessed January 26, 2019).Google Scholar
Whitmarsh, T. (2005) The Second Sophistic. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Wiedemann, E. E. G. (1970) Aufsätze zur arabischen Wissenschaftsgeschichte. Hildesheim: G. Olms.Google Scholar
Williams, G. (2012) The cosmic viewpoint: A study of Seneca’s Natural Questions. New York: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Witt, R. G. (1988) “Medieval Italian culture and the origins of humanism as a stylistic ideal,” in Rabil, A. (ed.), Renaissance humanism: Foundations, forms, and legacy. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, pp. 2970.Google Scholar
Wolfe, J. (2004) Humanism, machinery, and Renaissance literature. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Worp, K. A., Bruins, E. M., and Sijpesteijn, P. J. (1977) “Fragments of mathematics on papyrus,” Chronique d’Égypte, 52, pp. 105–11.Google Scholar
Zangheri, L. (1987) Pratolino, il giardino delle meraviglie. 2a ed. con aggiunta di documenti e tavole. Firenze: Gonnelli.Google Scholar

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure [email protected] is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

  • Bibliography
  • Courtney Ann Roby, Cornell University, New York
  • Book: The Mechanical Tradition of Hero of Alexandria
  • Online publication: 06 July 2023
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781009029261.006
Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

  • Bibliography
  • Courtney Ann Roby, Cornell University, New York
  • Book: The Mechanical Tradition of Hero of Alexandria
  • Online publication: 06 July 2023
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781009029261.006
Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

  • Bibliography
  • Courtney Ann Roby, Cornell University, New York
  • Book: The Mechanical Tradition of Hero of Alexandria
  • Online publication: 06 July 2023
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781009029261.006
Available formats
×