Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 February 2009
1 Studi biz. e neoellenici, 5 (1939), 504–5Google Scholar; id. 'ΕEπɩστ. έπετ. Φɩλ. Σχολ⋯ς. Пασσαλονίκης 3 (1937–9), 267–79.
2 Byz. Zeitschr., 40 (1940), 180–3.
3 Hellenica, 4 (1948), 24.
4 Byzance et la mer (Paris, 1966), 126Google Scholar.
5 IG x, 2, 1, no. 47Google Scholar.
6 Centre de Recherched'Hist. et Byzance, Civil de, Travaux et mémoires, 5 (1973), 150–1Google Scholar; ibid. 7 (1979), 333.
7 Recueil des inscriptions chretiennes de Macedoine (Paris, 1983)Google Scholar, n. 87.
8 To my knowledge, the latest seriously attested statue is that of Nicetas, cousin of the emperor Heraclius: Nicephorus, Opuscula historica, de Boor, 9. Those of Justinian II, Constantine VI and Irene are mentioned only in the fabulous Patria of Constantinople and should be regarded with considerable scepticism.
9 See Bury, J. B., History of the Later Roman Empire, 11 (1912), 412Google Scholar.
10 Malalas, Bonn ed., 436. The relevant entry follows that on the completion of the baths of Dagistheus and the paving of the court of the Basilica, for which Chron. Paschale, Bonn, ed., i. 618–19Google Scholar gives the date 528.
11 For his career see Stein, E., Histoire du Bas-Empire, ii. 433Google Scholar.