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The Manuscript Tradition of Euripides' Troades

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 February 2009

P. G. Mason
Affiliation:
Aldenham School, Herts

Extract

The text of Euripides' Troades depends mainly upon the versions preserved in two manuscripts, viz. Palatinus 287 (P) and Vaticanus 909 (V). Both these manuscripts are well known and have been several times collated. Their importance in relation to one another and to the other existing manuscripts for the study of the text of Euripides in general has been frequently discussed and is no longer a subject of major controversy. The notes which follow are designed (a) to put on record a number of corrections to the readings ascribed to P and V for the Troades in the apparatus criticus of Prinz-Wecklein and later editors; and (b) to correct and amplify the general descriptions of P and to call attention to certain difficulties in the current views of its relationship to Laurentianus xxxii. (L).

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Classical Association 1950

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References

page 61 note 1 After re-examination of L in Florence I am convinced that the Troades was not included in L originally and torn out before it was copied, as has been suggested.

page 61 note 2 Copies of this reproduction will be found in the Bodleian, in the University Library at Cambridge, and in the library of the Hellenic Society.