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Mycenaean weapon vocabulary. Battle of Haliartos (395 BC)
#1
New papers available on Greek affairs from Gladius 27, 2007:

"Theban victory at Haliartos (395 B.C.)" Dr. J. Pascual (in English)
Summary
This paper reviews the battle of Haliartos (395 B.C.) analyzing the strategy of both sides, their numbers and the routes followed by the armies in their way to the battlefield, especially Lysander, who used an inland boiotian route, the route of Koutomoulia and Evangelistria, and camped in the surroundings of modern Mazi about one kilometre to the south of Haliartos, and drew up in battle to a great extent as a Theban ambush.
Free download in pdf format:
http://gladius.revistas.csic.es/index.p ... le/view/96

The vocabulary of weapons in Mycenaean (Prof. A Bernabé)
(in Spanish)
Summary:Systematic analysis of rise, structure, and development of the words referred to weapons in Mycenaean tablets and in first Millennium Greek. The results of application of linguistic or philological methods can so be collated with ones achieved by archaeologists.
Free download: http://gladius.revistas.csic.es/index.p ... le/view/95


See also Archives for many more free downloadable pdf format papers in English, French and Spanish:
http://gladius.revistas.csic.es/index.p ... ue/archive
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#2
Thanks!
Qui plus fait, miex vault.
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#3
Laudes
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#4
Laudes seconded.
John Baker

Justice is the constant and perpetual wish to render to every one his due.
- Institutes, bk. I, ch. I, para. I
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#5
Thank you old chaps (or guys!) Browse through the archive, youll' find some more Greek stuff!.
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