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    Lexicon Vindobonense

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    Edizione critica del Lexicon Vindobonense nelle sue due redazion

    UN PROVERBIO GRECO REGISTRATO DAL BOCCACCIO

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    Four word in Latin letters, transcribed by Boccaccio in his autograph of the Bucolicum carmen, are the first evidence of a proverb, Ἄνθρωπος ἀγράμματος ξύλον ἄκαρπον (“an illiterate man is a fruitless tree”) which circulates among modern Greeks in the form Ἄν. ἀγ. ξύλο(ν) ἀπελέκητο(ν) (“an illiterate man is an unplaned wood”) as recently shown by G. De Gregorio, who found a precise parallel only in a work of a sixteenth-century Parmesan grammarian, L. Vitruvius Roscius (Rosso). This paper provides new evidence, which proves that Roscius was plagiarizing a text of Agostino Dati, a Sienese chancellor and humanist of the fifteenth century, who in his turn learnt the proverb probably from the mouth of Francesco Filelfo, his master of Greek. Greek proverb, Boccaccio, Agostino Dati, Francesco Filelfo, L. Vitruvius Roscius

    L'origine dei termini filosofo e filosofia secondo il testo di Diogene Laerzio

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    Esame e interpretazione di Diogene Laerzio 1, 12 e difesa della lezione tràdit

    La figura di Mosè nelle testimonianze e nel giudizio del mondo pagano greco e romano

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    The paper presents a review and a reappraisal of citations of Moses by Greek and Latin pagan authors from the Hellenistic period until emperor Julian
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