Showing posts with label Virgil. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Virgil. Show all posts

Friday, August 21, 2020

Open Access Journal: dPVS: the Digital Proceedings of the Virgil Society

[First posted in AWOL 18 March 2014, updated 21 August 2020]

dPVS: the Digital Proceedings of the Virgil Society
ISSN: 0968-2112
THE Virgil Society was founded in 1943, and its first President, the poet T.S. Eliot, delivered What is a Classic? as his Presidential Address in the following year. The purpose of the Society was and remains to unite all those who cherish the central educational tradition of Western Europe. Of that tradition Virgil is the symbol. Membership is open to all those who are in sympathy, whether they read Latin or not.

There are normally five or six meetings each year in London, held on Saturday afternoons in Senate House, Malet Street, London WC1E 7HU. 

The speakers include both amateur and professional scholars, many of them Virgilians of international repute. Lectures are followed by refreshments, giving an opportunity to meet the speaker and other members of the Society.

Most lectures are published in full in the Proceedings of the Virgil Society, which also include some reviews of works relevant to Virgil. There is also a Newsletter, which appears twice a year.
Presidential Address, 1948
Virgil Society 1 (1961-1962)

Virgil Society 2 (1962-1963)
Virgil Society 3 (1963-1964)
Virgil Society 4 (1964-1965)
Virgil Society 5 (1965-1966)
Virgil Society 6 (1966-1967)
Virgil Society 7 (1967-1968)
Virgil Society 8 (1968-1969)
Virgil Society 9 (1969-1970)
Virgil Society 10 (1970-1971)
Virgil Society 11 (1971-1972)
Virgil Society 12 (1972-1973)
Virgil Society 13 (1973-1974)
Virgil Society 14 (1974-1975)
Virgil Society 15 (1975-1976)
Virgil Society 16 (1976-1977)
Virgil Society 17 (1978-1979)
Virgil Society 18 (1986-1987)
Virgil Society 19 (1988-1989)
Virgil Society 20 (1991-1992)
Virgil Society 21 (1993-1994)
Virgil Society 22 (1996-1997)
Virgil Society 23 (1998-1999)
Virgil Society 24 (2001-2002)
Virgil Society 25 (2004-2005)
Virgil Society 26 (2008-2009)
Virgil Society 27 (2011-2012)
Virgil Society 28 (2013-2014)
Virgil Society 29 (2017) NEW

Friday, August 15, 2014

Virgil in Late Antiquity, the Middle Ages, and the Renaissance: An Online Bibliography

Virgil in Late Antiquity, the Middle Ages, and the Renaissance: An Online Bibliography
By David Scott Wilson-Okamura
http://www.painless.pwp.blueyonder.co.uk/virgilsociety/images/virgil_4.jpg
This is the eighth edition (2010) of "Virgil in Late Antiquity, the Middle Ages, and the Renaissance: An Online Bibliography." It is not exhaustive. It contains, moreover, many items that I have not handled in person. As a result, there are some entries that are incomplete (lacking, for instance, the name of a series or publisher). There are also, in all likelihood, some simple errors of transcription. If you find errors or lacunae, please send them to david@virgil.org. Other good sources for information include the Mantovano mailing list (an online discussion group devoted to Virgil's works and their reception), my own virgil.org collection of Virgil resources, as well as Vergil's Home Page. In print, see the excellent bibliographies by Suerbaum et al. in Aufstieg und Niedergang der römischen Welt 2:31.1,2 (1981), as well as the bibliographies that appear annually in Vergilius. (Some of these last are also online.) Online, see also Shirley Werner's Bibliographical Guide to Vergil's Aeneid.

Introduction

Textual Criticism
Late Antiquity
  Vitae
  Servius

Middle Ages
  Commentaries
  Adaptations
  Dante

Renaissance
  Printing History
  Illustrations
  Translations
  Imitations
  (Criticism)
  Commentaries
  Petrarch
  Landino
  Spenser
  Education