Showing posts with label Greek History. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Greek History. Show all posts

Monday, November 13, 2023

F. W. Walbank. 1957–1967. A Historical Commentary on Polybius (Volumes 1 & 2). Oxford: Clarendon Press.

In downtown Copenhagen Vangsgaards Antikvariat has an ongoing Antikvariske Bogudsalg (Antiquarian Book Sale) that is kind of run like a Dutch auction. In short, the maximum price for a single book in the book sale on the first day when all the new stock is put on the shelves (starting at 100 kr. or roughly $14.32 USD) and then this number is gradually decreased incrementally as the days go on, and this is done over the course of month at a time until finally it reaches 5 kr. per book (about $0.72 USD) by the final two days (but by which time the good stuff is largely picked over). I have been frequenting this sale fairly regularly for about a year now and while there is often lot of random stuff that is of no interest to me, I have made some occasional surprising finds including Robert Beekes' A Grammar of Gatha-Avestan, the first volume of the second edition of Johannes Friedrich's Hethitisches Elementarbuch, Rüdiger Schmitt's edited volume of essays on Indogermanische Dichtersprache in the Wege der Forschung series, and more. Basically, the impression that I have gotten (this is just a guess) is that Vangsgaards Antikvariat has so much overstock from buying out other antikvariater in Denmark and it would cost far more to appraise the market value of what they have and store it (until the right buyer comes along) than to just sell it off like this.

Anyway, I went there yesterday for the first time since the new stock was put out and found myself a very bonny first two volumes of Frank Walbank's A Historical Commentary on Polybius in good condition, and in the first printing with the original Oxford University Press red cloth bindings. The third and final volume was not to be found, but I will take my good book-hunting fortune as it comes. Polybius is, of course, one of our most important sources for the period 264 – 146 BCE, covering the early expansion of the Roman empire down to the sack of Corinth and the sack of Carthage (both in 146) which cemented Rome as the dominant state in the Mediterranean, so I am sure that I will probably have some use for these at some point. Total cost to me for these two was 120 kr. or approximately $17.31 USD, a right bargain, considering how much various sellers are trying to get for them on the online international book market.


If you happen to be in Copenhagen in the near future, this is the current schedule for the book auction. I have no doubt it will repeat again in the months to come.


Saturday, October 14, 2023

Russell Meiggs & David Lewis (1969). A Selection of Greek Historical Inscriptions to the End of the Fifth Century B.C. Oxford: Clarendon Press.

I've been feeling a bit out of it for the last few days, so I was really looking forward a day off where I could go see if there was anything new or interesting in the local used book shops. There wasn't really anything of interest at the book auction other than a copy of the second volume of Gotlands Runinskrifter (which is incidentally available online so I might as well leave that for someone who actually does runology), so I moved onto Vangsgaards main shop on Fiolstræde. 

It appears that there were a few new books in the Greek history and literature section, including a copy of Meiggs & Lewis' A Selection of Greek Historical Inscriptions to the End of the Fifth Century B.C.


I admit I already have a copy of the revised version of this which was reissued as a Clarendon Paperback in 1992 (a purchase from the very fine Hellenic Book Service in London some years back), but it is always nice to get a good clean copy of the original hardcover – especially at a reasonable price of 125 DKK (ca. $17.61 USD). Also, my paperback copy is currently in storage in Canada and it's not really helping me at the moment.

I believe I would also be somewhat remiss to mention that the book has been in-part superseded at least with regard to the coverage of fifth century inscriptions following the Persian Wars has by Robin Osborne and Peter Rhodes' Greek Historical Inscriptions 478–404 BC (Oxford, 2017), but it's still nice to have for the selection the inscriptions from 479 BCE and earlier.


F. W. Walbank. 1957–1967. <i>A Historical Commentary on Polybius</i> (Volumes 1 & 2). Oxford: Clarendon Press.

In downtown Copenhagen Vangsgaards Antikvariat has an ongoing Antikvariske Bogudsalg  (Antiquarian Book Sale) that is kind of run like a Dut...