Arthur Ludwich

Arthur Ludwich (18 May 1840, Lyck in East Prussia – 12 November 1920, Königsberg) was a German classical philologist who specialized in Homeric studies. He is remembered for his observations involving the metric and prosody of Homer,[1] for his edition of the Dionysiaca by Nonnus, and for coining the term "Viermännerkommentar" (i.e. "Four-Men Commentary", being Aristonichus, Didymus, Herodian and Nicanor) to define a lost ancient commentary to Homer's Iliad, survived in fragments prominently in the A-class of marginals.

He studied theology and classical philology at the University of Königsberg, where his instructors included Karl Lehrs and Ludwig Friedlander. In 1874–75 he conducted Homeric research in Italy, and during the following year, became an associate professor at the University of Breslau. In 1878 he succeeded Lehrs as professor of Greek philology at Königsberg.[1]

Selected works

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  • Aristarchs Homerische Textkritik nach den Fragmenten des Didymos (2 volumes), 1884–85 – Aristarchus' Homeric textual criticism according to the fragments of Didymos.
  • Homeri Odyssea (2 volumes), 1889, 1891 – Homer's "Odyssey".
  • Die Homervulgata als voralexandrinisch erwiesen, 1898 – The vulgate Homer as pre-Alexandrian evidence.
  • Homeri Ilias (2 volumes), 1901–02. Homer's "Iliad".
  • Anekdota zur griechischen Orthographie, 1905 – Anecdota to Greek orthography.
  • Homerischer Hymnenbau nebst seinen Nachahmungen bei Kallimachos, Theokrit, Vergil, Nonnos und Anderen, 1908 – Homeric hymn construction together with its imitations in Callimachus, Theocritus, Virgil, Nonnus and others.
  • Nonni Panopolitani Dionysiaca (2 volumes) 1909, 1911.[2]

References

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  1. ^ a b Ludwich, Arthur at Deutsche Biographie
  2. ^ Arthur Ludwich de.Wikisource