Sources

Ancient Greek Literature, (ed.) by K. J. Dover, Oxford Press, New York, c. 1980.

Cambridge Encyclopedia of Language, by David Crystal, Cambridge University Press, New York, c. 1987.

Carthage, by Brian Warmington, c. 1960, 1964.

Celts and the Classical World, by David Rankin, Routledge, New York, c. 1987, 1996.

The Celts: From the Bronze Age to the Atomic Age, Origins of the Celts and Introduction, by Jerry Gallop, www.unex.ucla.edu/plato/JerryCelts.htm, January 7, 1999.

Classical Drama: Greek and Roman, by Meyer Reinhold, Barron's Educational Series, Inc., New York, c. 1959.

Daughters of Isis: Women of Ancient Egypt, by Joyce Tyldesley, Penguin Books, New York, c. 1994.

Euripides: A Student of Human Nature, by William Nickerson Bates, A.S. Barnes and Co. Inc., New York, c. 1930, 1961.

Handbook to Life in Ancient Egypt, A. Rosalie David, Oxford University Press, 1999.

History of Libraries in the Western World, by Elmer D. Johnson and Michael H. Harris, Scarecrow Press, Metuchen, New Jersey, c. 1976.

History of the Babylonians and Assyrians: Language and Literature, History of the World, from Electric Library, www.elibrary.com, by George Godspeed, January 1, 1992.

Norton Book of Classical Literature, (ed.) by Bernard Knox, W. W. Norton and Co., New York, c. 1993.

Papyrus, by Richard Parkinson and Stephen Quirke, c. 1995.

Phoenicia, by Salim George Khalaf, Phoenicia.org.

Roman Literature and Society, by R. M. Ogilvie, c. 1980.

Who was Who in the Roman World, (ed.) by Diana Bowder, Washington Square Press, Pocket Books, New York, c. 1980, 1984.


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