Keria: Studia Latina et Graeca
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Keria (Greek for ‘honeycomb’) was founded by the Slovenian Society for Classical and Humanistic Studies in 1999. As a national journal for all fields of Greek and Latin studies, it is committed to fostering a dialogue between scholarship, teaching, and other areas of culture. Appearing twice yearly, Keria welcomes original research articles, translations, pedagogical contributions, literary essays, book reviews, and other submissions relevant to the study of classical antiquity and its reception, Latin and Byzantine Middle Ages, Latin humanism, and Modern Greek language and culture.
- The Argonauts in Slovenian Literature for Children and Youth
- Gregory of Nazianzus: Selected Poems. Translation, notes and afterword by Vid Snoj
- Marcus Tullius Cicero: Scipio’s Dream
- Erasmus of Rotterdam: Convivium Religiosum
- Unbesiegbare Herkulesse: die Italienische Peplum kinematographie
- Marcus Tullius Cicero: Cato Maior de Senectute. Translation by Vida Pust Škrgulja....
- Lysias: On the Murder of Eratosthenes
- What Does Xenophanes Have to Object against in Sport?
- Plotinus’ Flight from ‘Confinement’
- Sport as the Pragmatic Determiner, Motif and Theme of Pindaric Odes
- Modern Olympic Games: An Echo of the Ancient Athlete?
- Πάλη, ἔφεδρος and λαμπαδηδρομία on the Spectatii Tomb at Šempeter in the Savinja...
- The Architecture of Physical Culture in Ancient Greece
- The Wisdom of the Body: Ancient Ideal and Contemporary Practice
- Nikos Kazantzakis: Report to El Greco (translation)
- A Contribution to the Etymology of the Poleonym Bar
- Bimillenary Anniversary of Augustus's Death
- Petrarch: Ascent of Mont Ventoux (translation)
- Adamantios Korais and the Greek Language Policy at the Turn of the 18th to the 19th...
- Fragments of Greek Old Comedy (translation)
- The Bonds of the Past and Present in Euripides’ Orestes
- [Lactantius]: The Phoenix (translation)
- Quae istaec fabulast? In Search of Comedy in Plautus’ Rudens
- A Fountain of Words: Seminar on Classical Greek Literature and Culture in Delphi
- 0.4°S 32.7°E: Censorinus and His ‘Astronomical’ Observations