- (1764). The
Loves of
Chǣreas and Callirrhoe. London:
printed for T.
Becket and P. A. De Hondt. Blake,
Warren E. (1939). Chariton's
Chaereas and Callirhoe. Ann...
-
Chaerea is a
monotypic genus of
cribellate araneomorph spiders in the
family Dictynidae containing the
single species,
Chaerea maritimus. It was first...
- C****ius
Chaerea (classical Latin: [ˈkʰae̯rea]) was a
Roman soldier and
officer who
served as a
tribune in the army of
Germanicus and in the Praetorian...
-
already married (and
pregnant by
Chaereas). As a result,
Dionysius believes Callirhoe's son to be his own. Meanwhile,
Chaereas has
heard she is alive, and...
- The
consolidated Athenian fleet,
including a
force of land
troops under Chaereas, set out to the ****espont to
challenge Mindarus.
Pharnabazus controlled...
-
Caligula had
insulted Chaerea,
giving him
watchwords like the
ribald "Priapus" or "Venus", the
latter said to
refer to
Chaerea's weak, high voice, and...
- 257 & 270 Cueva,
Edmund P. (1996). "Plutarch's
Ariadne in Chariton's
Chaereas and Callirhoe."
American Journal of Philology, 117(3):473–84. Greene, Andrew...
- as a cognomen.
Other ancient Gr**** novelists:
Chariton - The
Loves of
Chaereas and
Callirhoe Xenophon of
Ephesus - The
Ephesian Tale
Achilles Tatius -...
- Life of Theseus, xx.5
Edmund P. Cueva, "Plutarch's
Ariadne in Chariton's
Chaereas and Callirhoe",
American Journal of Philology, 117.3 (Autumn 1996), pp...
- condemnation. All
Edessa knew that
Chaereas had come
merely to
announce a
sentence of
condemnation already p****ed.
Chaereas, however, was
moving too slowly...