Luciani Samosatensis Opera Graece et Latine: Deorum dialogi. Dialogi Marini. Dialogi Mortuorum
0 sources
Luciani Samosatensis Opera Graece et Latine: Deorum dialogi. Dialogi Marini. Dialogi Mortuorum
Summary
Luciani Samosatensis Opera Graece et Latine: Deorum dialogi. Dialogi Marini. Dialogi Mortuorum is a version, edition or translation[1].
Key Facts
- Luciani Samosatensis Opera Graece et Latine: Deorum dialogi. Dialogi Marini. Dialogi Mortuorum authored Deorum dialogi. Dialogi Marini. Dialogi Mortuorum — author (P50): Lucian of Samosata[2].
- Luciani Samosatensis Opera Graece et Latine: Deorum dialogi. Dialogi Marini. Dialogi Mortuorum's instance of is recorded as Deorum dialogi. Dialogi Marini. Dialogi Mortuorum — instance of (P31): version, edition or translation[3].
- Luciani Samosatensis Opera Graece et Latine: Deorum dialogi. Dialogi Marini. Dialogi Mortuorum was edited by Deorum dialogi. Dialogi Marini. Dialogi Mortuorum — editor (P98): Tiberius Hemsterhuis[4].
- Luciani Samosatensis Opera Graece et Latine: Deorum dialogi. Dialogi Marini. Dialogi Mortuorum was edited by Deorum dialogi. Dialogi Marini. Dialogi Mortuorum — editor (P98): Johan Frederik Reitz[5].
- Luciani Samosatensis Opera Graece et Latine: Deorum dialogi. Dialogi Marini. Dialogi Mortuorum was published by Deorum dialogi. Dialogi Marini. Dialogi Mortuorum — publisher (P123): Q1279130[6].
- Luciani Samosatensis Opera Graece et Latine: Deorum dialogi. Dialogi Marini. Dialogi Mortuorum's place of publication is recorded as Deorum dialogi. Dialogi Marini. Dialogi Mortuorum — place of publication (P291): Zweibrücken[7].
- Luciani Samosatensis Opera Graece et Latine: Deorum dialogi. Dialogi Marini. Dialogi Mortuorum's language of work or name is recorded as Deorum dialogi. Dialogi Marini. Dialogi Mortuorum — language of work or name (P407): Ancient Greek[8].
- Luciani Samosatensis Opera Graece et Latine: Deorum dialogi. Dialogi Marini. Dialogi Mortuorum's language of work or name is recorded as Deorum dialogi. Dialogi Marini. Dialogi Mortuorum — language of work or name (P407): Latin[9].
- Luciani Samosatensis Opera Graece et Latine: Deorum dialogi. Dialogi Marini. Dialogi Mortuorum was released on 1789[10].
- Luciani Samosatensis Opera Graece et Latine: Deorum dialogi. Dialogi Marini. Dialogi Mortuorum's edition or translation of is recorded as Deorum dialogi. Dialogi Marini. Dialogi Mortuorum — edition or translation of (P629): Dialogues of the Sea-Gods[11].
- Luciani Samosatensis Opera Graece et Latine: Deorum dialogi. Dialogi Marini. Dialogi Mortuorum's work available at URL is recorded as https://books.google.com/books?id=PWwNAAAAYAAJ[12].
- Luciani Samosatensis Opera Graece et Latine: Deorum dialogi. Dialogi Marini. Dialogi Mortuorum's title is recorded as Luciani Samosatensis Opera Graece et Latine: Deorum dialogi. Dialogi Marini. Dialogi Mortuorum[13].
Body
Authorship and Creation
Luciani Samosatensis Opera Graece et Latine: Deorum dialogi. Dialogi Marini. Dialogi Mortuorum authored Deorum dialogi. Dialogi Marini. Dialogi Mortuorum — author (P50): Lucian of Samosata[2]. Editors include Deorum dialogi. Dialogi Marini. Dialogi Mortuorum — editor (P98): Tiberius Hemsterhuis[4] and Deorum dialogi. Dialogi Marini. Dialogi Mortuorum — editor (P98): Johan Frederik Reitz[5]. It was published by Deorum dialogi. Dialogi Marini. Dialogi Mortuorum — publisher (P123): Q1279130[6].
Publication
Luciani Samosatensis Opera Graece et Latine: Deorum dialogi. Dialogi Marini. Dialogi Mortuorum was released on 1789[10]. Its place of publication is recorded as Deorum dialogi. Dialogi Marini. Dialogi Mortuorum — place of publication (P291): Zweibrücken[7]. Languages include Deorum dialogi. Dialogi Marini. Dialogi Mortuorum — language of work or name (P407): Ancient Greek[8] and Deorum dialogi. Dialogi Marini. Dialogi Mortuorum — language of work or name (P407): Latin[9].