Ancient Journey: A Festschrift in honor of Eugene Numa Lane
Editor: Cathy Calloway
Eugene Numa Lane (August 13, 1936 in Washington, DC – January 1, 2007, Columbia, MO) was an American classical philologist and archaeologist.
The son of linguist George Sherman Lane, he attended Episcopal High School in Alexandria, Virginia and studied from 1954 to 1958 at Princeton University (Salutatorian), then at Yale (MA 1960, Ph.D. 1962). Winning a Fulbright Scholarship, he spent a year studying at the American School of Classical Studies in Athens, Greece before taking a faculty position at the University of Virginia from 1962 to 1966. He then went on to teach at the University of Missouri from 1966 to 2000. In the course of his career at the University of Missouri, he was chairman of the Classics Department and served as the Director of Graduate Studies. He taught courses in ancient and modern Greek, along with Latin and others covering classical civilizations. In 1992 he taught once again at the American School of Classical Studies where he was the director of the institution's first summer session. In 2000 he became professor emeritus at the University of Missouri.
He died of complications of Parkinson's disease on New Year's Day 2007.
Introduction
Biography
Articles
The Iconography of Amor in Propertius
Tapping Hooves: Small Bronze Figures of Dance-loving Pan
Horace, Odes 1.31: The Construction of a Priamel
The Character of Orestes in Sophocles’ Electra
Athens and Pompey: A Political Relationship
Challenging Otherness: A Reassessment of Early Greek Attitudes Toward the Divine
‘What? Me a Poet?’ Generic Modeling in Horace Sat. 1.4
Remedium amoris
Trial by Amazon: Thoughts on the First Amazons in Greek Art
Chance Remarks On Dreams in Aelius Aristides
Epitaphs and Tombstones of Hellenistic and Roman Cyprus
From Polytheism to Christianity in the Temples of Cyprus
The Anatolian Cult of Sabazios
In Search of the Roman Frontier in Sardinia
Unfriendly Persuasion: Seduction and Magic in Tacitus’ Annales
Turning Again in Tibullus 1.5
Paidagogia pros to theion: Plutarch’s Numa
Flavius Josephus and the Archaeological Evidence for Caesarea Maritima
The Baths of Trajan Decius — or of Philip the Arab?
“Murderers of the Dead” in Antiphon 1