William Warde Fowler
From Infogalactic: the planetary knowledge core
William Warde Fowler (16 May 1847 – 15 June 1921) was an English historian and ornithologist, and tutor at Lincoln College, Oxford.[1] He was best known for his works on ancient Roman religion.[2]
Among his most influential works was The Roman Festivals of the Period of the Republic (1899). H. H. Scullard, in the introduction to his 1981 book on a similar topic, singled out Fowler's book as a particularly valuable resource despite its age, writing, "I have not been so presumptuous as to attempt to provide an alternative."[3]
References
External links
Wikisource has original works written by or about: William Warde Fowler |
- Works by William Warde Fowler at Project Gutenberg
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- The City-State of the Greeks and Romans: a survey introductory to the study of Ancient History (1895)
- Julius Caesar and the Foundation of the Roman Imperial System (1903)
- Rome Home University Library (1912)
- Roman Ideas of Deity in the last century before the Christian Era Oxford lectures (1914)
- Roman Essays and Interpretations (1920)
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- "Kingham, old and new, studies in a rural parish" by W. Warde Fowler, 1913
- "Obituary. W. Warde-Fowler" by Julian Huxley, from britishbirds.co.uk
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