[343] In addition to the works mentioned on pp. [xvii] and [xx f.], above, cf. Petersen, Preisrichter der grossen Dionysien (1878); Hayley, “Social and Domestic Position of Women in Aristophanes,” Harvard Studies, I (1890), 159 ff.; Lounsbury, Shakespeare as a Dramatic Artist (1902); Goodwin’s edition of Demosthenes’ Against Midias, Appendix IV (1906); Capps, “Epigraphical Problems in the History of Attic Comedy,” American Journal of Philology, XXVIII (1907), 179 ff.; Legrand, Daos; Tableau de la comédie grecque pendant la période dite nouvelle (1910), translated by Loeb in 1917 under the title The New Greek Comedy; Sheppard, Greek Tragedy (1911); and Ruppel, Konzeption und Ausarbeitung der aristophanischen Komödien (1913).

[344] A mina was equivalent to one hundred drachmae and was worth about $18, though allowance must be made for the greater purchase value of money in those days.

[345] Cf. Lysias xxi, §§ 1-5.

[346] Cf. his Life of Nicias, III.

[347] Cf. Aristotle, Constitution of Athens, c. 56.

[348] Cf. Kock, Comicorum Atticorum Fragmenta, I, 16, fr. 15 (Cratinus).

[349] Cf. Sheppard, op. cit., p. 58.

[350] Cf. Legrand, op. cit., pp. 312-15 and 455 f.

[351] Cf. Prescott in Classical Philology, XI (1916), 132.

[352] Cf. Hall, The Ancient History of the Near East² (1913), p. 48.