A CAMBRIDGE FESTSCHRIFT 



Essays and Studies presented to William RidgeTvay. ScD., LL.D. 



(Aberdeen)^ L'ttt.D. [Dublin and Manchester), F.B.A., Disney Professor 

 of Archaeology and Brereton Reader in Classics in the University of 

 Cambridge, Fellow of Gonville and Cains College, on his sixtieth birthday, 

 6 August, 1 91 3. 'Edited l>y E. C. Quiggin, M.A., Ph.D., Fellow of 

 Gonville and Cains College. 



Royal 8vo. pp. xxvi + 656. With a portrait in photoa^ravure, 17 plates, 3 maps and 

 93 other illustrations. Price 25J. net. 



This miscellany ot essays is divided 

 into three sections : (i) Classics and 

 Ancient Archaeology, (2) Medieval 

 Literature and History, (3) Anthropo- 

 logy and Comparative Religion. To 

 the first section there are 25 contribu- 

 tors, including Prof. R. S. Conway, 

 Prot. Flinders Petrie, Prof. J. P. Mahaffy, 

 Sir C. Hercules Read ; in the second 

 are essays by the Provost of King's, 

 Prof. H. M. Chadwick, and other 

 scholars; the third includes contribu- 

 tions by Dr J. G. Fraser, Dr C. G. 

 Seligmann and Dr A. C. Haddon. 



Mr A. D. Godley addresses a poem 

 to Dr Ridgeway which concludes : 



Prof. W. Ridgewaj' 



" Of tedious pedants though the world be full, 

 While RIDGEWAY lives, Research can ne'er be dul! 



Scythians and Greeks. A survey of ancient history and archaeology on the 

 north coast of the Euxine from the Danulye to the Caucasus. By Ellis H. 

 Minns, M.A., Fellow of Pembroke College, Cambridge. Member of 

 the Imperial Russian Archaeological Society. 



Royal 4to. pp. xl + 720. With 9 maps and plans, 9 coin plates and 355 illustrations. 



Price £^. 3J. net. 



" For the first time English scholars have at their command a Scythian encyclopaedia, 

 with an extremely generous supply of illustrations. We congratulate Mr Minns." — 

 The H'es/minster Ga'zette 



"The great work of the English scholar, E. H. Minns,. ..is one of the most useful 

 books of recent times. In it is set forth the contents of everything that is in print 

 upon the history and civilization of the inhabitants of South Russia from the earliest 

 times to the Byzantine period." — Numhmatic Miicellany, Moscow 



2 



