Abstract

entitled IIEpt rbxrts mowacKfl) three horoscopes from the collection which Antigonus of Nicaea had made in the late second or the third century (Apotelesmatica 2.18.22-66). Although the full text of Hephaestion was edited only very recently by D. Pingree (Leipzig: Teubner, 1973), the three horoscopes were published in 1902 from an epitome of his work (CCAG 8.2.82-86), and translated (though not in full) with astronomical commentary by O. Neugebauer and H. B. van Hoesen in their collection of ancient Greek horoscopes (nos. L 76, L40, L 113, IV).;2 The original publication readily identified the first and the third, which belong to a Roman emperor who was born on 24 January 76 and died in his sixtythird year, and to a noble youth, born on 6 April 113, who thinking he

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