
Anthony Bulloch
Anthony Bulloch was born and brought up in London, England. After graduating from University College School, London, he studied Classics at the university of Cambridge, England (B.A., M.A., Ph.D.) and was a student also at the British School at Rome and the University of Freiburg im Breisgau, Germany.
He taught in the Faculty of Classics, Cambridge, where he was also Fellow and Dean of King's College, for ten years, before moving to California to the University of California Berkeley, where he is Professor of Classics and Assistant Dean in the College of Letters and Science.
Publications include work in the fields of Greek Poetry (especially the Hellenistic period) and its influence, language, metrics, religion and myth. He is currently writing a new textbook on Greek Mythology, to be published by Thames and Hudson (London), and working on another on ancient Greek Cults and Festivals.
Address: Dept. of Classics
7303 Dwinelle Hall
Berkeley
California 94720
He taught in the Faculty of Classics, Cambridge, where he was also Fellow and Dean of King's College, for ten years, before moving to California to the University of California Berkeley, where he is Professor of Classics and Assistant Dean in the College of Letters and Science.
Publications include work in the fields of Greek Poetry (especially the Hellenistic period) and its influence, language, metrics, religion and myth. He is currently writing a new textbook on Greek Mythology, to be published by Thames and Hudson (London), and working on another on ancient Greek Cults and Festivals.
Address: Dept. of Classics
7303 Dwinelle Hall
Berkeley
California 94720
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[[Comment by Francis Cairns reviewing Robert Ball 'Tibullus the Elegist' in 'Classical Review' 37 (1987) 180-2
"Recent Tibullan scholarship, if it has achieved anything, has revealed how thoroughly steeped Tibullus was in Hellenistic learning, so that any curt denial of Callimachean influence is dangerous; and it was A. W. Bulloch's masterly paper 'Tibullus and the Alexandrians', PCPhS 119 (1973), 71-89 (the very work offering the conclusion dismissed by B.), which swung the balance of scholarly opinion decisively in this direction."]]