• O. Anderson, “The Widows, the City, and Thucydides 2.45.2,” Symbolae Osloenses 62 (1987) 33-50 / web link
  • K. Blomqvist, “From Olympias to Aretaphila: women in politics in Plutarch,” in Plutarch and his Intellectual World edited by J. Mossman, London (1997) 73-98 / web link
  • J. Bremmer, “Plutarch and the Naming of Greek Women,” American Journal of Philology 102 (1981) 425-427 / full text
  • M. Brosius, Women in Ancient Persia, Oxford: Oxford University Press (1996) / web link  / bmcr
  • F. S. Brown and W. B. Tyrrell, “ektilosanto: A Reading of Herodotus’ Amazons,” CJ 80 (1985) 297-302
  • D.L. Cairns, “‘Off with her aidos’: Herodotus 1.8.3-4,” Classical Quarterly 46.1 (1996) 78-83 / web link  / full text
  • E. D. Carney, “Alexander and Persian Women,” American Journal of Philology 117.4 (1996) 563ff. / web link
  • P. Cartledge, “The Silent Women of Thucyides: 2.45.2 Reviewed,” in Nomodeiktes. Greek Studies in Honor of Martin Ostwald (1993) / web link
  • P. Cartledge, “Engendering History: Men v. Women,” in The Greeks. A Portrait of Self and Others, Oxford (1993) 63-89
  • P. Cartledge, “Xenophon’s Women: A Touch of the Other,” in Tria Lustra. Fest. J. Pinsent edited by H. D. Jocelyn and H. Hurt, Liverpool (1995 or 1996)
  • G. Crane, “Thucydidean Exclusions and the Language of the Polis I: Women and Kinship,” in The Blinded Eye. Thucydides and the Invention of History: Rowman and Littlefield (1996)
  • Cromey, Robert D., “Perikles’ Wife: Chronological Calculations,” Greek, Roman and Byzantine Studies 23 (1982) 203-212
  • C. Dewald, “Women and Culture in Herodotus’ Histories,” in Reflections of Women in Antiquity edited by H. Foley (1981) 91-125
  • Lowell Edmunds, A Bibliography for Thucydides / web link
  • S. Flory, “Logic and Accident: Herodotus’ ‘Archaeology’ and the Motif of the ‘Clever, Vengeful Queen’,” in The Archaic Smile of Herodotus (1987) 23-48
  • L. Hardwick, “Philomel and Pericles: Silence in the Funeral Speech,” Greece & Rome 40 (1993) 147-162 / full text
  • C. S. Hardy, “Nomos and Replaceability in the Story of Intaphrenes and His Wife,” Transactions of the American Philological Association 126 (1996) 101-109 / web link  / full text
  • Harrison, Thomas, “Herodotus and the Ancient Greek Idea of Rape,” in Rape in Antiquity: Sexual violence in the Greek and Roman worlds edited by S. Deacy and K.F. Pierce, London: Duckworth (1997) 85-208
  • F. D. Harvey, “Women in Thucydides,” Arethusa 18 (1985) 67-90 / web link
  • C. Hindley, “Eros and Military Command in Xenophon,” Classical Quarterly 44.2 (1994) 347 / full text
  • C. Hindley, “Xenophon on male love,” The Classical Quarterly 49.1 (1999) 74-99
  • Hopwood, Keith, “Byzantine Princesses and Lustful Turks,” in Rape in Antiquity: Sexual violence in the Greek and Roman worlds edited by S. Deacy and K.F. Pierce, London: Duckworth (1997) 231-242
  • C. Jouanno, “Alexandre et Olympias: de l’histoire au mythe,” Bulletin de l’Association Guillaume Bude 1995.3 (1995) 211-230
  • L. Kallet-Marx, “Thucydides 2.45.2 and the Status of War Widows in Periclean Athens,” in Nomodeiktes. Greek Studies in Honor of Martin Ostwald edited by Ralph M. Rosen and Joseph Farrell (1993) 133-143 / web link
  • N. Loraux, The Invention of Athens, Cambridge, MA (1986)
  • Martin, Thomas R., Ancient Greece From Prehistoric to Hellenistic Times, New Haven: Yale University Press (1996) / web link  / bmcr
  • K. Mayer, Chaironeia, Plutarch’s home on the Web (includes bibliography) / web link
  • R. A. McNeal, “The Brides of Babylon. Herodotos 1.196,” Historia 37 (1988) 54-71 / web link
  • S. Sara Monoson, “Citizen as Erastes: Erotic Imagery and the Idea of Reciprocity in the Periclean Funeral Oration,” Political Theory (1994)
  • R. V. Munson, “Artemisia in Herodotus,” Classical Antiquity 7 (1988) 91-106 / web link
  • S. I. Oost, “Thucydides and the Irrational: Sundry Passages,” Classical Philology 70 (1975) 186-96 / full text
  • S.I. Oost, “Xenophon’s Attitude toward Women,” CW 71 (1977) 225-36
  • P. Schmitt Pantel, “‘L’historire des femmes’ en histoire ancienne aujourd’hui,” Studi italiani di filologia classica 10.1-2 (1992) 679-691
  • C. Pelling, “The urine and the vine: Astyages’ dreams at Herodotus 1.107-8,” Classical Quarterly 46.1 (1996) 68-77 / web link  / full text
  • M. Rossellini and S. Saïd, “Usages de femmes et autres nomoi chez les `sauvages’ d’Hérodote: Essai de lecture structurale,” Annali della Scuola normale superiore di Pisa 8 (1978) 949-1005
  • Tina Saavedra, “Women as Focalizers of Barbarism in Conquest Texts,” EMC 18 no. 1 (1999) 59-77
  • H. Sancisi-Weerdenburg, “Exit Atossa: Images of Women in Greek Historiography on Persia,” in Images of Women in Antiquity edited by A. Cameron and A. Kuhrt (1983)
  • D. M. Schaps, “The Women Least Mentioned: Etiquette and Women’s Names,” Classical Quarterly 27 (1977) 323-330 / full text
  • D. M. Schaps, “Women in Greek Inheritance Law,” The Classical Quarterly 25.1 (1975) 53-57 / full text
  • D. M. Schaps, “The Women of Greece in Wartime,” Classical Philology 77 (1982) 193-213 / full text
  • C. N. Seremetakis, Ritual, power and the body: historical perspectives on the representation of Greek women, New York: Pella (1993)
  • A. Tourraix, “La femme et la pouvoir chez Hérodote,” DHA 2 (1976) 369-86
  • Y. Vernière, “Plutarque et les femmes,” AncW 25.2 (1994) 165-69
  • P. Walcot, “The Funeral Speech: A Study of Values,” Greece & Rome 20 (1973) 111-121 / web link  / full text
  • P. Walcot, “Herodotus on Rape,” Arethusa 11 (1978) 137
  • P. Walcot, “Plutarch on sex,” Greece & Rome 45.2 (1998) 166-187 / full text
  • P. Walcot, “On widows and their reputation in antiquity,” Symbolae Osloenses 66 (1991) 5-26
  • T. J. Wiedemann, “elakhiston … en tois arsesi kleos: Thucydides, Women, and the Limits of Rational Analysis,” Greece & Rome 30 (1983) 163-170 / full text
  • G. Wilhelm, “Marginalien zu Herodot Klio 199,” in Lingering Over Words. Studies in Ancient Near Eastern Literature in Honor of William L. Moran, Atlanta (1990) 505-524 / web link