As a belated contribution to this topic, I should like to refer you to
Juergen Leonhardt, *Dimensio syllabarum: Studien zur lateinischen
Prosodie- und Verslehre von der Spaetantike bis zur fruehen Renaissance*
(Hypomnemata 92), Goettingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 1989, which contains
a detailed index of sources on pp. 196-283.

Adrian Nuessel

On Mon, 21 Jun 1999, David Wilson-Okamura wrote:

> Forwarded message from: Robin Sowerby <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Date: Mon, 21 Jun 1999 15:42:40 +0100
> 
> I decided to make contact via the internet with other Virgilians because I
> am rather isolated at my university where there is no classics department
> and I have come up against a problem to which so far I have not been able to
> find the answer. Part of my current project requires that I find evidence
> for the teaching of Latin verse in grammar schools in the Renaissance and
> beyond. Virgil and Ovid, then as now, must have been the main models for
> neo-Latinists as they made their own verse compositions. I have browsed the
> British Library catalogue and drawn a blank; I can find no manuals of verse
> composition for the earlier period at all. This material must exist if I
> knew the right place in which to look. Do you know of any scholars who might
> be able to help me?
> 
> - Robin Sowerby
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