Apache argentino, El
tango by Manuel Aroztegui
tango by Manuel Aroztegui
Uruguayan militar commander and "caudillo" (1814 -1882).
Fishburn and Hughes: "A member of the Uruguayan Blanco party who from 1870 to 1872 instituted a civil war against President Lorenzo Batlle because his party had been excluded from the government." (13)
Apelles, ancient painter, fl. 4th century BC
Sackville-West study
Islamic expression referring to Allah
Nagarjuna work on the stages of the Bodhisattva
Swedenborg, 1766.
pseud. of Guillaume de Kostrowitsky, French poet, 1880-1918
character from The Pilgrim’s Process
god of sun, music and song in Greek myth.
Fishburn and Hughes: "The Greek god of the arts, identified with the sun. His main shrine was at Delphi." (13)
these could refer to Apollodorus of Athens, Greek scholar, b. c. 180 B.C., or to Apollodorus of Alexandria, traditional author of the Bibliotheca, a study of Greek heroic mythology; the compilation in question was compiled several centuries after the life of both men.
Fishburn and Hughes: "An Athenian writer, author of a Chronicle of Greek history in iambic verse. Fragments survive of his study of Homer's Catalogue of ships and of texts on Greek grammar and etymology. He is also the supposed author of the Bibliotheca, a treatise on ancient mythology which may be an abridged version of his longer study On the Gods, now lost. The lines 'And the queen gave birth to a child who was called Asterion' comes from the Bibliotheca. A rough translation of the original Greek text would be: 'who gave birth to Asterion, called the Minotaur, who had a bull's head and a man's body.' " (13)
Tulio Herrera book, 1959
Sidney prose essay, c.1580
Apollonius of Rhodes, Alexandrian epic poet and grammarian, 222-181, author of the Argonautica
Apollonius of Tyana, Greek philosopher of the neo-Pythagorean school, c.5 B.C.-95 A.D.