G. Grasso, Una quesitone di topogr. stor. ed un errore di Frontino tra le imprese di Filippo II di Macedonia, Rendiconti d. R. Istituto lombardo Ser. 2, vol. 31 (1898), p. 976.
A. Dederich, Bruchstücke aus dem Leben des Sextus Julius Frontinus, Zeitschr. für die Alterthumsw. 1839, pp. 834, 1077.
E. Fritze, De Iuli Frontini Strategematon Libro iv., Diss. Halle, 1888.
C. Wachsmuth, Rhein. Mus. xv. (1860), p. 574.
E. Wölfflin, Hermes, ix. (1875), p. 72.
F. Haase, Rhein. Mus iii. (1845), p. 312.
E. Hedicke, Hermes, vi. (1872), p. 156.
G. Gundermann, Comment. philol. Jen. 1 (1881), p. 83.
H. M. Connor, A Study of the Syntax of the Strategemata of Frontinus, Diss. Ithaca, 1921.
M. Schanz, Philol. xlviii. (1889), p. 674.
The editio princeps of the De Aquis is that of Pomponius Laetus and Sulpicius, brought out at Rome 1484–1492 in connection with Vitruvius, with whom this work of Frontinus was combined in most of the earlier editions. Then followed editions printed in Venice and Florence, 1495–1497, several[1] editions in the sixteenth century, including that of Jocundus published at Florence in 1513, and again in 1522 and 1523, and three in the seventeenth century, one of which was the edition of Scriverius.[2]
In 1722 Poleni[3] brought out his elegant edition, which far surpassed all the preceding works. He used three manuscripts in its preparation, C and