Abstract
This paper completes a small but long desiderated act of restitution to the Euripidean scholarship of J. J. Scaliger.In 1694 Joshua Barnes published at Cambridge a complete edition of Euripides; he included either in his text or notes a number of conjectures transcribed from marginalia in a copy of W. Canter's Euripides owned successively by Scaliger, his pupil Daniel Heinsius, to whom Scaliger bequeathed the book, and Jan Rutgers. The book passed to the Bodleian Library at Oxford ; in the early nineteenth century P. Elmsley re-examined it for his editions of Medea and Bacchae, and complained that Barnes had not only failed to report all Scaliger's conjectures but frequently disguised the source of those he had noted or even silently appropriated them to himself.