Note: The dates for unpublished articles are approximations and based on indications in the manuscripts.
1978
1. ‘The Career and Conversion of Dio Chrysostom’, JHS 98: 79–100.
1979
2. A Commentary on Plutarch’s Brutus (diss. Oxford; unpublished; see below, no. 100).
3. ‘Notes on Aristotle, Poetics 13 and 14’, CQ n.s. 29: 77–94.
4. ‘A Neglected Aspect of Agamemnon 1389–92’, LCM 4: 179–89.
1980
5. ‘A Note on Antigone 1238f.’, LCM 5: 193–6.
1982
6. ‘A Note on Cicero, ad Quintum fratrem 2.10(9).3’, LCM 7: 63–5.
7. ‘The Ides of March and Anna Perenna’, LCM 7: 89–90.
8. ‘Plutarch, Crassus 13.4–5, and Cicero’s de consiliis suis’, LCM 7: 136–7.
9. Review of M. L. Clarke, The Noblest Roman (London and New York, 1981), LCM 7: 137–9.
10. Review of P. A. Stadter, Arrian of Nicomedia (Chapel Hill and London, 1980), JHS 102: 254–5.
1983
11. ‘Dio Chrysostom: Exile, Tarsus, Nero, and Domitian’, LCM 8: 130–4.
12. ‘“Honestius quam Ambitiosius”? An Exploration of the Cynic’s Attitude to Moral Corruption in his Fellow Men’, JHS 103: 103–23.
13. ‘The Date and Purpose of the Fourth Kingship Oration of Dio Chrysostom’, ClAnt 2: 251–78.
14. ‘Some “Last Words” of M. Iunius Brutus’, Latomus 42: 763–79.
15. ‘Virgil, Pompey and the Histories of Asinius Pollio’, CW 76: 287–8.
16. ‘The Woman and the River: Diogenes’ Apophthegm from Herculaneum and Some Popular Misconceptions about Cynicism’, Apeiron 17: 125–30.
17. ‘Fate, Apollo and M. Iunius Brutus’, AJPh 104: 249–56.
1984
18. ‘Aristotle and Dido’s Hamartia’, G&R 31: 48–54.
19. ‘The Addressee of the Third Kingship Oration of Dio Chrysostom’, Prometheus 10: 65–69.
20. ‘Aeschylus: Agamemnon 36–37 Again’, LCM 9: 5–6.
21. ‘Brutus and Dido Revisited’, LCM 9: 156.
22. ‘Philanthropia in the Poetics’, Phoenix 38: 325–35.
23. Review of J. L. Strachan-Davidson, Appian: Civil Wars I’ (Chicago reprint, 1983), JACT Bulletin Review 64: viii.
24. Review of N. G. L. Hammond, Three Historians of Alexander the Great (Cambridge, 1983), JACT Review 1: 32–33.
25. Review of A. J. Woodman, Velleius Paterculus: The Caesarian and Augustan Narrative (Cambridge, 1983), JRS 74: 242–4.
1985
26. ‘Cynicism in Horace Epistles I’, PLLS 5: 33–60.
27. ‘Plutarch, Brutus and the Ghost of Caesar’, PACA 82: 19–20.
28. ‘The Interpretation of the “Second Preface” in Arrian’s Anabasis’, JHS 105: 162–8.
29. Review of C. Carena, M. Manfredini, and L. Piccirilli, edd., Plutarco: Le vite di Temistocle e Camillo (Milan, 1983), CR 35: 260–1.
1986
30. Review of S. Goldhill, Language, Sexuality, Narrative: The Oresteia (Cambridge, 1984), LCM 11: 55–64.
1987
31. ‘Politics, Philosophy and Friendship in Horace Odes 2.7’, QUCC 25: 59–72.
32. ‘The Attacks on L. Cornelius Cinna, Praetor in 44 B.C.’, RhMus 130: 124–8.
33. ‘The Tragedy and Guilt of Dido’, in M. Whitby, M. Whitby, and P. R. Hardie, edd., Homo Viator: Classical Essays for John Bramble (Bristol and Chicago, 1987), 153–61.
1988
34. Plutarch: The Life of Cicero (Warminster).
1989
35. Review of J. Geiger, Cornelius Nepos and Ancient Political Biography (Wiesbaden, 1985), CR 39: 229–33.
36. Review of P. McGushin, Sallust: the Conspiracy of Catiline (Bristol, 1987), CR 39: 393–4.
1990
37. ‘The Kingship Orations of Dio Chrysostom’, PLLS 6: 297–375.
38. Review of A. J. Woodman, Rhetoric in Classical Historiography: Four Studies (London, Sydney, and Portland, 1988)’, History of the Human Sciences 3.2: 317–21.
39. Review of L. Pearson, The Greek Historians of the West: Timaeus and his Predecessors (Atlanta, 1987), JHS 110: 231–2.
40. Review of P. J. Rhodes, ed., Thucydides: History II (Warminster, 1988) and J. S. Rusten, ed., Thucydides: The Peloponnesian War II (Cambridge, 1989), JACT Review 7: 28–9.
41. Review of A. B. Bosworth, From Arrian to Alexander (Oxford, 1988), JACT Review 7: 29–30.
1991
42. ‘The Dramatic Coherence of Ovid, Amores 1.1 and 1.2’, CQ 41: 551–4.
1992
43. ‘The Text and Interpretation of Plutarch, Vit. Cic. 45.1’, Hermes 120: 240–44.
44. ‘Plutarch, Vit. Ant. 31.3 and Suetonius, Aug. 69.2’, Hermes 120: 245–7.
45. Review of V. J. Gray, The Character of Xenophon’s Hellenica (London and Baltimore, 1989)’, CR 13: 281–4.
46. Review of N. Horsfall, Cornelius Nepos: a selection, including the lives of Cato and Atticus (Oxford, 1989), CR 42: 314–6.
47. Review of J. R. Bradley, The Sources of Cornelius Nepos (New York, 1991), Ploutarchos 8: 30–2.
48. Review of C. Habicht, Cicero (Baltimore 1990), Ploutarchos 9: 28–31.
49. Review of P. A. Stadter, A Commentary on Plutarch’s Pericles (Chapel Hill, 1989), CR 42: 289–94.
1993
50. ‘Le cosmopolitisme cynique’, in M.-O. Goulet-Cazé and R Goulet, edd., Le Cynisme et ses prolonguements (Paris) 259–80. [English version no. 70, below.]
51. ‘Livy’s Preface’, PCPhS 39: 141–68.
52. ‘On Reading Cornelius Nepos with Nicholas Horsfall’, LCM 18: 76–80.
53. ‘Truth and Untruth in Greek and Roman Historiography’, in C. Gill and T. P. Wiseman, edd., Lies and Fiction in the Ancient World (Exeter and Austin) 88–121.
54. ‘Textual and Interpretative Notes on Plutarch’s Cicero’, in H. D. Jocelyn and H. Hurt, edd., Tria Lustra: Essays Presented to John Pinsent (Liverpool) 151–6.
55. ‘Thucydides’, JACT Review 14: 14–18.
56. Review of P. A. Stadter, ed., Plutarch and the Historical Tradition (London and New York, 1992), CR 43: 29–32.
57. Review of D. A. Russell, Dio Chrysostom: Orations VII, XII, XXXVI (Cambridge, 1992), CR 43: 256–8.
58. Review of J. M. Alonso-Núñez, La historia universal de Pompeyo Trogo (Madrid, 1992), CR 43: 285–6.
59. Review of A. J. Pomeroy, The Appropriate Comment: Death Notices in the Ancient Historians (Frankfurt am Main, 1991), CR 43: 295–6
60. Review of Oxford Studies in Ancient Philosophy: Supplementary Volume 1991: Aristotle and the Later Tradition (Oxford, 1991), Ploutarchos 9: 32–4.
1994
61. ‘Xenophon and Callicratidas’, JHS 114: 70–84.
62. Review of N. G. L. Hammond, Sources for Alexander the Great: an Analysis of Plutarch’s Life and Arrian’s Anabasis Alexandrou (Cambridge, 1993), CR 44: 344–5.
63. Review of T. J. Figueira, Excursions in Epichoric History: Aiginetan Essays (Lanham, Md., 1993), CR 44: 331–3.
64. Review of F. Chamoux, P. Bertrac, and Y. Vernière, edd., Diodore de Sicile: Bibliotheque Historique I (Paris, 1993), CR 44: 272–4.
1995
65. ‘The Cynics and Politics’, in A. Laks and M. Schofield, edd., Justice and Generosity: Studies in Hellenistic Social and Political Philosophy (Cambridge) 129–58.
66. ‘Dio Chrysostom, Greece, and Rome’, in H. Hine, D. C. Innes, and C. Pelling, edd., Ethics and Rhetoric: Studies Presented to Donald Russell (Oxford) 177–92.
67. Review of E. Badian, From Plataea to Potidaea: Studies in the History and Historiography of the Pentekontaetia (Baltimore and London, 1993), JHS 115: 213–5.
68. Review of R. Mayer, ed., Horace: Epistles I (Cambridge, 1994), BMCR 6.2: 160–70 (= BMCR 1995.02.37).
1996
69. ‘Herodotus Warns the Athenians’, PLLS 9: 259–84.
70. ‘Cynic Cosmopolitanism’, in M.-O. Goulet-Cazé and R. B. Branham, edd., The Cynics: the Cynic Movement in Antiquity and its Legacy (Berkeley, Los Angeles and London) 105–20.
1997
71. ‘Plutarch, Brutus, and Brutus’ Greek and Latin Letters’, in J. Mossman, ed., Plutarch and his Intellectual World (London) 141–68.
1998
72. ‘Cry Freedom: Tacitus Annals 4.32–35’, Histos 2: 95–184.
1999
73. ‘
2000
74. ‘The Dionian Charidemus’, in S. Swain, ed., Dio Chrysostom: Politics, Letters, and Philosophy (Oxford) 187–210.
75. ‘The Cynics’, in C. J. Rowe and M. Schofield, edd., The Cambridge History of Greek and Roman Political Thought (Cambridge) 415–34. (Entitled ‘The Political Thought of the Cynics’ in this collection.)
2001
76. ‘A False Dilemma: Thucydides’ History and Historicism’, in S. J. Harrison, ed., Texts, Ideas, and the Classics: Scholarship, Theory, and Classical Literature (Oxford) 195–219.
2002
77. ‘Reconstructing Plancus: Horace, C. 1.7’, JRS 92: 86–109.
78. ‘Poetry, Philosophy, Politics and Play: Epistles 1’, in T. Woodman and D. Feeney, edd., Traditions and Contexts in the Poetry of Horace (Cambridge) 141–57, 235–7.
79. ‘Herodotus and Athens’, in E. J. Bakker, I. J. F. de Jong, and H. van Wees, edd., Brill’s Companion to Herodotus (Leiden) 33–52.
2003
80. ‘Dio und Trajan’, in K. Piepenbrink, ed., Philosophie und Lebenswelt in der Antike (Darmstadt) 186–207. (English edition, previously unpublished, is entitled ‘Dio and Trajan’ in this collection.)
2005
81. ‘The Thirteenth Oration of Dio Chrysostom: Complexity and Simplicity, Rhetoric and Moralism, Literature and Life’, JHS 125: 112–38.
2006
82. ‘Cynic Influence upon First-Century Judaism and Early Christianity?’, in B. McGing and J. Mossman, edd., The Limits of Biography (London and Swansea) 89–116.
83. ‘Jesus and Dionysus in The Acts of the Apostles and Early Christianity’, Hermathena 180: 65–104.
2007
84. ‘Philosophy and Ethics’, in S. Harrison, ed., Cambridge Companion to Horace (Cambridge) 165–80. (Entitled ‘Philosophy and Ethics in Horace’ in this collection.)
85. ‘“Saving” Greece from the “Ignominy” of Tyranny? The “Famous” and “Wonderful” Speech of Socles (5.92)’, in E. Irwin and E. Greenwood, edd., Reading Herodotus: A Study of the Logoi in Book 5 of Herodotus’ Histories (Cambridge) 245–68.
2008
86. ‘Defacing the Currency: Cynicism in Dio Chrysostom’ (unpublished)
2010
87. ‘Narrative and Speech Problems in Thucydides Book I’, in C. S. Kraus, J. Marincola, and C. Pelling, edd., Ancient Historiography and its Contexts: Studies in Honour of A. J. Woodman (Oxford) 15–39.
2011
88. ‘Luke’s Preface: the Greek Decree, Classical Historiography, and Christian Redefinitions’, NTS 57: 461–82.
89. ‘Jesus the Healer in the Gospels, the Acts of the Apostles, and Early Christianity’, Histos 5: 117–82.
2012
90. ‘Horace: Life, Death, Friendship and Philosophy’, in The Horatian Society Addresses (Horatian Society, London) 5–18.
91. ‘Luke and Acts: Prefaces and Consequences’ (previously unpublished)
92. ‘What’s in a Name? Χριστός/χρηστός and χριστιανοί/χρηστιανοί in the First Century AD’ (previously unpublished).
2013
93. ‘Time and Space Travel in Luke-Acts’, in R. Dupertuis and T. Penner, edd., Engaging Early Christian History: Reading Acts in the Second Century (Durham) 101–22.
94. ‘Matthew the Mathete: Sphragis, Authority, Mathesis, Succession, and Gospel Truth’ (previously unpublished)
95. ‘Greek, Roman, Jewish, and Christian Philosophy in Luke-Acts’ (previously unpublished)
2014
96. ‘Accommodation, Opposition or Other: Luke–Acts’ Stance Towards Rome’, in J. M. Madsen and R. Rees, edd., Roman Rule in Greek and Latin Writing: Double Vision (Leiden) 79–104.
97. ‘Vergil’s Loss of Virginity: Reading the Life’ (previously unpublished)
98. ‘Selling Christian Happiness to Pagans: the Case of Luke-Acts’ (previously unpublished)
2017
99. ‘Romane, Memento: Antisthenes, Dio and Virgil on the Education of the Strong’, in A. J. Woodman and J. Wisse, edd., Word and Context in Latin Poetry: Studies in Memory of David West (Cambridge) 105–30.
100. A Commentary on Plutarch’s Brutus, edited with updated bibliography by C. B. R. Pelling (Histos Supplement 7; Newcastle).
Moles also wrote the entry ‘Demonax’ in D. J. Zeyl, ed., Encyclopedia of Classical Philosophy (Westport, 1997) 172–3, and various entries on Cynicism in OCD3: ‘Bion of Borysthenes’ (243); ‘Diatribe’ (463–4); ‘Diogenes the Cynic’ (473–4); ‘Cynics’ (418–19); ‘Crates of Thebes’ (406); and ‘Oenomaos’ (562).