Greenidge taught throughout his writing career. Two years after coming down from Oxford, he contributed many articles to a new edition of ''Smith's Dictionary of Antiquities (
1890/91). His first book Infamia, its place in Roman Public and Private Law
was published at Oxford in 1894. His next work was a Handbook of Greek Constitutional History
(1896), in which he gave a narrative of the main lines of development of Greek Public Law, Roman Public Life
(1901) in which he traced the growth of the Roman constitution and showed the political genius of Romans in dealing with all the problems of administration they had to face. This was followed by The Legal Procedure in Cicero's Time'', Oxford (1901), a systematic and historical treatment of civil and criminal procedure. He also revised Sir William Smith's
History of Rome (1897), (down to the death of Justinian) of the ''Student's Gibbon
(1899). In 1903, in cooperation with Agnes Muriel Clay, he produced Sources of Roman History BC 133-70'' (Oxford), designed to prepare the way for a new
History of Rome. In 1904, he contributed an historical introduction to the 4th edition of Poste's
Institutes of Gaius. In the same year, appeared the first volume of
A History of Rome during the Later Republic and Early Principate covering the years 133 to 104 B.C. This work was designed to extend to the accession of
Vespasian and to fill six volumes, indeed a
magnum opus, but no second volume (which was to end with the first consulship of
Pompey and
Crassus) was issued. The third volume was intended to be up to the death of
Caesar, the fourth was to cover the Civil War and the rule of
Augustus, while the fifth and sixth were to deal with the Emperors up to
Vespasian. Much of Abel Hendy Jones' most interesting work is to be found in scattered articles, more particularly in the
Classical Review. His merit as an historian lies in his "accurate accumulation of detail, combined with critical insight and power of exposition which was not unmixed with occasional paradox". On his death,
The Times recorded that "His death will be regarded as a great loss to classical scholarship; in his own department of ancient history he was an acknowledged authority, and what he had already given to the world gave further promise of the future."
The Daily Telegraph declared that "Abel Greenidge had tapped sources of Roman Law that English scholars did not even know about". ==References==