773 résultats
Of the oriental religions that swept across the Roman empire as forerunners of Christianity, the cult of Iuppiter Dolichenus was, together with Mithraism, the most successful in the Roman army. It may thus reveal something of the spirit of an army that was as multinational and multicultural as it was loyal, disciplined and efficient. The hope of gaining spirit of such an army and the spell of a powerful, mysterious religion prompted this study. ; Études Préliminaires Aux Religions Orientales Dans L'Empire Romain; 103 pages
Light wear to corners. Pencil marginalia to a few pages. ; Interest in goddess worship is growing in contemporary society, as women seek models for feminine spirituality and wholeness. New cults are developing around ancient goddesses from many cultures, although their modern adherents often envision and interpret the goddesses very differently than their original worshippers did. In this thematic study of the Roman goddess Ceres, Barbette Spaeth explores the rich complexity of meanings and functions that grew up around the goddess from the prehistoric period to the Late Roman Empire. In particular, she examines two major concepts, fertility and liminality, and two social categories, the plebs and women, which were inextricably linked with Ceres in the Roman mind. Spaeth then analyzes an image of the goddess in a relief of the Ara Pacis, an important state monument of the Augustan period, showing how it incorporates all these varied roles and associations of Ceres. This interpretation represents a new contribution to art history. With its use of literary, epigraphical, numismatic, artistic, and archaeological evidence, The Roman Goddess Ceres presents a more encompassing view of the goddess than was previously available. It will be important reading for all students of Classics, as well as for a general audience interested in New Age, feminist, or pagan spirituality. ; 308 pages
Skrifter Utgivna Av Svenska Institutet I Athen / Acta Instituti Atheniensis Regni Sueciae, Series in 8°, XIX; 421 pages; The focus of this book is the reconstruction of the mythicoritual nexus in Kios in Mysia through the in-depth investigation of the evidence (surviving in accounts by, and so shaped by the filters of, outsiders) and also of other issues implicated in its Problematik: ethnicity, cultural and religious interactions between Greeks and non-Greeks, colonial discourses (with special emphasis on the foundation mythopea of Kios’ mother city, Miletos) , the nature and functions of the Nymphs, the different personalities of Dionysos, advent festivals, certain problematic categories of cult recipients. Hylas’ myth and ritual had been constructed, through complex interactions between several mythicoritual schemata and included also elements that appear in non-Greek nexuses located in the area of Kios. The myth was both a foundation myth constructing cultural continuity with the heroic age and an immortalization myth: a Greek youth was abducted by Nymphs and became a diety rooted to the landscape and symbolically rooting the colony to the land; it established a poliouchos figure unique to Kios, connected Herakles with the city’s foundation, and articulated a relationship of cooperation and integration between Greeks and Non-Greeks. A ritual celebrated Hylas’ advent and commemorated the events that had led to Kios’ foundation, articulating a cooperative relationship between Greeks and locals.
DJ Spine is sunned and very discolored. Very light shelfwear to book. ; This book offers a series of in-depth studies of the beliefs, attitudes, and rituals surrounding death in ancient Greece, from the Minoan and Mycenean period to the end of the classical age. Drawing on a wide range of evidence--from literary texts, to inscriptions, to images in art--Sourvinou-Inwood sheds light on many key, still problematic, aspects of Greek life, myth, and literature. She also looks at the problem of "reading" this material within the context of our own culturally-determined beliefs. ; 512 pages
Fab1886Tours, Alfred Mame Et Fils ,Editeurs - 1886 - Traduits de L'Anglais par Richard Viot et précédé d'une introduction de Léon Gautier - 399 pages - Tables in finé - Illustrations dans le texte et en 10 grande compositions, nombreuses gravures d'après les monuments antiques. Paganisme et Christianisme - Volume in quarto, cartonnage de l'éditeur pleine percaline ,intérieur assez frais ,quelques rousseurs ,Bon exemplaire.
Some Foxing to DJ flaps and textblock and boards. A bit of colour loss along top edge of boards. ; This volume gathers diverse views of Apollo's origins and his far-reaching influences. It provides a fresh, multifaceted portrait of Apollo through essays that explore such topics as the etymology of his name, his association with religious cults and sacred groves, his appearances in Greco-Roman literature, and his iconography in the visual arts. Also included are bibliographies of ancient and modern sources. ; 9.1 X 6.6 X 1.1 inches; 190 pages
Scholar's name to ffep (Jenifer Neils). Slight soiling to DJ. DJ has a few small tears and creasing. ; This volume gathers diverse views of Apollo's origins and his far-reaching influences. It provides a fresh, multifaceted portrait of Apollo through essays that explore such topics as the etymology of his name, his association with religious cults and sacred groves, his appearances in Greco-Roman literature, and his iconography in the visual arts. Also included are bibliographies of ancient and modern sources. ; 9.1 X 6.6 X 1.1 inches; 190 pages
Book has minor shelfwear. Old price sticker residue on ffep else unmarked. Dustjacket is a bit tatty with chipping and some small tears. ; Martin Classical Lectures 25; 157 pages
Shelfwear book and dustjacket. Rounding to top of spine. Light pencil underlining on a few pages. ; It is a study of the Roman world in the first five centuries after Christ, and it tells the story of the historically improbable oddity of how a religious cult centered on an obscure construction worker living in the backwaters of a great Empire supplants the sophisticated Classical European religious worldview that had been embraced for thousands of years. Of particular interest to me was the story of Julian the Apostate, the last Roman emperor to openly embrace paganism. The author generously devotes an entire chapter to this remarkable personage. Although Julian was a nephew of Emperor Constantine and was raised as a Christian, he renounced the "new" religion when he became an adult and embraced the gods of his fathers. Because Julian ruled the Empire for a scant three years, he had insufficient time to turn back the tide of religious history, and we are left to wonder how things might have been different if he had ruled for 30 years instead. The author's sympathetic portrayal of this little-known Emperor lent a touching air of wistfulness to the sad story of the clash of Christianity with Paganism. ; 280 pages
Slight colour fading to part of rear panel. ; Brill's Companions To Classical Studies; 9.7 X 6.5 X 1.2 inches; 454 pages
Contents: Alexander the Great between two thrones and heaven / E. Badian Hellenistische Könige, zwischen griechische Vorstellungen vom Königtum und Vorstellungen ihrer einheimischen Untertanen / Peter Herz Ruler-cult at Aphrodisias in the late Republic and under the Julio-Claudian emperors / Joyce Reynolds La promotion du sujet par le culte du souverain / Robert Turcan Caligula's cult / C. J. Simpson Die Ikonographie des Genius Augusti im Kompital- und Hauskult der frühen Kaiserzeit / Heidi Hänlein Schäfer The imperial cult building in the Forum at Pompeii / John Dobbins The shrine of the imperial family in the Macellum at Pompeii / Alastair Small ; with an appendix The headgear of the female statue /? By Maria Kozakiewicz Cult and celt, indigenous participation in emperor worship in Central Spain /? Leonard A. Curchin Du nouveau sur les débuts du culte impérial municipal dans la Péninsule Ibérique / Robert Etienne Four temples at Tarraco / Duncan Fishwick The politics and architecture of the Athenian imperial cult / Michael Hoff Evidence for the imperial cult in Julio-Claudian Corinth / Mary E. Hoskins-Walbank Les empereurs romains versus Isis, Sérapis / Tran tam Tinh Les représentations des impératrices romaines "En Euthénia" sur les monnaies d'Alexandrie / Marie-Odile Jentel Alexander in Islam / Earle Waugh Subject and ruler, subjects and methods : an attempt at a conclusion /? Géza Alföldy. ; Journal Of Roman Archaeology Supplementary Series #17; 11.1 X 8.6 X 0.9 inches; 264 pages
Contents: Alexander the Great between two thrones and heaven / E. Badian Hellenistische Könige, zwischen griechische Vorstellungen vom Königtum und Vorstellungen ihrer einheimischen Untertanen / Peter Herz Ruler-cult at Aphrodisias in the late Republic and under the Julio-Claudian emperors / Joyce Reynolds La promotion du sujet par le culte du souverain / Robert Turcan Caligula's cult / C. J. Simpson Die Ikonographie des Genius Augusti im Kompital- und Hauskult der frühen Kaiserzeit / Heidi Hänlein Schäfer The imperial cult building in the Forum at Pompeii / John Dobbins The shrine of the imperial family in the Macellum at Pompeii / Alastair Small ; with an appendix The headgear of the female statue /? By Maria Kozakiewicz Cult and celt, indigenous participation in emperor worship in Central Spain /? Leonard A. Curchin Du nouveau sur les débuts du culte impérial municipal dans la Péninsule Ibérique / Robert Etienne Four temples at Tarraco / Duncan Fishwick The politics and architecture of the Athenian imperial cult / Michael Hoff Evidence for the imperial cult in Julio-Claudian Corinth / Mary E. Hoskins-Walbank Les empereurs romains versus Isis, Sérapis / Tran tam Tinh Les représentations des impératrices romaines "En Euthénia" sur les monnaies d'Alexandrie / Marie-Odile Jentel Alexander in Islam / Earle Waugh Subject and ruler, subjects and methods : an attempt at a conclusion /? Géza Alföldy. ; Journal Of Roman Archaeology Supplementary Series #17; 11.1 X 8.6 X 0.9 inches; 264 pages
Laura Slatkin's influential and widely admired book, here published in a second edition together with six additional essays, explores the superficially minor role of Thetis in the Iliad. Highly charged allusions reverberate through the narrative and establish a constellation of themes that link the poem to other traditions. Slatkin uncovers alternative traditions about the power of Thetis and shows how an awareness of those myths brings a far greater understanding of Thetis's place in the thematic structure of the Iliad. The six additional essays included in this volume--some of them classics, some never before published--cover a broad range of topics in the study of the Greek Epic: the workings of genre in Hesiod and Homer; the poetics of exchange; and the nature of enmity and friendship. The volume also includes a study of the Hesiodic Catalog of Women and reflections on particular heroes, such as Diomedes and Odysseus. ; Hellenic Studies 16; 238 pages
19401123Paris, PUF, 1940, in-12, broché, XX-130 pages.
Dustjacket is protected in mylar. ; Despite the rousing stories of male heroism in battles, the Trojan War transcended the activities of its human participants. For Homer, it was the gods who conducted and accounted for what happened. In the first part of this book, the authors find in Homer s Iliad material for exploring the everyday life of the Greek gods: what their bodies were made of and how they were nourished, the organization of their society, and the sort of life they led both in Olympus and in the human world. The gods are divided in their human nature: at once a fantasized model of infinite joys and an edifying example of engagement in the world, they have loves, festivities, and quarrels. In the second part, the authors show how citizens carried on everyday relations with the gods and those who would become the Olympians, inviting them to reside with humans organized in cities. At the heart of rituals and of social life, the gods were omnipresent: in sacrifices, at meals, in political assemblies, in war, in sexuality. In brief, the authors show how the gods were indispensable to the everyday social organization of Greek cities. ; Mestizo Spaces; 0.71 x 8.5 x 5.56 Inches; 287 pages
Light Foxing to textblock. ; Despite the rousing stories of male heroism in battles, the Trojan War transcended the activities of its human participants. For Homer, it was the gods who conducted and accounted for what happened. In the first part of this book, the authors find in Homer s Iliad material for exploring the everyday life of the Greek gods: what their bodies were made of and how they were nourished, the organization of their society, and the sort of life they led both in Olympus and in the human world. The gods are divided in their human nature: at once a fantasized model of infinite joys and an edifying example of engagement in the world, they have loves, festivities, and quarrels. In the second part, the authors show how citizens carried on everyday relations with the gods and those who would become the Olympians, inviting them to reside with humans organized in cities. At the heart of rituals and of social life, the gods were omnipresent: in sacrifices, at meals, in political assemblies, in war, in sexuality. In brief, the authors show how the gods were indispensable to the everyday social organization of Greek cities. ; Mestizo Spaces; 0.71 x 8.5 x 5.56 Inches; 287 pages
Very Good English Original dark red cloth. Demy 8vo. (22 x 15 cm). In English. [xiv], 752 p. I Volume Abridged Edition. The Golden Bough: A study in magic and religion.
Ca. 294 Seiten, ca. 122 Abbildungen mit zahlreichen Tabellen, 52 Tafeln, davon 8 Falttafeln, 1 Beilage. ; Athenaia Band 1; 294 pages; Das Deutsche Archäologische Institut Athen hat mit den Athenaia eine neue Schriftenreihe ins Leben gerufen, die in moderner Gestaltungsform das Publikationsspektrum der Abteilung ergänzen will. Im Fokus des Interesses stehen die Archäologie und Kulturgeschichte Griechenlands von der Vorgeschichte bis zur Spätantike. Die Athenaia verstehen sich auch als Medium für Tagungs- und Kongressberichte, die in der Folge verstärkt erscheinen werden.
Scholar's initial to inner cover (Jenifer Neils). ; 8.9 X 6.0 X 0.4 inches; 149 pages
Curling to foredges of wraps. Else minor shelfwear. ; American Schools of Oriental Research; 193 pages
New English Paperback. Pbo. Cr. 8vo. (20 x 14 cm). In Turkish. 144 p., b/w ills. Anadolu'da paganizm. Antik dönemde Harran ve Urfa. Paganism in Anatolia. Urfa and Harran in the Ancient Period.
Fine English Paperback., Fine., 20 x 14 cm., [x], [8], 213 p., b/w ills., "Son Gnostikler Sâbiîler; Inanç esaslari ve ibadetleri.", Sinasi Gündüz, Vadi Yayinlari, Ank., 1995. A study on Sabians. The Sabians of Middle Eastern tradition were a religious group mentioned three times in the Quran as a people of the Book, "the Jews, the Sabians, and the Christians". In the ahadith, they were described merely as converts to Islam in the period of Abbasi caliph, but interest in the identity and history of the group increased over time, and discussions and investigations about the Sabians began to appear in later Islamic literature.
Scholar's name to inner cover (Cedric Boulter). Dustsoiling to top of textblock. Light yellowing to DJ and edgewear. ; 116 pages
Scholars' bookplate to inner cover (Slater & Dunbabin). Ffep is creased. DJ has a 3 tears and some edgewear. Slipcase is present and intact. ; 3. Aufl. ; 4to 11" - 13" tall; 172 pages
Very light shelfwear to DJ. ; 26 römische Gottheiten sind in diesem Band jeweils in einem eigenen Kapitel behandelt: 12 weibliche und 14 männliche darunter so bekannte wie Jupiter, Juno und Minerva, aber auch weniger prominente wie Mater Matuta, Silvanus und Veiovis; 319 pages