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Books > Humanities > History > World history > BCE to 500 CE
This book is a compilation of several sections of a larger work, a
book by the name of African Origins of Civilization, Religion, Yoga
Mysticism and Ethics Philosophy. It also contains some additional
evidences not contained in the larger work that demonstrate the
correlation between Ancient Egyptian Religion and Buddhism. This
book is one of several compiled short volumes that has been
compiled so as to facilitate access to specific subjects contained
in the larger work which is over 680 pages long. These short and
small volumes have been specifically designed to cover one subject
in a brief and low cost format. This present volume, The Ancient
Egyptian Buddha: The Ancient Egyptian Origins of Buddhism, formed
one subject in the larger work; actually it was one chapter of the
larger work. However, this volume has some new additional evidences
and comparisons of Buddhist and Neterian (Ancient Egyptian)
philosophies not previously discussed. It was felt that this
subject needed to be discussed because even in the early 21st
century, the idea persists that Buddhism originated only in India
independently. Yet there is ample evidence from ancient writings
and perhaps more importantly, iconographical evidences from the
Ancient Egyptians and early Buddhists themselves that prove
otherwise. This handy volume has been designed to be accessible to
young adults and all others who would like to have an easy
reference with documentation on this important subject. This is an
important subject because the frame of reference with which we look
at a culture depends strongly on our conceptions about its origins.
in this case, if we look at the Buddhism as an Asiatic religion we
would treat it and it'sculture in one way. If we id as African
Ancient Egyptian] we not only would see it in a different light but
we also must ascribe Africa with a glorious legacy that matches any
other culture in human history and gave rise to one of the present
day most important religious philosophies. We would also look at
the culture and philosophies of the Ancient Egyptians as having
African insights that offer us greater depth into the Buddhist
philosophies. Those insights inform our knowledge about other
African traditions and we can also begin to understand in a deeper
way the effect of Ancient Egyptian culture on African culture and
also on the Asiatic as well. We would also be able to discover the
glorious and wondrous teaching of mystical philosophy that Ancient
Egyptian Shetaut Neter religion offers, that is as powerful as any
other mystic system of spiritual philosophy in the world today.
Modern historiography has become accustomed to portraying the
emperor Theophilos of Byzantium (829-842) in a favourable light,
taking at face value the legendary account that makes of him a
righteous and learned ruler, and excusing as ill fortune his
apparent military failures against the Muslims. The present book
considers events of the period that are crucial to our
understanding of the reign and argues for a more balanced
assessment of it. The focus lies on the impact of Oriental politics
on the reign of Theophilos, the last iconoclast emperor. After
introductory chapters, setting out the context in which he came to
power, separate sections are devoted to the influence of Armenians
at the court, the enrolment of Persian rebels against the caliphate
in the Byzantine army, the continuous warfare with the Arabs and
the cultural exchange with Baghdad, the Khazar problem, and the
attitude of the Christian Melkites towards the iconoclast emperor.
The final chapter reassesses the image of the emperor as a good
ruler, building on the conclusions of the previous sections. The
book reinterprets major events of the period and their chronology,
and sets in a new light the role played by figures like Thomas the
Slav, Manuel the Armenian or the Persian Theophobos, whose identity
is established from a better understanding of the sources.
Before it fell to Muslim armies in AD 635-6 Damascus had a long and
prestigious history as a center of Christianity. How did the city,
which became capital of the Islamic Empire, and its people,
negotiate the transition from a late antique, or early Byzantine
world to an Islamic culture? In this innovative study, Nancy Khalek
demonstrates that the changes that took place in Syria during the
formative period of Islamic life were not a matter of the
replacement of one civilization by another as a result of military
conquest, but rather of shifting relationships and practices in a
multi-faceted social and cultural setting. Even as late antique
forms of religion and culture persisted, the formation of Islamic
identity was effected by the people who constructed, lived in, and
narrated the history of their city. Khalek draws on the evidence of
architecture, and the testimony of pilgrims, biographers,
geographers, and historians to shed light on this process of
identity formation. Offering a fresh approach to the early Islamic
period, she moves the study of Islamic origins beyond a focus on
issues of authenticity and textual criticism, and initiates an
interdisciplinary discourse on narrative, story-telling, and the
interpretations of material culture.
In recent years memory has become a central concept in historical
studies, following the definition of the term 'Cultural Memory' by
the Egyptologist Jan Assmann in 1994. Thinking about memory, as
both an individual and a social phenomenon, has led to a new way of
conceptualizing history and has drawn historians into debate with
scholars in other disciplines such as literary studies, cultural
theory and philosophy. The aim of this volume is to explore memory
and identity in ancient societies. 'We are what we remember' is the
striking thesis of the Nobel laureate Eric R Kandel, and this holds
equally true for ancient societies as modern ones. How did the
societies of Mesopotamia, Egypt, Greece and Rome remember and
commemorate the past? How were relationships to the past, both
individual and collective, articulated? Exploring the balance
between memory as survival and memory as reconstruction, and
between memory and historically recorded fact, this volume unearths
the way ancient societies formed their cultural identity. >
In a unique way this study probes the linguistic, sociological,
religious and theological issues associated with being physically
disabled in the ancient Near East. By examining the law
collections, societal conventions and religious obligations towards
individuals who were physically disabled Fiorello gives us an
understanding of the world a disabled person would enter. He
explores the connection between the literal use of disability
language and the metaphorical use of this language made in biblical
prophetic literature as a prophetic critique of Israel's
dysfunctional relationship with God. COMMENDATIONS "In this
well-researched volume Michael Fiorello has made a significant
contribution to the study of disability in the Bible in the context
of its ancient Near Eastern world. Fiorello's work needs to be
taken seriously in the church, the academy, and the world." -
Richard E. Averbeck, Trinity Evangelical Divinity School, USA
Some early Christians used water, not wine, in the cup of their Eucharist, and avoided eating meat. This kind of avoidance, more common than previously imagined, reflected a more radical stance towards the wider society than that taken by the Christian mainstream. The discussion here throws new light on early Christianity and the ways eating and drinking have often reflected deeply-held beliefs and values.
This title offers discussion of themes such as spatiality,
temporality and sovereignty in Latin literature, drawing upon key
conteporary critical theorists. "Now and Rome" is about the way
that sovereign power regulates the movement of information and the
movement of bodies through space and time. Through a series of
readings of three key Latin literary texts alongside six
contemporary cultural theorists, Ika Willis argues for an
understanding of sovereignty as a system which enforces certain
rules for legibility, transmission and circulation on both
information and bodies, redefining the relationship between the
'virtual' and the 'material'. This book is both innovative and
important in that it brings together several key strands in recent
thinking about sovereignty, history, space, and telecommunications,
especially in the way it brings together 'textual' theories
(reception, deconstruction) with political and spatial thinking. It
also serves as a much-needed crossing-point between Classical
Studies and cultural theory. "Continuum Studies in Classical
Reception" presents scholarly monographs offering new and
innovative research and debate to students and scholars in the
reception of Classical Studies. Each volume will explore the
appropriation, reconceptualization and recontextualization of
various aspects of the Graeco-Roman world and its culture, looking
at the impact of the ancient world on modernity. Research will also
cover reception within antiquity, the theory and practice of
translation, and reception theory.
The Language of Atoms argues that ancient Epicurean writing on
language offers a theory of performative language. Such a theory
describes how languages acts, providing psychic therapy or creating
new verbal meanings, rather than passively describing the nature of
the universe. This observation allows us new insight into how
Lucretius, our primary surviving Epicurean author, uses language in
his great poem, De rerum natura (On the Nature of Things). The book
begins with a double contention: on the one hand, while scholarship
on Lucretius has looked to connect Lucretius' text to its larger
cultural and historical context, it has never turned to speech act
theory in this quest. This omission is striking at least in so far
as speech act theory was developed precisely as a way of locating
language (including texts) within a theory of action. The book
studies Lucretius' work in the light of performative language,
looking at promising, acts of naming, and the larger political
implications of these linguistic acts. The Language of Atoms
locates itself at the intersection of both older scholarly work on
Epicureanism and recent developments on the reception history, and
will thus offer scholars across the humanities a challenging new
perspective on Lucretius' work.
In ancient Greece and Rome, dreams were believed by many to offer
insight into future events. Artemidorus' Oneirocritica, a treatise
on dream-divination and compendium of dream-interpretations written
in Ancient Greek in the mid-second to early-third centuries AD, is
the only surviving text from antiquity that instructs its readers
in the art of using dreams to predict the future. In it,
Artemidorus discusses the nature of dreams and how to interpret
them, and provides an encyclopaedic catalogue of interpretations of
dreams relating to the natural, human, and divine worlds. In this
volume, Harris-McCoy offers a revised Greek text of the
Oneirocritica with facing English translation, a detailed
introduction, and scholarly commentary. Seeking to demonstrate the
richness and intelligence of this understudied text, he gives
particular emphasis to the Oneirocritica's composition and
construction, and its aesthetic, intellectual, and political
foundations and context.
Shipley presents the first modern commentary on Plutarch's Life of Agesilaos (c.444-360 BC) together with the full Greek text and a bibliography. Plutarch's biographies have long been valued for their literary, philosophic, and historiographic content, and the Life of Agesilaos, king of Sparta for forty years after the Peloponnesian war, has special interest as an introduction to Greek history, society, and culture in the fourth century, a critical period that has received little attention compared with the fifth century in Athens.
Richard Finn OP examines the significance of almsgiving in Churches
of the later empire for the identity and status of the bishops,
ascetics, and lay people who undertook practices which differed in
kind and context from the almsgiving practised by pagans. It
reveals how the almsgiving crucial in constructing the bishop's
standing was a co-operative task where honour was shared but which
exposed the bishop to criticism and rivalry. Finn details how
practices gained meaning from a discourse which recast traditional
virtues of generosity and justice to render almsgiving a
benefaction and source of honour, and how this pattern of thought
and conduct interacted with classical patterns to generate
controversy. He argues that co-operation and competition in
Christian almsgiving, together with the continued existence of
traditional euergetism, meant that, contrary to the views of recent
scholars, Christian alms did not turn bishops into the supreme
patrons of their cities.
The historical and cultural role of the Aramaeans in ancient Syria
can hardly be overestimated. Thus The Aramaeans in Ancient Syria
gives precise and up-to-date information on different aspects of
Aramaean culture. To that end, history, society, economy and law,
language and script, literature, religion, art and architecture of
the Aramaean kingdoms of Syria from their beginnings in the 11
century B.C. until their end at approximately 720 B.C. are covered
within the handbook. The wide survey of Aramaean culture in Syria
is supplemented by overviews on the Aramaeans in Assyria,
Babylonia, Phoenicia, Palestine, Egypt, North Arabia and on the
Aramaean heritage in the Levant.
Peter Liddel offers a fresh approach to the old problem of the
nature of individual liberty in ancient Athens. He draws
extensively on oratorical and epigraphical evidence from the late
fourth century BC to analyse the ways in which ideas about liberty
were reconciled with ideas about obligation, and examines how this
reconciliation was negotiated, performed, and presented in the
Athenian law-courts, assembly, and through the inscriptional mode
of publication. Using modern political theory as a springboard,
Liddel argues that the ancient Athenians held liberty to consist of
the substantial obligations (political, financial, and military) of
citizenship.
Roman identity is one of the most interesting cases of social
identity because in the course of time, it could mean so many
different things: for instance, Greek-speaking subjects of the
Byzantine empire, inhabitants of the city of Rome, autonomous civic
or regional groups, Latin speakers under 'barbarian' rule in the
West or, increasingly, representatives of the Church of Rome.
Eventually, the Christian dimension of Roman identity gained
ground. The shifting concepts of Romanness represent a
methodological challenge for studies of ethnicity because,
depending on its uses, Roman identity may be regarded as 'ethnic'
in a broad sense, but under most criteria, it is not. Romanness is
indeed a test case how an established and prestigious social
identity can acquire many different shades of meaning, which we
would class as civic, political, imperial, ethnic, cultural, legal,
religious, regional or as status groups. This book offers
comprehensive overviews of the meaning of Romanness in most
(former) Roman provinces, complemented by a number of comparative
and thematic studies. A similarly wide-ranging overview has not
been available so far.
Xerxes, the Persian king who invaded Greece in 480 BC, quickly
earned a notoriety which endured throughout antiquity and beyond.
The onslaught of this eastern king upon Greek territory,
culminating in the burning of Athens, ensured that the character of
Xerxes soon found his way into the Greek cultural encyclopaedia as
a symbol of arrogance, hubris and cruelty. The Xerxes-tradition is
rich in episodes which have captured the imagination of writers
throughout antiquity and into modern times, including the crossing
of the Hellespont, the battles of Thermopylae and Salamis, and the
destruction of Athens. The earliest ancient Greek sources created
an image of a figure to be both feared and mocked by those for whom
the experience of the Persian Wars was a key moment in their own
self-definition. Within this rhetorical framework Xerxes was
constructed as the antitype of the virtuous Greeks who had resisted
his attempt to enslave them. In later traditions this image was
revisited, adapted and, in some cases, contradicted.Imagining
Xerxes is a transhistorical analysis bringing together the
disparate cultural responses to the Persian king; it includes an
evaluation of his portrayal in historiographical works by Herodotus
and Ctesias and in the literary representations of Aeschylus, the
Athenian orators, the Roman poetic tradition and Plutarch. It also
considers evidence which goes beyond the Hellenocentric view, such
as extant Persian epigraphic and artistic sources and the Jewish
tradition. From the image of the tyrannical yet effeminate bully
seen in Aeschylus' Persae, to the official picture of the rightful
king portrayed in Persian inscriptions, or the cruel and enslaving
despot who transgresses boundaries seen in the historical and
oratorical tradition, Xerxes is a figure who has been reinvented in
a remarkable variety of cultural and literary contexts. Analysing
these reinventions, this title examines the reception of a key
figure in the ancient world: one whose image was in many cases
inextricably bound up with notions of how the receiving societies
imagined and defined themselves.
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