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Books > Religion & Spirituality > Non-Christian religions > Pre-Christian European & Mediterranean religions > General
The study of ancient Greek religion has been excitingly renewed in the last thirty years. Key areas are: religion and politics; archaeological finds; myth and ritual; gender; problems raised by the very notion of 'religion'. This volume contains challenging papers (updated especially for this collection) by some of the most innovative participants in this renewal, and includes an important introductory essay by Richard Buxton.
Dr Dignas asks whether Greek religion really formed a fundamental contrast to modern forms of religion that enjoy or, at least, claim a separation of 'church and state'. With a focus on economic and administrative aspects of sanctuaries in Hellenistic and Roman Asia Minor she investigates the boundaries between the sacred and the profane in the ancient world and reveals the sanctuaries as entities with independent interests and powers.
Do the terms `pagan' and `Christian,' `transition from paganism to
Christianity' still hold as explanatory devices to apply to the
political, religious and cultural transformation experienced
Empire-wise? Revisiting `pagans' and `Christians' in Late Antiquity
has been a fertile site of scholarship in recent years: the
paradigm shift in the interpretation of the relations between
`pagans' and `Christians' replaced the old `conflict model' with a
subtler, complex approach and triggered the upsurge of new
explanatory models such as multiculturalism, cohabitation,
cooperation, identity, or group cohesion. This collection of
essays, inscribes itself into the revisionist discussion of
pagan-Christian relations over a broad territory and time-span, the
Roman Empire from the fourth to the eighth century. A set of papers
argues that if `paganism' had never been fully extirpated or denied
by the multiethnic educated elite that managed the Roman Empire,
`Christianity' came to be presented by the same elite as providing
a way for a wider group of people to combine true philosophy and
right religion. The speed with which this happened is just as
remarkable as the long persistence of paganism after the sea-change
of the fourth century that made Christianity the official religion
of the State. For a long time afterwards, `pagans' and `Christians'
lived `in between' polytheistic and monotheist traditions and
disputed Classical and non-Classical legacies.
![Images of Mithra (Hardcover): Philippa Adrych, Robert Bracey, Dominic Dalglish, Stefanie Lenk, Rachel Wood](//media.loot.co.za/images/x80/14270564624179215.jpg) |
Images of Mithra
(Hardcover)
Philippa Adrych, Robert Bracey, Dominic Dalglish, Stefanie Lenk, Rachel Wood; Edited by …
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R2,146
Discovery Miles 21 460
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With a history of use extending back to Vedic texts of the second
millennium BC, derivations of the name Mithra appear in the Roman
Empire, across Sasanian Persia, and in the Kushan Empire of
southern Afghanistan and northern India during the first millennium
AD. Even today, this name has a place in Yazidi and Zoroastrian
religion. But what connection have Mihr in Persia, Miiro in Kushan
Bactria, and Mithras in the Roman Empire to one another? Over the
course of the volume, specialists in the material culture of these
diverse regions explore appearances of the name Mithra from six
distinct locations in antiquity. In a subversion of the usual
historical process, the authors begin not from an assessment of
texts, but by placing images of Mithra at the heart of their
analysis. Careful consideration of each example's own context,
situating it in the broader scheme of religious traditions and
on-going cultural interactions, is key to this discussion. Such an
approach opens up a host of potential comparisons and
interpretations that are often side-lined in historical accounts.
What Images of Mithra offers is a fresh approach to the ways in
which gods were labelled and depicted in the ancient world. Through
an emphasis on material culture, a more nuanced understanding of
the processes of religious formation is proposed in what is but the
first part of the Visual Conversations series.
Though considered one of the most important informants about
Judaism in the first century CE, the Jewish historian Flavius
Josephus's testimony is often overlooked or downplayed. Jonathan
Klawans's Josephus and the Theologies of Ancient Judaism reexamines
Josephus's descriptions of sectarian disagreements concerning
determinism and free will, the afterlife, and scriptural authority.
In each case, Josephus's testimony is analyzed in light of his
works' general concerns as well as relevant biblical, rabbinic, and
Dead Sea texts. Many scholars today argue that ancient Jewish
sectarian disputes revolved primarily or even exclusively around
matters of ritual law, such as calendar, cultic practices, or
priestly succession. Josephus, however, indicates that the
Pharisees, Sadducees, and Essenes disagreed about matters of
theology, such as afterlife and determinism. Similarly, many
scholars today argue that ancient Judaism was thrust into a
theological crisis in the wake of the destruction of the second
temple in 70 CE, yet Josephus's works indicate that Jews were
readily able to make sense of the catastrophe in light of biblical
precedents and contemporary beliefs. Without denying the importance
of Jewish law-and recognizing Josephus's embellishments and
exaggerations-Josephus and the Theologies of Ancient Judaism calls
for a renewed focus on Josephus's testimony, and models an approach
to ancient Judaism that gives theological questions a deserved
place alongside matters of legal concern. Ancient Jewish theology
was indeed significant, diverse, and sufficiently robust to respond
to the crisis of its day.
This volume investigates the reasons why Plotinus, a philosopher
inspired by Plato, made critical use of Epicurean philosophy.
Eminent scholars show that some fundamental Epicurean conceptions
pertaining to ethics, physics, epistemology and theology are drawn
upon in the Enneads to discuss crucial notions such as pleasure and
happiness, providence and fate, matter and the role of sense
perception, intuition and intellectual evidence in relation to the
process of knowledge acquisition. By focusing on the meaning of
these terms in Epicureanism, Plotinus deploys sophisticated methods
of comparative analysis and argumentative procedures that
ultimately lead him to approach certain aspects of Epicurus'
philosophy as a benchmark for his own theories and to accept,
reject or discredit the positions of authors of his own day. At the
same time, these discussions reveal what aspects of Epicurean
philosophy were still perceived to be of vital relevance in the
third century AD.
Inspiration and Ideas for a Holistic Pagan Lifestyle
Live fully as a Pagan every day of the year, not only on full
moons and holidays. With practical tips for integrating
earth-centered spirituality into every aspect of life, To Walk a
Pagan Path shows you how to: Cultivate a meaningful Pagan practice
by following seven simple steps. Develop a sacred calendar
customized for your beliefs, lifestyle, and environment. Make daily
activities sacred with quick and easy rituals. Reclaim your place
in the food cycle by producing a portion of your own food--even if
you live in an apartment Express Pagan spirituality through a
variety of craft projects: candles, scrying mirrors, solar wreaths,
recipes, and more. Create sacred relationships with animal
familiars.
In Hans Urs von Balthasar and the Critical Appropriation of Russian
Religious Thought, Jennifer Newsome Martin offers the first
systematic treatment and evaluation of the Swiss Catholic
theologian's complex relation to modern speculative Russian
religious philosophy. Her constructive analysis proceeds through
Balthasar's critical reception of Vladimir Soloviev, Nicholai
Berdyaev, and Sergei Bulgakov with respect to theological
aesthetics, myth, eschatology, and Trinitarian discourse and
examines how Balthasar adjudicates both the possibilities and the
limits of theological appropriation, especially considering the
degree to which these Russian thinkers have been influenced by
German Idealism and Romanticism. Martin argues that Balthasar's
creative reception and modulation of the thought of these Russian
philosophers is indicative of a broad speculative tendency in his
work that deserves further attention. In this respect, Martin
consciously challenges the prevailing view of Balthasar as a
fundamentally conservative or nostalgic thinker. In her discussion
of the relation between tradition and theological speculation,
Martin also draws upon the understudied relation between Balthasar
and F. W. J. Schelling, especially as Schelling's form of Idealism
was passed down through the Russian thinkers. In doing so, she
persuasively recasts Balthasar as an ecumenical, creatively
anti-nostalgic theologian hospitable to the richness of
contributions from extra-magisterial and non-Catholic sources.
In the early nineties, after Reinholds first publication "Die
Beziehungen Altisraels zu den aramaischen Staaten in der
israelitisch-judaischen Koenigszeit" an archaeological find came to
light with the broken pieces of the early Aramaic written Tel Dan
Stela, which has greatly illuminated the portrait of Aram and
ancient history of Israel. The author offers a renewed overview to
the Aramaean history on the foundation of the forced researches in
the last 50 years. This begins with the early testifying of Aram in
cuneiform sources of the 3rd/2nd Mill. B.C. from the Mesopotamian
and Syrian area and ends with the decline of Aram-Damascus. The
Volume incorporates a revised edition of the researches history and
two excurses about the newest palaeographic results to the second
line of the Bar-Hadad Stela of Aleppo in Syria on the base of
precision photographs and computer-enhancements and presents a new
transcription and translation of the Tel Dan Stela fragments. These
are a certain basis to build on the royal line of sucession in
Aram-Damascus and to illuminate their historical background in the
Ancient Near East. Reinhold emphasizes, that the results of
archaeology could always be adapted or replaced by recent
discoveries; but he hopes that the "New Studies on Aram and Israel"
will be served as a base for the future research of the Near
Eastern Archaeology and History.
Recent scholarship on ancient Judaism, finding only scattered
references to messiahs in Hellenistic- and Roman-period texts, has
generally concluded that the word ''messiah'' did not mean anything
determinate in antiquity. Meanwhile, interpreters of Paul, faced
with his several hundred uses of the Greek word for ''messiah,''
have concluded that christos in Paul does not bear its conventional
sense. Against this curious consensus, Matthew V. Novenson argues
in Christ among the Messiahs that all contemporary uses of such
language, Paul's included, must be taken as evidence for its range
of meaning. In other words, early Jewish messiah language is the
kind of thing of which Paul's Christ language is an example.
Looking at the modern problem of Christ and Paul, Novenson shows
how the scholarly discussion of christos in Paul has often been a
cipher for other, more urgent interpretive disputes. He then traces
the rise and fall of ''the messianic idea'' in Jewish studies and
gives an alternative account of early Jewish messiah language: the
convention worked because there existed both an accessible pool of
linguistic resources and a community of competent language users.
Whereas it is commonly objected that the normal rules for
understanding christos do not apply in the case of Paul since he
uses the word as a name rather than a title, Novenson shows that
christos in Paul is neither a name nor a title but rather a Greek
honorific, like Epiphanes or Augustus. Focusing on several set
phrases that have been taken as evidence that Paul either did or
did not use christos in its conventional sense, Novenson concludes
that the question cannot be settled at the level of formal grammar.
Examining nine passages in which Paul comments on how he means the
word christos, Novenson shows that they do all that we normally
expect any text to do to count as a messiah text. Contrary to much
recent research, he argues that Christ language in Paul is itself
primary evidence for messiah language in ancient Judaism.
The city of Constantinople was named New Rome or Second Rome very
soon after its foundation in AD 324; over the next two hundred
years it replaced the original Rome as the greatest city of the
Mediterranean. In this unified essay collection, prominent
international scholars examine the changing roles and perceptions
of Rome and Constantinople in Late Antiquity from a range of
different disciplines and scholarly perspectives. The seventeen
chapters cover both the comparative development and the shifting
status of the two cities. Developments in politics and urbanism are
considered, along with the cities' changing relationships with
imperial power, the church, and each other, and their evolving
representations in both texts and images. These studies present
important revisionist arguments and new interpretations of
significant texts and events. This comparative perspective allows
the neglected subject of the relationship between the two Romes to
come into focus while avoiding the teleological distortions common
in much past scholarship. An introductory section sets the cities,
and their comparative development, in context. Part Two looks at
topography, and includes the first English translation of the
Notitia of Constantinople. The following section deals with
politics proper, considering the role of emperors in the two Romes
and how rulers interacted with their cities. Part Four then
considers the cities through the prism of literature, in particular
through the distinctively late antique genre of panegyric. The
fifth group of essays considers a crucial aspect shared by the two
cities: their role as Christian capitals. Lastly, a provocative
epilogue looks at the enduring Roman identity of the post-Heraclian
Byzantine state. Thus, Two Romes not only illuminates the study of
both cities but also enriches our understanding of the late Roman
world in its entirety.
This examination of myths from around the world focuses on the role
nature plays within mythology. Creation myths from myriad cultures
recognized that life arose from natural elements, inextricably
connecting human life to the natural world. Nature as portrayed in
myth is unpredictable and destructive but also redemptive,
providing solace and wisdom. Mythology relates the human life cycle
to the seasons, with spring, summer, fall and winter as metaphors
for birth, adulthood, old age and death. The author identifies
divinities who were direct representations of natural phenomena.
The transition of mythic representation from the Paleolithic to
Neolithic periods is discussed.
This book examines the organization of religion - Christian, pagan, and Jewish - in the Roman Empire at the time of Constantine and Augustine. The author argues that because official pagan religion was inextricably tied to the structure of individual cities, Christianity alone was able to unite the inhabitants of the Empire as a whole.
In 1902 Steiner wrote Christianity as Mystical Fact and the
Mysteries of Antiquity, showing the evolutionary development from
the ancient mysteries, through the great Greek philosophers, to the
events portrayed in the gospels. Steiner saw the Christ event as
the turning point in the world's spiritual history -- an
incarnation whose significance he saw as transcending all
religions. Charles Kovacs brings his deep knowledge of esoteric
writings, mythology and Steiner's lectures to give more background
and to show how the way for Christianity was prepared in the
ancient pre-Christian mysteries of Egypt and Greece. He discusses
the symbolic and real events of the gospels, as well as looking at
some of the understandings and disputes of the early Christians.
The book is illustrated with Kovacs' own colour paintings.
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