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Religion and Reconciliation in Greek Cities - The Sacred Laws of Selinus and Cyrene (Hardcover, New)
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Religion and Reconciliation in Greek Cities - The Sacred Laws of Selinus and Cyrene (Hardcover, New)
Series: Society for Classical Studies American Classical Studies
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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Two Greek cities which in their time were leading states in the
Mediterranean world, Selinus in Sicily and Cyrene in Libya, set up
inscriptions of the kind called sacred laws, but regulating worship
on a larger scale than elsewhere - Selinus in the mid fifth century
B.C., Cyrene in the late fourth. In different ways, the content and
the format of both inscriptions are so unusual that they have
baffled understanding.
At Selinus, a large lead tablet with two columns of writing upside
down to each other is thought to be a remedy for homicide pollution
arising from civil strife, but most of it remains obscure and
intractable. The gods who are named and the ritual that is
prescribed have been misinterpreted in the light of literary works
that dwell on the sensational. Instead, they belong to agrarian
religion and follow a regular sequence of devotions, the
upside-down columns being reversed midway through the year with
magical effect. Gods and ritual were selected because of their
appeal to ordinary persons. Selinus was governed by a long enduring
oligarchy which made an effort, appearing also in the economic
details of sacrifice, to reconcile rich and poor.
At Cyrene, a long series of rules were displayed on a marble block
in the premier shrine of Apollo. They are extremely diverse - both
costly and trivial, customary and novel - and eighty years of
disputation have brought no agreement as to the individual meaning
or general significance. In fact this mixture of things is
carefully arranged to suit a variety of needs, of rich and poor, of
citizens of long standing and of new-comers probably of Libyan
origin. In one instance the same agrarian deities appear as at
Selinus. It is the work once more of a moderate oligarchy, which on
other evidence proved its worth during the turbulent events of this
period.
Religion and Reconciliation in Greek Cities provides a revised
text and a secure meaning for both documents, and interprets the
gods, the ritual, and the social background in the light of much
comparative material from other Greek cities. Noel Robertson's
approach rejects the usual assumptions based on moralizing literary
works and in doing so restores to us an ancient nature religion
which Greek communities adapted to their own practical purposes.
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