The religious imagination of the Greeks, Robert Garland
observes, was populated by divine beings whose goodwill could not
be counted upon, and worshipers faced a heavy burden of choice
among innumerable deities to whom they might offer their devotion.
These deities and Athenian polytheism itself remained in constant
flux as cults successively came into favor and waned. Examining the
means through which the Athenians established and marketed cults,
this handsomely illustrated book is the first to illuminate the
full range of motives political and economic, as well as spiritual
that prompted them to introduce new gods."
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