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What were the limits of knowledge of the physical world in Greek
and Roman antiquity? How far did travellers get and what did they
know about far-away regions? How did they describe foreign
countries and peoples? How did they measure the earth, and
distances and heights on it? Ideas about the physical and cultural
world are a key aspect of ancient history, but until now there has
been no up-to-date modern overview of the subject. This book
explores the beginnings and development of geographical ideas in
Classical antiquity and demonstrates technical methods for
describing landscape, topographies and ethnographies. The survey
relies on a variety of sources: philosophical and scientific texts
but also poems and travelogues; papyrological remains and visual
monuments.
What were the limits of knowledge of the physical world in Greek
and Roman antiquity? How far did travellers get and what did they
know about far-away regions? How did they describe foreign
countries and peoples? How did they measure the earth, and
distances and heights on it? Ideas about the physical and cultural
world are a key aspect of ancient history, but until now there has
been no up-to-date modern overview of the subject. This book
explores the beginnings and development of geographical ideas in
Classical antiquity and demonstrates technical methods for
describing landscape, topographies and ethnographies. The survey
relies on a variety of sources: philosophical and scientific texts
but also poems and travelogues; papyrological remains and visual
monuments.
Classics as an academic discipline appears to belong to the lecture
hall and the seminar. But Classics is alive outside Classics, as
the studies collected in this volume show. We engage with Classics
in the 19th century through the hymn Gaudeamus Igitur and a popular
song on Herman the German, we meet Classics in the Early Modern
school, in the 19th century celebrating the Olympics in King Otto's
Greece, and identifying the gorilla, and in the 20th century
invention of Spartacus as a Bulgarian. We encounter frauds, hoaxes,
and the lexicographical tradition, by looking at two works
fraudulently ascribed to a Byzantine author, at a joke presented as
a New Testament agraphon, at the lexicographical invention of
Euboean Cyme, and at the tradition of poking fun at lexica in
lexica themselves. We learn about classicists ousted from Classics
through the lives of Richard Laqueur and Victor Ehrenberg, and we
engage with two publications which were highly influential in
popularising Classics: Falke's cultural history of Greece and Rome,
and Asterix. The volume thus presents fourteen studies on Classcis
outside Classics.
Wie konnten die Menschen in der Antike ihre finstersten Wunsche
durchsetzen? Fluchtafeln und andere Formen des Schadenzaubers geben
hierauf eine beredte Antwort: Da bittet jemand den groaten aller
Gotter um Rache an Priscilla, die den groaen Fehler gemacht hat zu
heiraten und zwar einen anderen. Da vergrabt jemand eine
Zauberpuppe, die zuvor an Auge, Hals, Brust, Bauch, Huften und Anus
durchbohrt wurde. Und da erfleht jemand fur seinen Gegner nichts
auaer ein boses Ende ... In Wort und Bild stellt der Band neue
Funde darunter drei hier erstmals publizierte Fluchtafel-Texte und
neue Deutungen zum antiken Schadenzauber vor, in anschaulichen
Essays internationaler Fachleute.
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