This is a book about identity, about how the ancient Greeks saw themselves and others, and what this tells us in turn about Greek mentality and culture. It looks at voyagers and explorers, at travels in reality and in the mind, and shows what these reveal at key points in Greek history from the creation of Homer's monumental epic around 700 BC to the high Roman imperial period some eight hundred years later. The author takes us first to the journeyings of Odysseus, considering the returning warrior's concerns of witness and memory and finding in the epic the themes that will preoccupy the Greeks over the centuries. He then travels to Egypt with Herodotus, to the problematically 'barbarian' world of Persia and the Near East with Alexander the Great, to old Greece with the fictional Scythian Anacharsis, to the new Greek world under Roman domination with Polybius, Dionysius of Halicarnassos and Strabo, and finally to the Asia Minor of the first-century AD sage Apollonius of Tyana in the company of Philostratos. He examines both what their representations of these lands meant in their own day and how they were received in later times. He looks in particular at the importance of the invention of the barbarian and the "other", first in the theoretical process of desribing and accounting for the outside world, and secondly at the justification it gives for the practical reshaping of alien space through conquest and assimilation - themes which have had, as he points out, a more recent resonance. François Hartog draws widely on ancient and modern authors to create a cultural history of ancient Greece that sheds a new and revealing light on the Greeks and the history of humankind more generally.
The Temple of Ares in the Athenian Agora was evidently taken down stone by stone from its unidentified original site, moved, and re-erected with the help of a system of lettering on the blocks that showed exactly where each stone ...
The Princeton Encyclopedia of Classical Sites
... wie folgendes gut beglaubigtes Vorkommnis zeigt : Als der Lehrer Ernst Reinstorff ( 1830-1893 ) bei geöffnetem Fenster Unterricht erteilte und von draußen die Kommandorufe des Turnlehrers L. Bintz hereindrangen , da rief er dem ...
Oxbow says: This book's author does not shy away from expressing her opinions on the destruction of ancient sites in Greece and her belief that the Elgin Marbles are best left in the care of the British Museum, or at least for the time ...
The collection, which boasts the first handwritten document known from Britain, was discovered during archaeological excavations for Bloomberg.
This volume brings together the work of Snodgrass's former students; scholars who, while they could be variously classified as prehistorians, ancient historians, Classical archaeologists, Classical art historians, Classicists and modern ...
Fifth Chapter: Praxiteles at his Peak (around 364-360); 22.
The magical practices of the Roman world are explored in this second volume in the new TRAC Themes in Roman Archaeology series.
Greek Gold in the Hermitage Collection: Antique Jewellery from the Northern Black Sea Coast ; [art Book]
Studies in Mediterranean Archaeology