Prodigy and Expiation

Prodigy and Expiation
Author: Bruce MacBain
Publsiher: Peeters
Total Pages: 148
Release: 1982
Genre: History
ISBN: UOM:39015014196961

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Prodigy and Expiation

Prodigy and Expiation
Author: Bruce MacBain
Publsiher: Peeters
Total Pages: 148
Release: 1982
Genre: History
ISBN: UVA:X000967230

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Public Portents in Republican Rome

Public Portents in Republican Rome
Author: Susanne William Rasmussen
Publsiher: L'ERMA di BRETSCHNEIDER
Total Pages: 304
Release: 2003
Genre: History
ISBN: 8882652408

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The Romans were a superstitious bunch with public portents forming an integral role in most political and social ceremonies and rituals. This detailed analysis of prodigia (unusual events that were reported to the Senate who then proclaimed that event as an unfavourable portent) does not look at what these events reveal about Roman psychology but, instead, focuses on the sociological consequences of this complete integration of politics and religion during the Republican period. Much of the book comprises a table of prodigies, gathered from primary sources, notably Livy's Ab urbe condita and Julius Obsequens' Ab anno-urbis conditae DV prodigium liber . This data is supported by detailed discussions of Cicero and public divination, the relationship between divination and science, the types of portents and the nature of religio-politics. Danish summary.

Popular Medicine in Graeco Roman Antiquity Explorations

Popular Medicine in Graeco Roman Antiquity  Explorations
Author: William V. Harris
Publsiher: BRILL
Total Pages: 335
Release: 2016-09-07
Genre: Medical
ISBN: 9789004326040

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In Popular Medicine in Graeco-Roman Antiquity: Explorations an international group of scholars aims to give a fresh start to the study of the wide range of practices that people in Antiquity actually engaged in when they were faced with ill health.

Worlds Full of Signs

Worlds Full of Signs
Author: Kim Beerden
Publsiher: BRILL
Total Pages: 260
Release: 2013-08-08
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 9789004256309

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Worlds Full of Signs compares Greek divination to divinatory practices in Neo-Assyrian Mesopotamia and Republican Rome. It argues that the character of Greek divination differed fundamentally from that of the two comparanda. Ample attention is given to background and method at first. Subsequent chapters discuss the divinatory elements – sign, homo divinans, and text, relating divination to time and uncertainty. This book brings together sources originating from various times and places, questioning these to consider both generalities of ancient divination and specifics of Greek divination. Greek divination was inherently flexible on many levels: these findings should be connected to Greek views on time and the future as well as the relatively low level of divinatory institutionalization.

News and Frontier Consciousness in the Late Roman Empire

News and Frontier Consciousness in the Late Roman Empire
Author: Mark W. Graham
Publsiher: University of Michigan Press
Total Pages: 276
Release: 2006
Genre: History
ISBN: 0472115626

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A novel interpretation of Roman frontier policy

Ancient Divination and Experience

Ancient Divination and Experience
Author: Lindsay Gayle Driediger-Murphy,Esther Eidinow
Publsiher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 309
Release: 2019
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780198844549

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This is an open access title available under the terms of a CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 licence. It is free to read at Oxford Scholarship Online and offered as a free PDF download from OUP and selected open access locations. This volume sets out to re-examine what ancient people - primarily those in ancient Greek and Roman communities, but also Mesopotamian and Chinese cultures - thought they were doing through divination, and what this can tell us about the religions and cultures in which divination was practised. The chapters, authored by a range of established experts and upcoming early-career scholars, engage with four shared questions: What kinds of gods do ancient forms of divination presuppose? What beliefs, anxieties, and hopes did divination seek to address? What were the limits of human 'control' of divination? What kinds of human-divine relationships did divination create/sustain? The volume as a whole seeks to move beyond functionalist approaches to divination in order to identify and elucidate previously understudied aspects of ancient divinatory experience and practice. Special attention is paid to the experiences of non-elites, the perception of divine presence, the ways in which divinatory techniques could surprise their users by yielding unexpected or unwanted results, the difficulties of interpretation with which divinatory experts were thought to contend, and the possibility that divination could not just ease, but also exacerbate, anxiety in practitioners and consultants.

The Fragments of the Roman Historians

The Fragments of the Roman Historians
Author: Tim Cornell,Edward Bispham,John Rich,Christopher John Smith
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 2719
Release: 2013
Genre: Historians
ISBN: 9780199277056

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"This title is a definitive and comprehensive edition of the fragmentary texts of all the Roman historians whose works are lost. Historical writing was an important part of the literary culture of ancient Rome, and its best-known exponents, including Sallust, Livy, Tacitus, and Suetonius, provide much of our knowledge of Roman history. However, these authors constitute only a small minority of the Romans who wrote historical works from around 200 BC to AD 250. In this period we know of more than 100 writers of history, biography, and memoirs whose works no longer survive for us to read. They include well-known figures such as Cato the Elder, Sulla, Cicero, and the emperors Augustus, Tiberius, Claudius, Hadrian, and Septimius Severus"--Page 4 of cover.