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Francis Borchardt deposited Sabbath Observance, Sabbath Innovation: The Hasmoneans and Their Legacy as Interpreters of the Law in the group
Ancient Greece & Rome on Humanities Commons 8 years, 9 months agoBoth 1 Maccabees and 2 Maccabees portray the Sabbath law as a central point of con- tention during the struggle over Judean law and tradition in the second century BCE (e.g., 1 Macc 1:41-50; 2 Macc 6:4-6). The Hasmonean family in particular is at times high- lighted as holding the Sabbath in high regard (2 Macc 5:27). In every available source,…[Read more]
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Francis Borchardt deposited Influence and Power: The Types of Authority in the Process of Scripturalization in the group
Ancient Greece & Rome on Humanities Commons 8 years, 9 months agoMany scholars recognize the importance of authority in the process of scripturalization. The presence of words like “authority” and “au- thoritative” in definitions of the term “scripture” is ubiquitous. Many also identify authoritative status for a text as an important step on the way toward it becoming scripture. However, “authority”…[Read more]
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Francis Borchardt deposited Reading Aid: 2 Maccabees and the History of Jason of Cyrene Reconsidered in the group
Ancient Greece & Rome on Humanities Commons 8 years, 9 months agoThis article investigates the prefatory material in 2 Maccabees (2:19-32; 15:38-39) in order to reveal the motivation and attitude of the epitomator of 2 Maccabees toward the text he is adapting. The article argues that the concept of auxiliary texts, recog- nized in Graeco-Roman and Hellenistic texts by classicist Markus Dubischar, is the lens…[Read more]
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Francis Borchardt deposited What Do You Do When a Text is Failing? The Letter of Aristeas and the Need for a New Pentateuch in the group
Ancient Greece & Rome on Humanities Commons 8 years, 9 months agoThis study highlights features of the Letter of Aristeas that reveal how that story conceives of the royal translation project. It will apply the concept of ‘auxiliary texts’ developed by Markus Dubischar based on the conversation theory of Paul Grice in order to show that Aristeas understands the Hebrew Pentateuch as a failing text. It will be…[Read more]
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Rebecca Kennedy created the group
Women in Antiquity on Humanities Commons 8 years, 9 months ago -
Marco Heiles deposited Sortes in Latin and German. One Date, one Place, two Manuscript Cultures? in the group
Ancient Greece & Rome on Humanities Commons 8 years, 10 months agoPoster presentation.
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Benjamin Hartmann deposited Vadimonium Nertae. Zum römischen Privatrecht in den gallischen Provinzen in the group
Ancient Greece & Rome on Humanities Commons 8 years, 10 months agoPublication of a recently discovered, wooden wax tablet (tabula cerata) from Augustobona Tricassium (Troyes, F). The writing tablet was part of a vadimonium deed, which was issued to an inhabitant with the Celtic name Nerta in the second half of the 1. century AD. The document sheds light on the question of the diffusion and usage of Roman civil…[Read more]
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Fiona Mitchell deposited Monstrous Omens in Herodotus’ Histories in the group
Ancient Greece & Rome on Humanities Commons 8 years, 11 months agoMonstrous omens appear four times in Herodotus: a concubine of the king of Sardis gives birth to a lion (1.84), a donkey is born with male and female genitalia (7.57), a horse gives birth to a hare (7.57) and fish come back to life whilst being cooked (9.120). These omens are the only occasions when monsters appear in close proximity to Greece;…[Read more]
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Seán Easton deposited WHY LUCAN’S POMPEY IS BETTER OFF DEAD in the group
Ancient Greece & Rome on Humanities Commons 8 years, 11 months agoThe unexpected return of Lucan’s Pompey to civil war as a ghost (9.1–18) leads to newfound success vis-à-vis enemies and allies alike. The language and imagery of this postmortem narrative revisits the portrait of Pompey’s decline in Books 1–2, where it activates a latent theme of victorious return in spite of death. Pompey’s acts of possession…[Read more]
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Benjamin Hartmann deposited Die epigraphische Kultur der römischen Kolonie Augusta Raurica: Ein «epigraphic habit» keltischer Prägung in the group
Ancient Greece & Rome on Humanities Commons 8 years, 11 months agoDie Analyse der epigraphischen Kultur der römischen Koloniestadt Augusta Raurica ist geprägt von der prekären Überlieferungslage der inschriftlichen Monumente. Erhalten haben sich primär diejenigen Inschriften, welche noch in der Spätantike ins Castrum Rauracense oder im Mittelalter und vor allem in der Frühen Neuzeit nach Basel verschleppt und an…[Read more]
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Benjamin Hartmann deposited Die hölzernen Schreibtafeln im Imperium Romanum – ein Inventar in the group
Ancient Greece & Rome on Humanities Commons 8 years, 11 months agoHolztafeln fanden in der römischen Antike weite Verbreitung als Schriftträger. Nichtsdestotrotz sind materielle Überreste von solchen Schreibtafeln bis heute vergleichsweise rar. Dies ist vor allem auf die prekären Überlieferungskonditionen von Holz zurückzuführen. Insbesondere in Mittel- und Westeuropa sowie in Britannien fanden und finden sich b…[Read more]
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Joe Hoffman posted an update in the group
Ancient Greece & Rome on Humanities Commons 9 years agoIf you haven’t been following Neville Morley at https://thesphinxblog.com/ , this is just to let you know that he’s been on a roll lately.
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Elton Barker deposited The Pleiades Gazetteer and the Pelagios Project in the group
Ancient Greece & Rome on Humanities Commons 9 years agoPelagios is a community-driven initiative that facilitates better linkage between online resources documenting the past, based on the places that they refer to. Our member projects are connected by a shared vision of a world – most eloquently described in Tom Elliott’s article “Digital Geography and Classics” (Elliot and Gillies, 2009) – in which…[Read more]
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Noémie VILLACEQUE deposited « Histoire de la poikilia, un mode de reconnaissance sociale dans la démocratie athénienne » in the group
Ancient Greece & Rome on Humanities Commons 9 years agoDuring the Persian wars, poikilia refers to the gaudy fabrics worn by the Persians ; however, these were not rejected by the Athenian society, since, among the elite’s imported oriental luxury goods, were the heavily embroidered garments they had adopted. Their democratization at the end of 5th c. BC was more concerned with civic imagination t…[Read more]
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Seán Easton deposited Sappho and Pocahontas in Terrence Malick’s ‘The New World’ (2005) in the group
Ancient Greece & Rome on Humanities Commons 9 years agoWriter-director Terrence Malick makes the character of Pocahontas in The New World (2005) deliver several lines from Sappho as her own thoughts and words. These quotations, in conjunction with allusions to Vergil and other sources, open narrative directions that enable Pocahontas to emerge within a film that begins as an epic of European…[Read more]
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Elton Barker deposited PAGING THE ORACLE: INTERPRETATION, IDENTITY AND PERFORMANCE IN HERODOTUS’ HISTORY in the group
Ancient Greece & Rome on Humanities Commons 9 years agoHerodotus begins his inquiry (‘historia’) into why Greeks and Persians came into conflict with the figure of Croesus, ‘the first man whom we know enslaved Greeks’ – the archetypal eastern despot. In the subsequent narrative of his reign, Herodotus explores the reasons behind Croesus’s actions, and the consequences following on from them, throu…[Read more]
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Elton Barker deposited Flight club: the new Archilochus and its resonance with Homeric epic in the group
Ancient Greece & Rome on Humanities Commons 9 years agoThis paper analyses the new Archilochus fragment (POxy. LXIX 4708), which tells the story of Telephos’ rout of the Achaeans, in terms of its resonance with Homeric epic. Where previous scholarship has read Archilochus’ poetry as indebted to and derivative on Homer, we instead use the idea of ‘traditional referentiality’ – the process by which a w…[Read more]
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Elton Barker deposited Momos advises Zeus: changing representations of ‘Cypria’ fragment 1 in the group
Ancient Greece & Rome on Humanities Commons 9 years agoThis paper investigates the importance of context for assessing fragment one of the ‘Cypria’, one of the poems belonging to an ‘Epic Cycle’ that – along with the Iliad and Odyssey – told the story of the war at Troy. With the exception of the Homeric epics, these poems come down to us in pieces, in the form of mutilated quotations, assorted te…[Read more]
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Elton Barker deposited Oedipus of many pains: Strategies of contest in Homeric poetry in the group
Ancient Greece & Rome on Humanities Commons 9 years agoIn this paper we analyse Oedipus’ appearance during Odysseus’ tale in book 11 of Homer’s Odyssey in order to outline and test a methodology for appreciating the poetic and thematic implications of moments when ‘extraneous’ narratives or traditions appear in the Homeric poems. Our analysis, which draws on oral-formulaic theory, is offered partly as…[Read more]
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Elton Barker deposited Entering the Agon: Dissent and authority in Homer, historiography and tragedy in the group
Ancient Greece & Rome on Humanities Commons 9 years agoThis book investigates one of the most characteristic and prominent features of ancient Greek literature – the scene of debate or agon, in which with varying degrees of formality characters square up to each other and engage in a contest of words – and sets out for the first time to trace its changing representations through Homeric epic, his…[Read more]
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