Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://epiphanios.theo.ac.cy/handle/20.500.14286/98
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dc.contributor.authorPavlou, Maria-
dc.date.accessioned2025-10-21T08:56:51Z-
dc.date.available2025-10-21T08:56:51Z-
dc.date.issued2011-
dc.identifier.isbn978-90-04-19412-0el
dc.identifier.urihttps://epiphanios.theo.ac.cy/handle/20.500.14286/98-
dc.description.abstractA prevalent view in the current scholarship on ancient religions holds that state religion was primarily performed and transmitted in oral forms, whereas writing came to be associated with secret, private and marginal cults, especially in the Greek world. In Roman times, religions would have become more and more bookish, starting with the Sibylline books and the Annales Maximi of the Roman priests and culminating in the canonical gospels of the Christians. It is the aim of this volume to modify this view or, at least, to challenge it. Surveying the variety of ways in which different types of texts and oral discourse were involved in ancient Greek and Roman religions, the contributions to this volume show that oral and written forms were in use for both Greek and Roman state and private religions.el
dc.description.tableofcontentsPart I: GREEK LITERATURE 1. The Words of Gods: Divine Discourse in Homer's Iliad Elizabeth Minchin 2. Enter the Divine: Sympotic Performance and Religious Experience Fiona Hobden 3. Past and Present in Pindar’s Religious Poetry Maria Pavlou 4. Euripides, the Derveni Papyrus, and the Smoke of Many Writings Ruth Scodel Part II: GREEK LAW 5. Writing Sacred Laws in Archaic and Classical Crete Michael Gagarin 6. Embedded Speech in the Attic Leges Sacrae Sarah Hitch 7. From Oath-swearing to Entrenchment Clause: the Introduction of atimia Terminology in Legal Inscriptions Evelyn van ’t Wout 8. ‘And you, the demos, made an uproar’: Performance, Mass Audiences and Text in the Athenian Democracy Rosalind Thomas Part III: GREEK AND ROMAN RELIGIOUS TEXTS 9. Hexametrical Incantations as Oral and Written Phenomena Christopher Faraone 10. Oral Bricolage and Ritual Context in the Golden Tablets Franco Ferrari 11. Greek Hymns from Performance to Stone Mark Alonge 12. Annales Maximi: Writing, Memory, and Religious Performance in the Roman Republic Ana Rodriguez-Mayorgas 13. Homer the Prophet: Homeric Verses and Divination in the Homeromanteion Andromache Karanika 14. Assuming the Mantle of the Gods: ‘Unknowable Names,’ Hieratic Formulae and Invocations in Late Antique Theurgic Ritual Crystal Addey Part IV: ROMAN LITERATURE 15. Plautus the Theologian Niall W. Slater 16. Orality in Livy’s Representation of the Divine: The Construction of a Polyphonic Narrative Vanessa Berger 17. Dilemmas of Pietas in Roman Declamation Bé Breij Part V: EARLY CHRISTIAN LITERATURE 18. Paul the ‘Herald’ and the ‘Teacher’: Paul’s Self-Images within an Oral Milieu Akio Ito 19. Divine Voice, Literary Models, and Human Authority: Peter and Paul in the Early Christian Church James Morrison 20. Singing together in Church: Augustine’s Psalm against the Donatists Vincent Huninkel
dc.format.extent59-78 σσ.el
dc.language.isoenel
dc.publisherBrillel
dc.relation.ispartofSacred Words: Orality, Literacy and Religionel
dc.subjectΠίνδαροςel
dc.subjectΘρησκευτική ποίησηel
dc.titlePast and Present in Pindar’s Religious Poetryel
dc.typeBook chapterel
dc.relation.placeLeidenel
Appears in Collections:Δημοσιεύσεις σε βιβλία

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