In our contemporary Western society, death has become taboo. Despite its inevitability, we focus on maintaining youthfulness and well-being, while fearing death's intrusion in our daily activities. In contrast, observes Maria Serena Mirto, the ancient Greeks embraced death more openly and effectively, developing a variety of rituals to help them grieve the dead and, in the process, alleviate anxiety and suffering. In this fascinating book, Mirto examines conceptions of death and the afterlife in the ancient Greek world, revealing few similarities—and many differences—between ancient and modern ways of approaching death. Exploring the cultural and religious foundations underlying Greek burial rites and customs, Mirto traces the evolution of these practices during the archaic and classical periods. She explains the relationship between the living and the dead as reflected in grave markers, epitaphs, and burial offerings and discusses the social and political dimensions of burial and lamentation. She also describes shifting beliefs about life after death, showing how concepts of immortality, depicted so memorably in Homer's epics, began to change during the classical period. Death in the Greek World straddles the boundary between literary and religious imagination and synthesizes observations from archaeology, visual art, philosophy, politics, and law. The author places particular emphasis on Homer's epics, the first literary testimony of an understanding of death in ancient Greece. And because these stories are still so central to Western culture, her discussion casts new light on elements we thought we had already understood. Originally written and published in Italian, this English-language translation ofDeath in the Greek World includes the most recent scholarship on newly discovered texts and objects, and engages the latest theoretical perspectives on the gendered roles of men and women as agents of mourning. The volume also features a new section dealing with hero cults and a new appendix outlining fundamental developments in modern studies of death in the ancient Greek world.
DK Diels , H. and Kranz , W. Die Fragmente der Vorsokratiker . 6th ed . 3 vols . ... Fenton 1941 Fenton , W.N. ' Iroquois Suicides : a Study in the Stability of a Culture Pattern ' , Bureau of American Ethnology Bulletin no .
This volume represents the first to examine the influences, intersections, and developments of understandings of death and the afterlife between poetic, religious, and philosophical traditions in ancient Greece in one resource.
Or named for the Hesperid Erytheia griechische Sagenbilder in Boiotien ( 1936 ) 58 , 67 ; who mothered Eurytion , Robertson , op . cit . T. Howe , AJA 58 ( 1954 ) 209 ; Kunze , note 45 ; Apollonios Rh . IV.1399 and Schol .; Schildbänder ...
... and slaves are in fact documented as early as the Mycenaean age in the Linear B tablets. ... To the Greeks there was a very important distinction between slave and free and there was little or no moral dilemma for the Greeks about ...
First Published in 1999. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company.
For Arganthonius's offer to the Phocaeans and the site of Tartessus (Phoenician Tarshish), see Demand (1990,37); Murray (1993, 109); and Asheri et al. (2007, 184). Regions where presettlement contacts are very likely to have occurred ...
This book offers a series of in-depth studies of the beliefs, attitudes, and rituals surrounding death in ancient Greece, from the Minoan and Mycenean period to the end of the classical age.
... United States , 1960–1990 : Decades of Discord Myron A. Marty Daily Life of the Aztecs : People of the Sun and Earth ... DAILY LIFE OF THE ANCIENT GREEKS ROBERT GARLAND The Greenwood.
Including illustrations, maps, a chronological table and close referencing to Ancient Greece: Social and Historical Documents from Archaic Times to the Death of Alexander, this book will provide support for courses in ancient Greek history ...
How would various provisions of the laws help pro-democrats counter those threats? And did the laws work?