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Negotiating Identity in the Ancient Mediterranean: the Archaic and Classical Greek Multiethnic Emporia Denise Demetriou Index More Information
Cambridge University Press 978-1-107-01944-7 - Negotiating Identity in the Ancient Mediterranean: The Archaic and Classical Greek Multiethnic Emporia Denise Demetriou Index More information Index Abu Simbel, 112n, 149 emporia, importance of in, 91–2, 94, 103 Adjiyska Vodenitza, 159n, 158–60, 160n Epaktia, 93 Adonia, 222 Epilimenia, 91, 92 Adonis, 84, 222 Euploia, 93, 218 Aegean Galenaia, 93 North, 155, 159–60, 168.SeealsoPistiros, Gravisca, worship of in, 77, 83, 86n, 88–90, trade network 102, 103, 139, 235 Sea, 19–21, 106, 130, 178, 188, 199 Hellenion and, 144, 234 Aeolians, 12–13, 110, 146–7, 236 Kition, worship of at, 222, 237 Aeschylus, 101, 167–8 Kos, worship of at, 92–3, 141 Africa, North, 4, 68, 106 kourotrophos, 101–2, 139 Agathe, 22, 24, 29–30, 37–8, 38n Naukratis, worship of in, 81, 89, 114, 138, Agde.SeeAgathe 139–42, 235 Aigina, 64, 80, 91, 92–3, 103, 145n.Seealso navigation, patron of, 91–5, 234 Gravisca Ourania, 93, 220–1 Athens and, 184, 197 Pandemos, 93, 140, 141 Naukratis and, 80, 110, 129, 135, 142, Peiraieus, worship of in, 92, 218–22, 228 237 Pontia, 93, 141 script of, 64, 78, 80 Pontia kai Limenia, 93 temple of Aphaia in, 68 prostitutes and, 140–1 Aiginetan(s), 80–1, 129, 138–9, 237.Seealso sacred prostitution and, 82, 90–1 Sostratos of Aigina traders and, 93–5 Gravisca, 64, 83, 103 Turan and, 90, 97–8, 102, 103–4, 233 Alexander, 119, 155, 216n Apollo, 70, 89.Seealsocity-ethnic, Apollo Amadokos II, 163, 164, 165n, 182, 183, 185 Aigina and, 64, 80, 83, 103, 211, 237 Amasis, Pharaoh, 7, 148, 150–1 archegetes, 57, 59, -
Daftar Arsip Legiun Veteran Ri Daerah Pendaftaran Sumatera Selatan Tahun 1959-1983
DAFTAR ARSIP LEGIUN VETERAN RI DAERAH PENDAFTARAN SUMATERA SELATAN TAHUN 1959-1983 SUBDIT PENGOLAHAN ARSIP KONVENSIONAL STL 1945 ARSIP NASIONAL REPUBLIK INDONESIA 2010 DAFTAR ARSIP VETERAN PROVINSI SUMATERA SELATAN TAHUN 1959 – 1983 SUB DIT PENGOLAHAN ARKON SETELAH TAHUN 1945 ARSIP NASIONAL REPUBLIK INDONESIA 2010 KATA PENGANTAR Sesuai dengan amanat Undang-Undang Nomor 43 Tahun 2009 tentang Kearsipan, bahwa perlu dilakukan pengolahan khazanah arsip statis yang ada di ANRI. Oleh karena itu, pada kesempatan ini ANRI menyajikan hasil pengolahan arsip berbentuk Daftar Arsip Veteran Provinsi Sumatera Selatan Tahun 1959 - 1983. Substansi informasi pada daftar arsip tersebut merupakan daftar perorangan para veteran, data keluarga yang menjadi tanggungan veteran (ahli waris), surat keterangan persaksian, riwayat perjuanan veteran beserta nomor pokok veteran untuk wilayah Sumatera Selatan pada kurun waktu 1959 - 1983. Daftar ini terdiri dari 18 boks, 53 jilid terbagi dalam 3.216 nomor. Daftar arsip ini diharapkan dapat menjadi sumbangan berarti bagi peningkatan layanan publik yang dilakukan oleh Arsip Nasional Republik Indonesia, dan dapat meningkatkan aksesibilitas publik pada kahsanah arsip statis yang ada di ANRI. Para pengguna diharapkan dapat memperoleh informasi akurat mengenai arsip veteran di wilayah Sumatera Selatan. Terbitnya Daftar Arsip Veteran Provinsi Sumatera Selatan Tahun 1959 - 1983 merupakan karya yang dihasilkan oleh Tim Pengolah Arsip di lingkungan Sub Direktorat Pengolahan Arsip Konvensional Setelah Tahun 1945. Daftar Arsip Veteran Provinsi Sumatera Selatan ini disajikan kepada publik untuk panduan penemuan arsip yang dibutuhkan dan memberi sumbangan yang berarti bagi para penggunanya. Jakarta, November 2010 Direktur Pengolahan, Drs. Mustari Irawan, MPA KETERANGAN Khazanah arsip Veteran Wilayah Provinsi Sumatera Selatan ini diatur berdasarkan sistem alfabetis dengan mengacu pada abjad nama para anggota veteran. -
Aparchai and Phoroi: a New Commented Edition of the Athenian
Thèse de doctorat présentée à la Faculté des Lettres de l'Université de Fribourg (Suisse) Aparchai and Phoroi A New Commented Edition of the Athenian Tribute Quota Lists and Assessment Decrees Part I : Text Björn Paarmann (Danemark) 2007 Contents Preface 3 Introduction 7 Research History 16 The Tribute Lists as a Historical Source 37 Chapter 1. The Purpose of the Tribute Lists 40 1.1 The Tribute Quota Lists 40 1.1.1 Archives or Symbols? 40 1.1.2 Archives? 40 1.1.2 Accounts? 42 1.1.3 Votives? 43 1.1.4 Conclusion 50 1.2 The Assessment Decrees 52 1.3. Conclusion: Θεοί and θεδι 53 Chapter 2. The Geographical Distribution of the Ethnics 55 2.1 The Organisation of the Quota Lists 55 2.2 The Interpretation of the Data 58 2.3 Conclusion 63 Chapter 3. Tribute Amount and the Size of the Pokis 64 3.1 Tribute Amount and Surface Area 64 3.2 Examination of the Evidence 73 3.3 Conclusion 77 Chapter 4. Ethnics and Toponyms in the Tribute Lists 78 Conclusion: On the Shoulders of Giants 87 Future Perspectives 91 Appendix: Size of the Members of the Delian League 92 Bibliography 97 Plates 126 Preface A new edition of the tribute quota lists and assessment decrees needs, if not an excuse, then perhaps at least an explanation. Considering the primary importance of these historical sources, it is astonishing how little attention has been paid to the way they have been edited by Meritt, McGregor and Wade-Gery in The Athenian Tnbute Lists (ATL) I-IV from 1939-1953 and by Meritt in Inscnptiones Graecae (IG I3) 254-291 from 1981 during the last several decades.1 This negligence on the part of contemporary scholars, both ancient historians and, more surprisingly, also Greek epigraphists, stands in sharp contrast to the central place the lists take in academic articles, monographs and history books dealing with Greek history of the fifth century BC. -
Plutarch's Moralia
THE LOEB CLASSICAL LIBRARyT .jr^ FOUNDED BY JAMES LOEB, LL.D. X^ ^ EDITED BY tT. E. PAGE, C.H., LITT.D. E. t CAPPS, PH.D., LL.D. t W. H. D. ROUSE, lttt.d. L. A. POST, L.H.D. E. H. WARMINGTON, m.a., f.r.hist.soc. PLUTARCH'S MORALIA VI PLUTARCH'S MOKALIA IN FIFTEEN VOLUMES VOLUME VI 439a— 523b WITH AN ENGLISH TRANSLATION BY VV. C. HELM BOLD TRINITir COLLBGK, UABTTOKD, COKX. CAMBRIDGE, MASSACHUSETTS HARVARD UNIVERSITY PRESS LOKDON WILLIAM HEINEMANN LTD MCMLXU First primeaprinted 1939iaj» ^^ . Reprinted 1957, 1962 W jX ?>RA DECl c; 11536 Printed in Great Britain — CONTENTS OF VOLUME VI PAOK Preface vii The Traditional Order of the Books of the MORALIA ix Can Virtue be Taught ? Introduction 2 Text and Translation 4 On Moral Virtue— Introduction 16 Text and Translation 18 Ox the Control of Anger— Introduction 90 Text and Translation 92 On Tranquillity of Mind— Introduction 163 Text and Translation 166 On Brotherly Love— Introduction 245 Text and Translation 246 V CONTENTS OF VOLUME VI PAGE On Affection for Offspring— Introduction 328 Text and Translation 330 Whether Vice be sufficient to cause Unhappiness— Introduction 361 Text and Translation 362 Whether the Affections of the Soul are WORSE than Those of the Body— Introduction 378 Text and Translation 380 Concerning Talkativeness— Introduction 395 Text and Translation 396 On being a Busybody— Introduction 471 Text and Translation 472 Index • 519 PREFACE In proceeding with this edition of the Moralia a few changes have been made from the standard created and maintained by Professor Babbitt. -
Map 51 Thracia Compiled by E.N
Map 51 Thracia Compiled by E.N. Borza, 1994 with the assistance of G. Reger Introduction Mainland: see Introduction to Map 50. Islands For Thasos in particular, the harvest of toponyms and sites is very rewarding, and grows every year with the work of the Franco-Hellenic archaeological teams that continue to scour the island. The map marks only a selection of the sites that could have been shown here, and possibly a rather arbitrary one at that. As on other islands rich in towers, only a selection is marked (again, perforce somewhat arbitrarily); all are shown as forts without prejudice to their actual function (see Bon 1930; and above all Osborne 1986), except for two of the three structures identified as lighthouses by Kozelj (1989). Omitted are the potteries that seem to be coming to light with bewildering frequency (Garlan 1996). For a variety of reasons, Imbros remains underexplored. Directory All place names are in Greece unless otherwise noted Abbreviations IGBulg G. Mihailov (ed.), Inscriptiones Graecae in Bulgaria Repertae, 4 vols., Sofia, 1956-70 TIB Thrakien P. Soustal, Tabula Imperii Byzantini 6, Thrakien, DenkWien 221, Vienna, 1991 TIR Naissus Tabula Imperii Romani K 34, Naissus, Dyrrhachion–Scupi–Serdica–Thessalonike, Ljubljana, 1976 TIR Philippi Tabula Imperii Romani K 35, I, Philippi, Athens, 1993 Names Grid Name Period Modern Name/ Location References H4 Abarnis CH Çardak? TKY RE Abarnias; NPauly Abarnias §Abarnias § Abarnos D3 Abdera ACHR Avdira Isaac 1986, 73-108; TIR Philippi 17 B1 Ablanica Rodopi HRL BUL IGBulg 4.2335-37; TIB Thrakien 159 G4 Abydos ACHRL Maltepe TKY PECS; Hakkert, Lex. -
A Critical Edition of Derek Walcott's Omeros Part 1
University of Warwick institutional repository: http://go.warwick.ac.uk/wrap A Thesis Submitted for the Degree of PhD at the University of Warwick http://go.warwick.ac.uk/wrap/46005 This thesis is made available online and is protected by original copyright. Please scroll down to view the document itself. Please refer to the repository record for this item for information to help you to cite it. Our policy information is available from the repository home page. A Critical Edition of Omeros - Part 1 (Critical Introduction) D Barnard English and Comparative Literary Studies, Warwick University 0867693 A Critical Edition of Derek Walcott’s Omeros Part 1 – Critical Introduction by Donald Edwin Barnard A thesis submitted in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in English and Comparative Literary Studies University of Warwick Department of English and Comparative Literary Studies February 2012 Final version February 2012 A Critical Edition of Omeros - Part 1 (Critical Introduction) D Barnard English and Comparative Literary Studies, Warwick University 0867693 Table of Contents Part 1 – Critical Introduction 1. Introduction 1 2. Narrative 2.1 Themes 4 2.2 Achille, Hector and Helen 5 2.3 Philoctete and Ma Kilman 6 2.4 Dennis and Maud Plunkett 7 2.5 The Narrator 8 2.6 Structure 9 2.7 Timelines 10 2.8 Epic Features 12 2.9 Myth-making 18 3. Settings 3.1 Walcott’s Geography 21 3.2 Gros Îlet, St Lucia, the Caribbean 22 3.3 Africa 27 3.4 North America 29 3.5 Europe 31 4. -
Notes Du Mont Royal ←
Notes du mont Royal www.notesdumontroyal.com 쐰 Cette œuvre est hébergée sur « No- tes du mont Royal » dans le cadre d’un exposé gratuit sur la littérature. SOURCE DES IMAGES Google Livres HERODOTI MUSE, SIVE HISTORIARUM LIBRI 1X. A1) VETEBUM CODICUM FIDEM DENUO nucnnsm’r, CON TINUA INTERPRÉTATIONE LATINA, ADNOTATIONIBUS WESSELINGII ET VALCKENARII ALIORUMQUE ET SUIS ILLUSTRAVIT J OHAN N ES SCHWEIGHÆUSER, lN ACAD. ARGENT. ET HEM. PEOT. LITERAB. GREC. PROF. ACADÉMIE REG. lNBcBIPT. ET HUM. LITERAB. ADBCÉ. ACCEDUNT GÉOGRAPHIE ET UWOLOGIÆ HERODOTEÆ SPECININA A G. G. BREDOW; -T. C. BREIGEB COIMENTATIO DE DIFFICILIOEIBU! QUIBUS- DL]! A811! EEBODOTEÆ ;-ASIÆ nEnODO’IEÆ DIFFICILIOIA, LUCIDE): C. G. H. FBÜMHICEEN ;-J. F. EEN’N’ICKE COI- HENTATIO DE GEOGRAPHIA AFRICÆ HERODOTEA: ITEMQUE SUMMAEIA, SCBOLIA, VABLBQUE LECTIONES E CODICE PALATINO ;--CAN0N CHRONOLOGICUE LABCHEBIANUB, AUCTUS ET EHENDATUS ;-C0LLAT10 ÉDITION!!! SCHWEIGKÆUSBRI, 3312H ET SCKÆFEBI, AC WESELINGII: g i uneM. ÆMILII son PORTI.y DICTIONARIUM IONICUM GRÆCO-LATINUM, CUM APPENDICE TRACTATUS QUOSDAM COMPLECTENTE DE DIALECTO IONICA, NBMPE, MIGRAILIS MIRAI", 63mm commun, «sumac: "DENSE, GIAHHATICI MBBMANNIANI, GMMHA’HŒ AUGUS’I’ANI. a TOMUS TERTIUS. LONDIN I EXCUDIT T. DAVISON,’ VENEUNT API") RICARDUM PRIESTLEY. 1824. AV ADNOTATIONES -AD HERODOTI LIBRUM PRIMUM. PROŒM. Lin. r. mm... un... Wassein Thucyd. lib. VIH. 49. Équi- nniîu) Aristotelis une (in nonnullis dem ’Ahugnûv et ’Ahuguniîl, mi in cette Historinrum W spogmphis) MSS. Archiepisoopi Cmmuiœsis et T1985... englué? hutins 11:53:51; le- Vindobonensi sape numero, pfæfer- gebatur, Rhemr. lib. HI. 9. (aliis cap. rem, niai ipsimet Halicnmsssenses ob- 5. sect. l. sic in ed. Oxon.) neque de- sisœrent, geminntnm sibilnnœm litœnm începs defuerunt, qui, induèto tuage. -
The Sense of Smell in the Homeric Hymns to Dionysus, Aphrodite, and Demeter
Brown Classical Journal Volume 32 2020 Brown Classical Journal Volume 32 The Philosopher’s Flight: Cicero’s Contempt for Earthly Life 1 in the Tusculanae Disputationes David Sacks Empathy Both Ways: The Use of Nature in Saigyo’s Poetry 15 JP Mayer The Presence of Ovid's Metamorphoses in the Conversions of 19 Augustine’s Confessions Kelly Clark Imperfect Representations of the Human Body in Hellenistic 25 Greece, Republican Rome, and Medieval Germany Kate Van Riper Prometheus, or for the Sake of Myself a God 33 Annabelle Hutchinson Menaechmi: Palla 35 Leo McMahon The Byzantine Hippodrome and Circus Factions: The 41 Political Power of Constantinople’s Sporting Culture Thomas Wilson The Sense of Smell in the Homeric Hymns 49 Victoria Lansing Vergil Eclogue IV Translation 61 Anna Barnett Commentary: Demeter’s Tale of Her Past (122-134) 65 Hannah Grosserichter How Do You Read Homer? Ethics, Epistemology, and the 69 Self in Homeric Scholarship Aliosha Pittaka Bielenberg “Deadly Erinys of Latium”: Cleopatra’s Power in Lucan’s 87 Civil War Michal Loren Cataline and the Confessions: An Indictment of Human 93 Sin Shawn Kant Pindar and the Artistic Self in Olympian 1 101 David Del Terzo Cato the Elder: A Model of Romanitas 105 Annabelle Hutchinson Xenophon’s Pragmatism towards Foreigners in the Poroi, 109 Lacedaimonion Politeia, and Hieron Zoë Mermelstein Lamentable Expectations: Understanding the Woman’s 115 Lament Through the Wealtheow/Grendel’s Mother Dichotomy in Beowulf Opal Lambert Agency in Ancient Exile Literature 121 Kaleb Hood The Last -
Manuel D'histoire Universelle, Résumé Raisonné Des Faits Et Événemens Les
MANUEL UNIVERSELLE, aiisaari n~iso~rslDES FAITS ET ~V$NEXENS LES PLUS nt- PORTARS; DES INVEITlOKS LES PLUS UTILES DES HOJlNES LES PLUS EEJIABQUABLHS DEPUIS LE COYhlERCENENT DU MOXDE JUSQU'IT~ 1856; PAR S. CASEN !* TRADUCTEITR DE LA B1Bl.E. PARIS, -4 LA LIBRAIRIE E~CYCLOPEDIQVEDE RORFIT, RUE HAUTEPEUILLE, ;YD IO ElS. 1836. INTRODUCTION. Si l'histoire a pour objet de faire con- naître ce qiii est arrivd , iine histoire uni- verselle ou générale devra riécessairement offrir le tableau complet de tous les faits qui ont eu lieil depuis que le monde existe. L'univers rcnferine clans son ensemble ce que nos sens et notre raison y aper- qoi\ieiit en detail. Mais la Giiblesse de l'es- prit humain ne lui permet même pas de niesilrer l'espace et le temps, ces deux bases esseri tielles des fai ts ;saisir l'en~emble dails son inimensité est une tAche trop dif- ficile pour la conception bornée de l'homme. 011 peut avoir sur cet ensemble des pressen- limens confus; mais pressentir n'est pas savoir, et l'histoire est de la science. Considérée sous un point de vue plus a (2) restreint, l'histoire générale est une Con. naissance autlienti que, un tableau exact des époqiics les plus importantes de la terre et du genre lirimain , des temps les plus anciens jusqu'aiix plus rapprochés de iious. Rlais s'il est difficile de décrire les 60 ou 80 ans d'un individu, la dilIiculté est bieii plus grande quand il s'agit des 6,000 ans qu'on attribiie à l'liuinanilé entikrc. -
Notes Du Mont Royal ←
Notes du mont Royal www.notesdumontroyal.com 쐰 Cette œuvre est hébergée sur « No- tes du mont Royal » dans le cadre d’un exposé gratuit sur la littérature. SOURCE DES IMAGES Google Livres la - ultJjA’MÇ-Q.Üærm30 [1,1770 W124 1.-. à Il I 4* HERODOTI i x HISTORIARUM LIBRI IX. L A TINE, EX VERSIONE J. s’ÉHWEIGHAEUSER, DG AD EDITlONEM REIZII ET SCHAFERI EMENDATA. GLASGUÆ: EXCUDEBANT ANDREAS ET JACOBUS DUNCAN, ÀCÀDIIII TYPOOIAPBI. V VINEUNT APUD RICARDUM rnrmm, . LONDINI. a 1818. 2.. 2h... ; figea y- HERODOTI HISTORIARUM LIBER PRIMUS. CLIO. ..............-. HERODOTUS Halicarnasseus, quæ quum cæteris de rebus, tum de mussa bellorum Græcos inter Barbarosque gestorum, perquirendo cognovit, en bis libris consignata in publicum edit; ne, quæ ab hominibus gestn surit, progressu temporis oblivione deleantur, nave præclara mirabiliaque facto, qua: vel a. Græcis alita sunt vel’ a Barbaris, sua lande fraudentur. l. 1mn Persarum quidem litemtos si andins, inimîcitinrum primi autor-es Phœnices filera. Hos enim, aiunt, postquam a mari quod Rubrum vocatur ad hoc nostrum mare ndvenissent, hancque re- gimem quam etiam nunc incolunt, eœpissent habitare, continuo navigationibus longinquîs dedisse operam, et transvebendis mer- cibus Ægyptiis Assyriisque quum alias Græciæ partes, tum vero - et Argos adiisse. Argos enim illis temporibus inter alia ejus regionis oppidu, quæ Græcià nunc nominatur, rebus omnibus eminebu. Ad Argos igitur hoc postquam adpulissent Phœnices, ibique merces suas venum exposaissent, quinto au: sexte ab ad» ventu die, divenditis fere rebus omnibus, mulieres ad mare venisse, quum alias maltas, tum vero et regis filiam 5 quam quidem codem immine Perse adpellant arque Græci, Io. Quæ dum ad puppim mvis stances mercaremur merces quæ illamm’ll’r maxime animos advertissent, Phœnioes interim mutuo sese cohortatos impetum in illas fecisse: et majorem quidem mulierum numenïm profugîsse, Io vero cum allia fuisse raptam: quibus in navem inpositis, salua: havi Phœnîœs Ægyptum versus vela. -
An Update on the Shotgun Method Mogens Herman Hansen
An Update on the Shotgun Method Mogens Herman Hansen N The Shotgun Method (2006) I argued that the total number of ancient Greeks in the age of Alexander the Great came I to a minimum of 7–7.5 million and that a more realistic estimate seems to be between 8 and 10 million. My investi- gation was based on the Copenhagen Polis Centre’s Inventory of Archaic and Classical Poleis (2004).1 Out of 1035 communities re- corded as poleis 166 are unlocated. Of the 869 located poleis 438 had remains of walls of the Archaic and/or Classical periods and a further 91 are referred to as fortified in written sources. The presumption is that in the fourth century B.C. almost every polis town was fortified (Shotgun 16–17). For 232 poleis we know the intramural area of the urban centre, and on the basis of the information we have about habitation quarters, houses, and the size of a Greek household we can make a rough calculation of the total number of ancient Greeks living in urban centres be- hind the walls (Shotgun 35–63). Published archaeological land- scape surveys can give us an idea about the relation between urban and rural population (Shotgun 64–76), and by combining the two types of evidence it is possible to come up with an esti- mate of the total population (Shotgun 16–24). It is certainly not an exact estimate: it is rather a minimum figure which, on the other hand, is much higher than any other figure suggested in contemporary scholarship. -
The Morals, Vol. 1 [1878]
The Online Library of Liberty A Project Of Liberty Fund, Inc. Plutarch, The Morals, vol. 1 [1878] The Online Library Of Liberty This E-Book (PDF format) is published by Liberty Fund, Inc., a private, non-profit, educational foundation established in 1960 to encourage study of the ideal of a society of free and responsible individuals. 2010 was the 50th anniversary year of the founding of Liberty Fund. It is part of the Online Library of Liberty web site http://oll.libertyfund.org, which was established in 2004 in order to further the educational goals of Liberty Fund, Inc. To find out more about the author or title, to use the site's powerful search engine, to see other titles in other formats (HTML, facsimile PDF), or to make use of the hundreds of essays, educational aids, and study guides, please visit the OLL web site. This title is also part of the Portable Library of Liberty DVD which contains over 1,000 books and quotes about liberty and power, and is available free of charge upon request. The cuneiform inscription that appears in the logo and serves as a design element in all Liberty Fund books and web sites is the earliest-known written appearance of the word “freedom” (amagi), or “liberty.” It is taken from a clay document written about 2300 B.C. in the Sumerian city-state of Lagash, in present day Iraq. To find out more about Liberty Fund, Inc., or the Online Library of Liberty Project, please contact the Director at [email protected]. LIBERTY FUND, INC.