M. Minucii Felicis O Ctaviu S

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

M. Minucii Felicis O Ctaviu S EDITORIS PRAEFATIO. M u a e o R a causidicns uo . Min ci s F lix , f ri om ni , q tem wre dialo um cui Oo a n a e in osuit ; g , t n mici nom n p , in l emiserit accuratius am uul o a ua em i pub icum , qu g st t nt pw e puto . Et uniuerm m libellum examinam us in quidem si , se r monis color atque pr oprie… osten dit Felicem s te. e ab eorum a ui stilum Ciceronianum tiss p rte , q sibi imit and um s um se runt h . e. d istin ctius ut at ad p , , loqu , m axim e et Plinii minoris exemplum T allii ' sectatorem u e. ah tm en eo difiert in f iss his , quod n onnullis rebus l abentis atque in n ouam s peciem (puta e m ae An to nin orum ae uo tam ex u o riscorum a , qu st di p obso letorumque s cripto m m quam ex intuente promin eiarnm genere loqnen di exorta est) inclinan tis latini tatis indici a hic illio iam prae se fert : nemo n imirum su o sae u a ita o reluctari ut l u c l p test , nihi ei s con i hn e e a diction es uales u s e tu d ni conced at . c u r f r s , q s nt 81: r in masentiam m huc m ositionis de ro in g . p , p p p me a usu a a et ut stru nt li m, li his rebus Mi In eermonem Mim eianum artemqu e rhetoricam qui pe stud o n u rem nalit o en s ret um facturnm ess e i i q i , p p i r tracte tu r ut pm prio , poetico et iuridico lo eiua ar a ua Min ncius Caocilìi efi ti , q l ua k d ei n en a iq tenue sernare stadni , qu omod o color prmecip uus Tn llianus aul ul um sit cor. uco illo r cano ut tamen a ns africxbatis tu m Romam f Af i , b i ind pìentis mod estus sit ueus n eque in h oc tam cor a’ I EDITORIS PRAEFATIO V . n ucius Frontonis Apulei Gellii temporibus interd um accedit ita a e usu d elicn s a o e us , m xim illo in h bit i fi urae rhetoricae ua a uocabula. as n d etice umu g , q tri y c u t F n sae ius adhibe e a u . an e t l t r h c quippe ro to p t Ha. ia u I L E dr n s o cf. V 2 2 h a imperat r ; C . III 53 os la ' " id ibus randibus rambus inae ualzbus uos ne ue ue p g g q , q q here neque attollere neque locare quis p ossit; ad quem De e H driani r a I S . a . 1 e em locum hn r ( eliqui e p 2 ) x pl a. a am ex Fr n on ad scri si m mult eti o t e p t. haru igitur aetate e n on uixis se F x n tam en tsi potest non eli oster, ab eisd em s at est diuersus utpote (ut mihi quidem in i d e R uidetur) non in prou c a. qu a am s d omae natus ed ucatus que : Tr aian i fere temp ore ad ulescentiam suam in urbe ut in omn i bonarum artium studio ita in optime quoque latini sermonis auctore cogn oscen d o et Tulliano eloquio pen itu s percipiendo peregit s ed ex culto sic proprio dicen di genere max annie uirilibus n u a extrin s ecus adlata ut fit a non ll , fere in fori or tore, adhaeres cere a u e t a a m sibi p ss s s . ill utem cu Quin ti liano Plinioque iuniore et similibus coniunctio atque a a cern itur flosculis b a an a or societ s eti m in ud p ci a. tionis Minuciu s d ebuit lection i r , quos corum poeta am a n n e a. Front nis l ti orum, quorum i d o tempore minor in rosa.e scri tores au a e i n am on p p ctorit s sse coep t. n solum oe a hi1080 hum Lucretium F x a u a e le erat p t m p p eli cc r t g , s ed etiam in d elicn s habuit cum Horatium 0uidium * Lucanum q en alem nam aliorum ) imitatio n imis ’ ‘ incerta est tum nero uatem xo w é€oypyv Romanum ru to textu uin dicentur scri tori uae sunt mitia 1ibrmiorum p p q . n am lubidì ne artis criticae frenis carente nonnulli apud Min u cinm feren d a es se un ot d ix erunt uae in a.ecnli rtii i p , q e te hom nibus s mibarbaris d emu m aun t ler e pos t o ari. exim 9n di etiam ex comm entariis n onnulli errores b ue r in e t entes u eluti uerba. c . 4 m mi it a e s . 6 cu a a em oer p , c i p r s z ' aut accip zat mot faciat priores interpretes ad Publilinm Syrum refem nt mm in e t n . i a s n e tiae a. recentioribus Sy m tem ere ad ’ scri tus cf Woelfl lin i editio l . 1 19 uerba. i la ex so Minucio p ( p . ) ip influx run e t. EDITOBIS PRAEFATI O. V ' Ver ih nm u am o i s id ex aliis g . cui s r m rificn quod in dieiis iam atefactum ane com robat Minnci est p pl p , um s ma m eruers e ue r aeeunte F Ba a fuis e Ro nu p q p . lduin an a ia ro A a enditatum es t doctie b d p nc p fric no u esse . autem illud poetici sermonis studium ad rectam quo. que et interpretationem et emen d ationem alicuius mo Libe lli in uniuersum a sermon e examin atio quod ‘ efle cit id confirm atur ex aliarum re m in uisitione , ru q . am ol tis a em se un Cbr a n ex a o e i fin c di . s eculi p g c rc p . flo ren tibus cum unus Tertullianus cum Apolo tl o sn o e e uen iat cen sum n am ex r de £ henì n r in ( . g . É m m a in certa eum m e e Min ucio g o ni ), usu ss , non Mi ' n u<num r u a tam u u e e n u errim e e Te t lli no , l c l nt p d mon ' t uit A Ebertus ìn dis sertatione Tertullians Ver s m . ( ’ aeltniss z u Min . F. in scri ta Li siae ut r h p , p fe e m d r m n s comm un e octo u ads ensum ferret. in erbi autem - dialo i no e. 9 6 as sim omnes locuntur id etiam g stri , p , Oir tmszs nostri testatur oratio m raesens e te pus p , tsi non co git omm no tamen probabile admod um atque neri s e red dit a i d e n e adhuc uiuo s ner imil , g Fro ton inter e f c. 3 e e e sant ; c . n qu facil poste riore tempore anno 230) nudum ill ud Cir… t nostr i intell e i o tuit . uerum em es Caecilium g p quid , , d m r abo aliquot ex capite primo ex e pla ad in terp eta, tion em a ectan in 1 u e iam tr ct e p fia. 5 q a am a a et d can o nu errim e xatitit u n ll p e q i o et renoue re, ’ cordand o in mem axn re o d o owi u care , cet r sc iben a p u m a reu ooabo (neil . in me I A I VI EDITOR S PRAEF T O. a adlata. o Frontonem a a Cir qui n erb l quitur , ppell re ten sem nostrum utpote conterran eum sed n on d ebuit d in s ] V 47 1 . a cri H e o . X H De au e a u . ss ( rm p sqq ) p ' tion es n onn ull as Cirten s es in M arcus Caccilzus , quibus 2 11 ci: 217 Cirtae a Quin ti fi Natalis intra. anuos pr e fectus quin quennafis atque ethn icorum s uperstitioni inhaeren s comm emoratur ita. rouocare ut an , p h c ipsum C aecilium puizaret esse nostri dialogi participem (de i n f 16 in fine Caracall l c . c a Nata s . e nomi e , qui l a. imbut s sacris christian i imperii ne poste u esset s . n am a u e ind ubitatis testim oniis n ta etsi r ris t m n co s t, t r ùrem et filium n a u a um etiam tum empo is pa. t m xim ei d em e e n omin ib us in ins cri tione ua. s use s ss . sic p q M r uardtu d B a 1 47 7 cf. a s a m N .
Recommended publications
  • Official U.S. Bulletin
    : : : — : . PVBLISHEa DJIILY under order of THE PRESIDENT of THE UNITED STETES by COMMITTEE on PUBLIC INFORMATION GEORGE CREEL, Chairman ~k -k -k COMPLETE Record of U. S. GOUERNMENT Activities ' VoL. 3 WASHINGTON, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1919. No. 545 SIXTH BIWEEKLY OFFERING FIRST EDITION OF INCOME TAX CONDITIONS AT BREST CAMP OF TREASURY CERTIFICATES REGULATIONS READY THIS WEEK OUTLINED BY GEN. PERSHING OVERSUBSCRIBED $20,578,500 Second Edition for Use ef-Cor- porations Being Prepared IN RESPONSE TO REQUEST RESERVE BANK DISTRICT RESULTS Joint Edition Later. MADEBYPRESIDENTWILSON Aggregate Subscriptions in Anticipa- The Bureau of Internal Revenue issues the following; tion Victory Liberty Loan Now of The first edition of the income tax regu- INQUIRY RESULT OF $3,845,678,000-r—Bond Drive in lations which relate to the tax on individ- NEWSPAPER CHARGES ual incomes will be distributed by collec- Occupied Germany. tors of internal revenue early this week. The regulations were prepared under Complaints That Soldiers Secretary Glass announces that the the immediate direction of Hugh Satter- From Front and Red Cross sixth biweekly offering (Series V. F) of lee, of Rochester, N. Y. Mr. Satterlee Treasury certificates of indebtedness in was connected with the Bureau of In- Nurses Practically Held anticipation of the Victory Liberty Loan ternal Revenue last year as .special attor- was overscribed. The minimum amount ney and returned at the request of Com- Prisoners bsolutely offered was .'^GOO.000.000 and the total missioner Ddniel C. Roper to take charge Groundless/*Says Report, subscriptions aggregate $620,.578, 500. The of this branch of the work.
    [Show full text]
  • The Book of Greek and Roman Folktales
    © Copyright, Princeton University Press. No part of this book may be distributed, posted, or reproduced in any form by digital or mechanical means without prior written permission of the publisher. INTRODUCTION Give me a copper coin and you’ll hear a golden tale! — Roman storyteller’s street cry1 I begin with three instances of storytelling. One hot day Socrates and a companion Phaidros sought relief from the sun by strolling alongside the cool stream of the Ilissos outside the walls of Athens. The place brought to Phaidros’s mind an event from the distant past. “Tell me, Socrates,” he said, “wasn’t it from somewhere around here that Boreas is said to have carried off Oreithyia?” He was thinking of the myth according to which the Athenian king’s daughter was playing on the banks of the stream when suddenly the god of the north wind snatched her up and carried her off to his cold kingdom. “Yes, that’s what they say.” “Was it from here, then?” “No,” Socrates replied, “the spot is actually some distance downstream. There is an altar of Boreas there.” Phaidros asked if Socrates believed the story was true. Socrates replied that although clever men might explain the story away, he did not care to waste time on such speculations and was content to accept the usual beliefs (Plato Phaedrus 229a– 230b; cf. Finkelberg 2014). On a different occasion, a group of persons was traveling and partying together aboard a ship. One of the men, Eumolpus, made a comment on the unfaithfulness of women, adding that he had in mind not women in the old tragedies and legends but a woman of their own day.
    [Show full text]
  • Book VIII Seminar 1 16 November 1960
    THE SEMINAR OF JACQUES LACAN BOOK VIII Transference 1960 - 1961 Translated by Cormac Gallagher from unedited French typescripts FOR PRIVATE USE ONLY http://www.lacaninireland.com Book VIII Seminar 1 16 November 1960 Seminar 1: Wednesday 16 November 1960 I announced for this coming year that I would deal with transference, with its subjective oddity (sa disparite subjective). It is not a term that was easily chosen. It underlines essentially something which goes further than the simple notion of asymmetry between subjects. It poses in the very title... it rebels, as I might say from the beginning, against the idea that intersubjectivity can by itself alone provide the framework in which the phenomenon is inscribed. There are words which are more or less appropriate in different tongues. I am looking for some equivalent for the word impair, for the subjective oddity of transference, for the oddity that it contains essentially. There is no term, except the very term imparite which is not used in French, to designate it. "In its supposed situation" (dans sa pretendue situation) my title also says, indicating by that some reference to this effort over the last years in analysis to organise, around the notion of situation, what happens in analytic treatment. The very word supposed is there again to say that I dispute the validity of, or at least that I take up a corrective position with respect to this effort. I do not believe that one can say purely and simply about psychoanalysis that what we have here is a situation. If it is one, it is one of which one could also say: it is not a situation or again, that it is a false situation.
    [Show full text]
  • This Strongs Greek-English Glossary Has Been Generated Based On
    STRONGS GREEK-ENGLISH GLOSSARY This Strongs Greek-English Glossary has been generated based on “Lexical Form” glosses and Strong’s number assignment from the Lexham Greek-English Interlinear New Testament, available from Logos Bible Software (http://www.logos.com). Lexical Form glosses are general and relatively context-free; they are not formal definitions. While they serve some use for quick and easy lookup, if one is studying a particular word or word usage, one should further consult a formal Greek-English dictionary or lexicon. 1 ἄλφα alpha alpha 30 ἄγγος, ἀγγεῖον angos, angeion vessel 2 Ἀαρών Aarōn Aaron 31 ἀγγελία angelia message 3 Ἀβαδδών Abaddōn Abbadon 32 ἄγγελος angelos angel 4 ἀβαρής abarēs not burdensome 33 ἄγε — see 71 5 ἀββά abba Abba, Aramaic for “Father” 34 ἀγέλη agelē herd 6 Ἅβελ Habel Abel 35 ἀγενεαλόγητος agenealogētos without genealogy 7 Ἀβιά Abia Abijah 36 ἀγενής agenēs insignificant 8 Ἀβιαθάρ Abiathar Abiathar 37 ἁγιάζω hagiazō to make holy 9 Ἀβιληνή Abilēnē Abilene 38 ἁγιασμός hagiasmos sanctification 10 Ἀβιούδ Abioud Abiud 39 ἅγιος hagios holy; sanctuary 11 Ἀβραάμ Abraam Abraham 40 ἅγιος hagios holy 12 ἄβυσσος abyssos netherworld 41 ἁγιότης hagiotēs holiness 13 Ἅγαβος Hagabos Agabus 42 ἁγιωσύνη hagiōsynē holiness 14 ἀγαθοεργέω agathoergeō to do good 43 ἀγκάλη ankalē arm 15 ἀγαθοποιέω agathopoieō to do good 44 ἄγκιστρον ankistron fishhook 16 ἀγαθοποιί̈α agathopoiia doing good 45 ἄγκυρα ankyra anchor 17 ἀγαθοποιός agathopoios doing good 46 ἄγναφος agnaphos new 18 ἀγαθός agathos good 47 ἁγνεία hagneia purity 19 ἀγαθωσύνη
    [Show full text]
  • The Epigraphic Habits of the Slaves and Freed Slaves of the Julio-Claudian Households
    University of Calgary PRISM: University of Calgary's Digital Repository Graduate Studies The Vault: Electronic Theses and Dissertations 2013-10-02 The Epigraphic Habits of the Slaves and Freed Slaves of the Julio-Claudian Households Penner, Lindsay Rae Penner, L. R. (2013). The Epigraphic Habits of the Slaves and Freed Slaves of the Julio-Claudian Households (Unpublished doctoral thesis). University of Calgary, Calgary, AB. doi:10.11575/PRISM/28131 http://hdl.handle.net/11023/1081 doctoral thesis University of Calgary graduate students retain copyright ownership and moral rights for their thesis. You may use this material in any way that is permitted by the Copyright Act or through licensing that has been assigned to the document. For uses that are not allowable under copyright legislation or licensing, you are required to seek permission. Downloaded from PRISM: https://prism.ucalgary.ca UNIVERSITY OF CALGARY The Epigraphic Habits of the Slaves and Freed Slaves of the Julio-Claudian Households by Lindsay Rae Penner A THESIS SUBMITTED TO THE FACULTY OF GRADUATE STUDIES IN PARTIAL FULFILMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY DEPARTMENT OF GREEK AND ROMAN STUDIES CALGARY, ALBERTA SEPTEMBER, 2013 © Lindsay Rae Penner 2013 i Abstract This study examines the epigraphic evidence and literary texts relating to the slaves, freed slaves, and staff of the households of the Julio-Claudians. Rather than focusing on the Julio-Claudian emperors alone, the integration of their relatives places the Imperial household in its full domestic context, without separating it from other households which shared the same physical space and social situation.
    [Show full text]
  • GRŠKE MITOLOŠKE OSEBE 1. Del – 1 IMMORTALS
    BIOtransfer GRŠKE MITOLOŠKE OSEBE 1. del – 1 IMMORTALS GRŠKE MITOLOŠKE OSEBE 1. del IMMORTALS KAZALO: 1 Immortals 1.1 Olympian deities 2 1.2 Protogenoi (primordial) 3 1.3 Titans 4 1.4 Gigantes (giants) 6 1.5 Personified concepts 7 1.6 Chthonic deities 12 1.7 Sea deities 13 1.8 Sky deities 16 1.9 Rustic deities 19 1.10 Agricultural deities 31 1.11 Deified mortals 32 1.12 Health deities 33 1.13 Other deities 34 1.14 Seznam z merilnimi podatki o BIOtransferu 37 Vir: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greek_gods Ljubljana, 04.04.2013 Stran 1 od 50 121010_BR_FOTO_grške_mitološke_osebe_1.del BIOtransfer GRŠKE MITOLOŠKE OSEBE 1. del – 1 IMMORTALS 1 IMMORTALS 1.1 OLYMPIAN DEITIES TWELVE OLYMPIANS 1. Aphrodite 2. Apollo 3. Ares 4. Artemis 5. Athena 6. Demeter 7. Dionysus 8. Hades 9. Hephaestus 10. Hera 11. Hermes 12. Hestia 13. Poseidon 14. Zeus Ljubljana, 04.04.2013 Stran 2 od 50 121010_BR_FOTO_grške_mitološke_osebe_1.del BIOtransfer GRŠKE MITOLOŠKE OSEBE 1. del – 1 IMMORTALS 1.2 PROTOGENOI (PRIMORDIAL) 15. Aether 16. Ananke 17. Erebos or Erebus 18. Gaia or Gaea 19. Hemera 20. Chaos 21. Chronos 22. The Nesoi 23. Nyx or Night 24. Uranus 25. The Ourea 26. Phanes 27. Pontus 28. Tartarus 29. Thalassa Ljubljana, 04.04.2013 Stran 3 od 50 121010_BR_FOTO_grške_mitološke_osebe_1.del BIOtransfer GRŠKE MITOLOŠKE OSEBE 1. del – 1 IMMORTALS 1.3 TITANS THE TWELVE TITANS 30. Hyperion 31. Iapetus 32. Coeus 33. Crius 34. Cronus 35. Mnemosyne 36. Oceanus 37. Phoebe 38. Rhea 39. Tethys 40. Theia 41. Themis Ljubljana, 04.04.2013 Stran 4 od 50 121010_BR_FOTO_grške_mitološke_osebe_1.del BIOtransfer GRŠKE MITOLOŠKE OSEBE 1.
    [Show full text]
  • Greek Masculinity‛: the Elusive Ideal
    UNIVERSITY COLLEGE LONDON DEPARTMENT OF GREEK AND LATIN Euripidean Men Revisited Four Case Studies Dimitra Kokkini Thesis submitted to the University College of London for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy University College London August 2010 1 Declaration I, Dimitra Kokkini, confirm that the work presented in this thesis is my own. Where information has been derived from other sources, I confirm that this has been indicated in the thesis. Signature: 2 Abstract While Euripides’ women have attracted a great deal of attention in recent decades, it is now half a century since the last substantial monograph devoted to his male characters. The present thesis examines representations of manliness and male behaviour in Euripidean tragedy. It aims to revisit Euripidean men as characters in their own right, not simply as foils to powerful women, and in relation with ideals of manliness as expressed and experienced in fifth-century Athens. The Introduction is divided thematically into two parts. The first part deals with the emergence of Gender and Men’s Studies from the same theoretical thinking that shaped Feminist thought, and demonstrates how their rhetoric and ideas can be used in literary criticism. The second part uses the idea of masculinity as a cultural construct and focuses on the concept of ‚ideal masculinity‛ as promoted in ancient Greek sources. Four case studies constitute the four main chapters of the thesis, each one of them placing emphasis on different aspects of masculinity and male identity. Chapter 1 focuses on Herakles in Herakles, and deals with questions regarding his relation with femininity, gender balance of roles within the oikos, male domesticity and the existence of multiple definitions of manly courage.
    [Show full text]
  • March of the Billionaires
    Finance & Development is published quarterly in English, Arabic, Chinese, French, Russian, and Spanish. English edition ISSN 0015-1947 FINANCE & DEVELOPMENT A QUARTERLY PUBLICATION OF THE INTERNATIONAL MONETARY FUND EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Jeremy Clift December 2012 • Volume 49 • Number 4 MANAGING EDITOR FD Marina Primorac SENIOR EDITORS FEATURES Camilla Andersen James L. Rowe, Jr. Hyun-Sung Khang Simon Willson Natalie Ramírez-Djumena CATALYSTS FOR CHANGE ONLINE EDITOR 8 Good Works Glenn Gottselig Can philanthropy and social entrepreneurship step in ASSISTANT EDITORS Khaled Abdel-Kader Jacqueline Deslauriers where official aid leaves off? Maureen Burke Lika Gueye Marina Primorac PRINT/WEB PRODUCTION SPECIALIST 10 Every Which Way We Can Lijun Li Philanthropy and private investment are increasingly 8 SOCIAL MEDIA MANAGER important in the global fight against poverty Sara Haddad Dean Karlan SENIOR EDITORIAL ­ASSISTANT 14 Learning Laboratory Niccole Braynen-Kimani Social entrepreneurship offers innovative EDITORIAL ­ASSISTANT Harris Qureshi cost-effective development solutions J. Gregory Dees CREATIVE DIRECTOR Luisa Menjivar 18 Point of View: The Power of Cooperation GRAPHIC ARTISTS Networks of creative collaboration can transform lives Kenneth Grubby Michelle Martin Bill Clinton Seemeen Hashem 18 ADVISORS TO THE EDITOR ALSO IN THIS ISSUE Bas Bakker Thomas Helbling Nicoletta Batini Laura Kodres 22 China Prompting Western Creativity Helge Berger Paolo Mauro Chinese manufacturing exporters are capturing low-skill production Tim Callen Gian Maria Milesi-Ferretti but driving high-skill innovation in the West Paul Cashin Paul Mills Adrienne Cheasty Martin Muhleisen Nick Bloom, Mirko Draca, and John Van Reenen Alfredo Cuevas Laura Papi 25 When Commodity Prices Surge Marcello Estevão Uma Ramakrishnan A price spike is likely to have more impact on countries with already Domenico Fanizza Abdelhak Senhadji James Gordon high inflation levels and weak institutions Gaston Gelos and Yulia Ustyugova © 2012 by the International Monetary Fund.
    [Show full text]
  • Memorialistica Românească: Între Documentul Istoric Şi Obiectul Estetic
    Bogdan Creţu • Ofelia Ichim • Marius-Radu Clim (coordonatori) Memorialistica românească: între documentul istoric şi obiectul estetic ACADEMIA ROMÂNĂ INSTITUTUL DE FILOLOGIE ROMÂNĂ FILIALA IAŞI „A. PHILIPPIDE” Volumul de faţă cuprinde textele comunicărilor prezentate la Simpozionul naţional Memorialistica românească: între documentul istoric şi obiectul estetic, ediţia I, organizat de Institutul de Filologie Română „A. Philippide” – Filiala din Iaşi a Academiei Române, în colaborare cu Asociaţia Culturală „A. Philippide” (Iaşi, 9–10 iunie 2015). Comitetul ştiinţific al simpozionului: Acad. Eugen SIMION (Institutul de Istorie şi Teorie Literară „G. Călinescu”, Academia Română, Bucureşti); Mircea ANGHELESCU (Universitatea din Bucureşti); Ştefan BORBÉLY (Universitatea „Babeş-Bolyai”, Cluj-Napoca); Gheorghe CLIVETI (Institutul de Istorie „A.D. Xenopol” – Filiala din Iaşi a Academiei Române); Bogdan CREŢU (Institutul de Filologie Română „A. Philippide” – Filiala din Iaşi a Academiei Române, Preşedinte); Florin FAIFER (Institutul de Filologie Română „A. Philippide” – Filiala din Iaşi a Academiei Române); Sanda GOLOPENŢIA (Brown University, SUA); Ştefan S. GOROVEI (Universitatea „Alexandru Ioan Cuza” din Iaşi); Ştefan LEMNY (Biblioteca Naţională a Franţei, Paris); Antonio PATRAŞ (Universitatea „Alexandru Ioan Cuza” din Iaşi); Ion SIMUŢ (Universitatea din Oradea); Elvira SOROHAN (Universitatea „Alexandru Ioan Cuza” din Iaşi); Andrei TERIAN (Universitatea „Lucian Blaga”, Sibiu); Cornel UNGUREANU (Universitatea de Vest, Timişoara). Redactor: Cerasela
    [Show full text]
  • Epigraphic Bulletin for Greek Religion 1999
    Kernos Revue internationale et pluridisciplinaire de religion grecque antique 15 | 2002 Varia Epigraphic Bulletin for Greek Religion 1999 Angelos Chaniotis and Joannis Mylonopoulos Electronic version URL: http://journals.openedition.org/kernos/1394 DOI: 10.4000/kernos.1394 ISSN: 2034-7871 Publisher Centre international d'étude de la religion grecque antique Printed version Date of publication: 1 January 2002 ISSN: 0776-3824 Electronic reference Angelos Chaniotis and Joannis Mylonopoulos, « Epigraphic Bulletin for Greek Religion 1999 », Kernos [Online], 15 | 2002, Online since 21 April 2011, connection on 16 September 2020. URL : http:// journals.openedition.org/kernos/1394 Kernos Kernos, 15 (2002), p. 331-414. Epigraphie Bulletin for Greek Religion 1999 (EBGR 1999) If the number of lemmata in this 12th issue of the Epigraphie Bulletin for Greek Religion is substantially smaller than that of EBGR 1997 and 1998, this is certainly not related to a decrease in the number of epigraphic contributions to the study of Greek religion, but only to other pressing obligations that have prevented us from covering the entire epigraphic harvest of 1999. We have given priority to new corpora and to the edition of new texts, hoping to cover the gaps in the next issues. In addition to the largest part of the publication of 1999 we have also included in this issue many publications of earlier years that we had been unable to summarize in previous issues. Despite the omissions we hope that the EBGR 1999 reflects the diversity of the contribution of epigraphy to the study of cults, deities, ritual practices, myths, priests, sanctuaries, and eschato­ logical ideas in the Greek and Hellenized world.
    [Show full text]
  • Yunan Mitolojisi
    2013 YUNAN MİTOLOJİSİ AD: Berkay SOYAD: Gerz SINIF-NUMARA: 9/D - 927 DERS: TARİH ÖĞRETMEN: ZÜLFER ÇAMALTI Beşir Balcıoğlu Anadolu Lisesi 27.12.2013 İÇİNDEKİLER MİTOLOJİ NEDİR?...........................................................................................................3 YUNAN MİTOLOJİSİ…………………………………………………………………………………………………...5 MİTOLOJİK KAHRAMANLAR……………………………………………………………………………………...11 YUNAN MİTOLOJİSİ İSİMLERİ…………………………………………………………………………………….12 YUNAN MİTOLOJİSİNDEKİ İSİMLERİN GRUPLANDIRILMASI………………………………………..144 YUNAN MİTOLOJİSİ KAHRAMANLARI………………………………………………………………………….151 YUNAN MİTOLOJİSİ FİLMLERİ……………………………………………………………………………………..154 YUNAN MİTOLOJİSİNDE TANRILAR………………………………………………………………………………159 YUNAN MİTOLOJİSİ SOY AĞACI…………………………………………………………………………………….167 KAYNAKÇA…………………………………………………………………………………………………………………….194 2 MİTOLOJİ NEDİR? Mitoloji bir din veya bir halkın kültüründe tanrılar, kahramanlar, evren ve insanın yaratılışına dair tüm sözlü ve yazılı efsane birikiminin ve bu efsanelerin doğuşlarını, anlamlarını yorumlayıp, inceleyen ve sınıflandıran çalışmalar bütünüdür Türk mitolojisi nedir? Türk mitolojisi, tarihi Türk halklarının inanmış oldukları mitolojik bütüne verilen isimdir. Eski efsaneler, Türk halklarının eski ortak inancı Tengricilikten öğeler taşımaktan ziyade sosyal ve kültürel tema'larla doludur. Bunların bazıları sonradan islami öğeler ile değiştirilmiştir.Dünyanın en eski Edebi belgelerinden biri olarak geçen Dede Korkut Destanlarının orjinal Yapıtları, Vatikan ve Dresden Kütüphünelerinde bulunmaktadır. Ege
    [Show full text]
  • Vocabulario Griego Del Nuevo Testamento
    VOCABULARIO GRIEGO DEL NUEVO TESTAMENTO EDICIONES SIGUEME a . 1 f3 31 y 37 O 41 f . 51 S 77 11 . 79 {} 81 85 x 89 A 107 ~l 111 _.__.3l,,,..,.,.,121 St: ". 125 o 127 J1 135 Q 161 o 165 L 183 U 191 cp 197 X , 203 1.1) 207 (l) 209 EDICIONES SíGUEME BIBLIOTECA DE ESTUDIOS BÍBLICOS MINOR 5 Diccionarios publicados por Ediciones Sígueme: -L. Coenen (ed.), Diccionario teológico del NT (BEB 26-29) -H. Balz-G,Schneider (eds.),Diccionario exegéticodel NT (BEB 90-91) -L. Pacomio (ed.), Diccionario teológico interdisciplinar (Ver 66-69) -A. Di Berardino (ed.), Diccionario patrístico (VeI 97-98) -G. Canobbio, Pequeño diccionario de teología (Vel 122) VOCABULARIO GRIEGC) DEL NUEVO TESTr\lvIENT() SEGUNDA EDICiÓN Ediciones Sígueine Salamanca 2001 © Ediciones Sígueme, S,A" 1998 el García Tejado, 23-27 - E-37007 Salamanca/España ISBN: 84-301-1351-7 Depósito Legal: S. 127-2001 Printed in Spain Imprime: Gráficas Varona Polígono «El Montalvo» - Salamanca, 2001 Presentación Ediciones Sígueme acaba de publicar el Diccionario exegé• tico del Nuevo Testamento (DENT), obra en dos volúmenes que ha merecido las críticas más elogiosas. La mayor novedad de este diccionario es su actualidad: recoge la gran cantidad de cambios y nuevos enfoques surgidos en la discusión científica especializada. Se trata de un diccionario en sentido estricto: presenta todos los vocablos del texto griego del nuevo testamento, incluidos los nombres propios y las variantes textuales, alfabéticamente ordenados. En cada palabra se ofrecen los datos precisos para su traducción y exégesis. Los artículos parten siempre de los estratos más antiguos de la tradición, de donde se toma el voca• blo correspondiente como portador de sentido, se estudian las implicaciones teológicas y exegéticas y ofrece el significado de cada término en su contexto.
    [Show full text]