DOCSLIB.ORG
Explore
Sign Up
Log In
Upload
Search
Home
» Tags
» Bacchanalia
Bacchanalia
The Art and Artifacts Associated with the Cult of Dionysus
Introduction. Dionysus in Rome: Accommodation and Resistance
The Invisibility of Juvenal James Uden Submitted in Partial Fulfillment of Th
Plutarch, Apuleius, and Vettius Agorius Praetextatus ______
Thomas Hardy's Tess of the D'urbervilles, Apollo, Dionysus, And
Ritual Killing in Ancient Rome: Homicide and Roman Superiority Dawn F Carver, Jasmine Watson, Jason Curtiss Jr
The Other Greeks: Metaphors and Ironies of Hellenism in Livy’S Fourth Decade
Beyond Priesthood Religionsgeschichtliche Versuche Und Vorarbeiten
The Underlying Reasons for the Bacchanalia Affair of 186 BC
Octavian and Egyptian Cults: Redrawing the Boundaries of Romanness Eric M
The Rites in the Mysteries of Dionysus the Birth of the Drama
Rome, Women and Religion: Asserting Agency Through Decoration Chloe Ginnegar
[email protected]
Dionysian Aspects As Symbols of Otherness in the Artwork of the Painter Asad Azi
The Regulation of Rome's Women in the Second Punic
Liberalia in Ovid Liber in the Roman Religion
Hommage to Bacchanalia Andrea Alberto Dutto in the Shadow Of
An Examination of the Moral Panic in 186 BCE and the Political Implications Accompanying the Persecution of the Bacchic Cult in the Roman Republic
Subjects in the Visual Arts: Dionysus by Roberto C
Top View
The Bacchanalia: How Wine Set the Stage By
Religious Toleration and Political Power in the Roman World Religious Toleration and Political Power in the Roman
Revised THESIS
Introduction the Festa Della Chinea, Which Roughly Translates As 'Festival
Excerpt from Secret History of the Witches, Vol III © 2015 Max Dashu 1
Roman Identity in the Age of Augustus
Bollan, John Mcgrory. (2013) Pontificalis Honor: a Re-Evaluation of Priestly Auctoritas and Sacro-Political Violence in the Transition from Republic to Principate
Dionysus and Rome
Much Is Known About the Ancient Civic Cult of Dionysus
«Dionysian Religion: a Study of the Worship of Dionysus in Ancient Greece and Rome»
Liber, Fufluns, and the Others : Rethinking Dionysus in Italy Between the Fifth and the Third Centuries BCE