Emperor Worship and Roman Religion: Oxford Classical Monographs
Ittai Gradelen Limba Engleză Paperback – 29 iul 2004
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780199275489
ISBN-10: 0199275483
Pagini: 428
Ilustrații: numerous halftones and line illustrations
Dimensiuni: 139 x 215 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.55 kg
Ediția:Revised
Editura: Clarendon Press
Colecția Clarendon Press
Seria Oxford Classical Monographs
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 0199275483
Pagini: 428
Ilustrații: numerous halftones and line illustrations
Dimensiuni: 139 x 215 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.55 kg
Ediția:Revised
Editura: Clarendon Press
Colecția Clarendon Press
Seria Oxford Classical Monographs
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
Recenzii
Gradel's book is essential reading for anyone interested in the religious life of the Roman Empire, particularly for those who deal with ruler cult. His style and conclusions are provocative and, even where they do not convince, they force a serious re-reading of the evidence.
Gradel offers a highly provocative interpretation of what may be the most distinctive innovation of the Roman Empire.
Most impressive (and refreshing) is Gradel's ability to identify the biases and suppositions of prior scholarship and to pose alternate questions and practical answers based not on assumptions about beliefs (ancient and modern), but on Roman social and religious practices. While his categories and arguments may not always convince, they will certainly inspire debate, as they reconceive the "imperial cult".
Gradel's work is eminently readable and slyly witty at times. He impressively handles a wide range of evidence, deftly analyzing epigraphic, numismatic and archaeological data alongside literary testimonia. The inclusion of archaeological evidence in particular marks a great step forward.
Because of its approach, Gradel's work is relevant not only to those interested in the "imperial cult" but also to students of Roman religion, society, archaeology and epigraphy.
Ittai Gradel's stimulating work marks an important contribution to the study of emperor worship.
... an important book on an important topic, which every student and historian of the Roman empire, whether interested in so-called 'religious' or 'political' aspects, ought to read.
The book is cleverly constructed, written comprehensibly, and well-illustrated. It has a boldly stated thesis, examines long held interpretations of familiar sources critically, and argues its points in a provocative fashion.
... excellent volume ... the first detailed study of the phenomenon of the so-called 'imperial cult' that focusses on Rome and the empire's Italian districts.
Throw away most of your books and all of your notes on imperial cult, and buy Gradel's book. The territory has been redesigned and many of them will no longer fit in ... he marshals a very wide range of evidence across the range of inscriptions, ancient literature, coins: just about anything that has a bearing on his topic. He takes imperial cult by the scruff of the neck and starts with the evidence all over again ... I suspect that Gradel's formulation will become the new orthodoxy and the starting point for future discussions: it certainly should.
Gradel's book is consistently thoughtful and learned ... Gradel assembles a large quantity of valuable information concerning the imperial cult, erects a thought-provoking interpretative superstructure upon it and points the way to a number of fruitful future topics of research. I commend his book without hesitation as an admirable piece of scholarship which no work on its subject matter can henceforth afford to ignore.
A stimulating and valuable contribution to understanding and debate in a notoriously difficult area.
Gradel offers a highly provocative interpretation of what may be the most distinctive innovation of the Roman Empire.
Most impressive (and refreshing) is Gradel's ability to identify the biases and suppositions of prior scholarship and to pose alternate questions and practical answers based not on assumptions about beliefs (ancient and modern), but on Roman social and religious practices. While his categories and arguments may not always convince, they will certainly inspire debate, as they reconceive the "imperial cult".
Gradel's work is eminently readable and slyly witty at times. He impressively handles a wide range of evidence, deftly analyzing epigraphic, numismatic and archaeological data alongside literary testimonia. The inclusion of archaeological evidence in particular marks a great step forward.
Because of its approach, Gradel's work is relevant not only to those interested in the "imperial cult" but also to students of Roman religion, society, archaeology and epigraphy.
Ittai Gradel's stimulating work marks an important contribution to the study of emperor worship.
... an important book on an important topic, which every student and historian of the Roman empire, whether interested in so-called 'religious' or 'political' aspects, ought to read.
The book is cleverly constructed, written comprehensibly, and well-illustrated. It has a boldly stated thesis, examines long held interpretations of familiar sources critically, and argues its points in a provocative fashion.
... excellent volume ... the first detailed study of the phenomenon of the so-called 'imperial cult' that focusses on Rome and the empire's Italian districts.
Throw away most of your books and all of your notes on imperial cult, and buy Gradel's book. The territory has been redesigned and many of them will no longer fit in ... he marshals a very wide range of evidence across the range of inscriptions, ancient literature, coins: just about anything that has a bearing on his topic. He takes imperial cult by the scruff of the neck and starts with the evidence all over again ... I suspect that Gradel's formulation will become the new orthodoxy and the starting point for future discussions: it certainly should.
Gradel's book is consistently thoughtful and learned ... Gradel assembles a large quantity of valuable information concerning the imperial cult, erects a thought-provoking interpretative superstructure upon it and points the way to a number of fruitful future topics of research. I commend his book without hesitation as an admirable piece of scholarship which no work on its subject matter can henceforth afford to ignore.
A stimulating and valuable contribution to understanding and debate in a notoriously difficult area.