: Julietta Steinhauer-Hogg
: Religious Associations in the Post-Classical Polis
: Franz Steiner Verlag
: 9783515108690
: Potsdamer altertumswissenschaftliche Beiträge
: 1
: CHF 51.70
:
: Altertum
: English
: 189
: Wasserzeichen/DRM
: PC/MAC/eReader/Tablet
: PDF

This e-book investigates the development of religious associations in the Aegean world in Hellenistic and Roman times on the basis of epigraphic and archaeological evidence from major sites. It offers a socio-cultural examination of religious associations linked to a variety of deities at different places. Founding or joining a religious association was a matter of individual choice. But that choice took place in an environment dominated by more traditional forms of religious worship, many of them closely integrated into the polis. Julietta Steinhauer asks what let individuals to participate in religious associations of this kind. What made these associations popular among people from different social groups and ethnic backgrounds? Who might found a religious association, how did they do it, and why? Which deities were the most popular among the worshippers initiating such associations, and what were the reasons for their choices? Two case-studies investigating the evidence from Athens and Delos form the foundation of this e-book. One chapter is dedicated to the background of people involved in religious associations. The actual assembly places are considered from an archaeological perspective. Finally, a comparative chapter deals with the socio-political place of religious associations in the post-classical poleis of the Aegean world.



ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS6
CONTENTS10
ABBREVIATIONS12
1. INTRODUCTION16
1.1 TERMINOLOGY17
1.2 HISTORY OF SCHOLARSHIP20
1.3 MATERIALS, METHODS, STRUCTURE24
1.4 LEADING IDEAS26
2. ATHENS – A CASE STUDY28
2.1 EARLY EVIDENCE30
2.2 THE FOURTH CENTURY BCE, A CENTURY OF ORGEONES ASSOCIATIONS31
2.3 PEAK-TIME FOR RELIGIOUS ASSOCIATONS IN ATHENS?37
2.4 ORGEONES IN PIRAEUS – THE CASE OF THE DIONYSIASTAI44
2.5 DECREASE IN EVIDENCE47
2.6 EARLY ROMAN ATHENS: NEW ACTIVITIES IN THE CENTRE OF THE CITY48
2.7 CONCLUSION ATHENS49
3. DELOS, A CASE STUDY52
3.1 RELIGIOUS ASSOCIATIONS WORSHIPPING THE EGYPTIAN GODS53
3.2 RELIGIOUS ASSOCIATIONS WORSHIPPING AT THE ‘SANCTUARY OF THE SYRIAN GODS’58
3.3 THE SANCTUARIES OF THE ‘ORIENTAL DEITIES’ AND THE KYNTHEION59
3.4 RELIGIOUS ASSOCIATIONS TO BE LINKED WITH THE ‘SYNAGOGUE’62
3.5 OTHER ASSOCIATIONS – THE EXAMPLE OF THE POSEIDONIASTAI OF BERYTOS66
3.6 THE INSTITUTIONALISATION OF THE DELIAN SANCTUARIES67
3.7 CONCLUSION DELOS69
4. THE PEOPLE: PERSONNEL AND PARTICIPANTS72
4.1 THE EGYPTIAN DEITIES: A CASE SUI GENERIS74
4.2 ASSOCIATIONS WORSHIPPING OTHER ‘NEW’ GODS93
4.3 METIC INITIATORS, PARTICIPANTS AND OFFICE-HOLDERS100
4.4 CONCLUSION PEOPLE, PERSONNEL, AND PARTICIPANTS108
5. ARCHITECTURE AND ARCHAEOLOGY111
5.1 EPIGRAPHIC EVIDENCE OF ARCHITECTURAL STRUCTURES111
5.2 FUNERARY SITES114
5.3 RELIGIOUS ASSOCIATIONS IN TEMPLES AND SANCTUARIES119
5.4 DINING HALLS ATTACHED TO TEMPLES122
5.5 FREE-STANDING ASSEMBLY-ROOMS128
5.6 RELIGIOUS ASSOCIATIONS AND PUBLIC SPACE137
5.7 CONCLUSION: ARCHITECTURE AND ARCHAEOLOGY139
6. RELIGIOUS ASSOCIATIONS AND CIVIC INSTITUTIONS142
6.1 ATHENS143
6.2 DELOS149
6.3 RHODES152
6.4 CONCLUSION RELIGIOUS ASSOCIATIONS AND CIVIC INSTITUTIONS159
7. CONCLUSION161
8. BIBLIOGRAPHY167
APPENDIX I176
APPENDIX II185
The Jews in the Diaspora185
The Septuagint186
GENERAL INDEX187