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Inscriptions and the Epigraphic Habit -

Inscriptions and the Epigraphic Habit

The Epigraphic Cultures of Greece, Rome, and Beyond
Buch | Hardcover
392 Seiten
2023
Brill (Verlag)
978-90-04-68311-2 (ISBN)
CHF 209,95 inkl. MwSt
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This volume illustrates how the epigraphic habit is ubiquitous but variously expressed. Inscriptions become part of the fabric of Greek and Roman culture.
Inscriptions are a major feature of the Greek and Roman worlds, as inhabitants around the Mediterranean chose to commit text to stone and other materials. How did the epigraphic habit vary across time and space? Once adopted, how was the epigraphic habit variously expressed?
The chapters of this volume analyze the epigraphic cultures of regions, cities, and communities through both large-scale analyses and detailed studies. From curse tablets in Britain to multilingual communities in Judaea-Palestine, from Greece to Rome to the Black Sea, and across nearly a millennium, the epigraphic outputs of cities and individuals underscore a collective understanding of the value of inscribed texts.

Rebecca R. Benefiel, Ph.D. (2005), Harvard University, is Abigail Grigsby Urquhart Professor of Classics at Washington & Lee University. She is Director of the Ancient Graffiti Project and has authored numerous articles on Latin epigraphy and Roman social history. She is co-editor of Inscriptions in the Private Sphere in the Greco-Roman World (Brill, 2016). Catherine M. Keesling, Ph.D. (1995), University of Michigan, is Professor of Classics at Georgetown University. Her publications include articles and book chapters on the epigraphical evidence for ancient Greek sculpture as well as the monographs The Votive Statues of the Athenian Acropolis (Cambridge 2003) and Early Greek Portraiture: Monuments and Histories (Cambridge 2017). Contributors are: Rebecca R. Benefiel, Gianmarco Bianchini, John Bodel, Sarah Brucia Breitenfeld, Jan-Mathieu Carbon, Jeffrey Easton, Marta Fernández-Corral, Gian Luca Gregori, Jessica L. Lamont, Kathryn A. Langenfeld, Elizabeth A. Meyer, Morgan E. Palmer, Cameron G. Pearson, Joanna Porucznik, Susan Rahyab, Jane Sancinito, Caterina A. Stripeikis, Holly M. Sypniewski, Michael Zellmann-Rohrer, Sebastian Zerhoch.

Preface

 Catherine M. Keesling and Rebecca R. Benefiel



List of Figures, Graphs, Maps, and Tables

Notes on Contributors



1 Epigraphic Culture and the Epigraphic Mode

 John Bodel



Part 1: Epigraphy and Regional Trends

2 Reader-Oriented Strategies in Attic Funerary Monuments from the Fourth Century BCE

 Caterina A. Stripeikis



3 Artemis Kindyas and the Traveling Tombs of Bargylia

 Jan-Mathieu Carbon



4 Roman Voting Tribes, Citizenship, and Epigraphic Habit: The Case Study of Hispania Citerior

 Marta Fernández-Corral



5 The Epigraphic Habit of the Northwestern Black Sea Region during the Roman Period

 Joanna Porucznik



Part 2: Epigraphy and Civic Life

6 A Deceptively Simple Ritual: Libation in Greek Inscriptions

 Sebastian Zerhoch



7 The Keepers of the Agora: Contracts and the Office of Agoranomos in the Epigraphic Record

 Susan Rahyab



8 Writing on Columns: Graffiti in the Campus of Pompeii

 Rebecca R. Benefiel and Holly M. Sypniewski



Part 3: Epigraphy and Collective Identity

9 The Fictores and the Epigraphic Habit in the Atrium Vestae

 Morgan E. Palmer



10 Viae Appiae multorum annorum negotians: Place in Merchant Funerary Inscriptions

 Jane Sancinito



11 Servi empticii and Manumission in the Roman Municipal familia publica

 Jeffrey A. Easton



12 Epigraphic Permanence and Ephemerality: The Augusteum Assemblage and Memory Construction at Ostia’s Caserma dei Vigili

 Kathryn A. Langenfeld



Part 4: Epigraphy and the Individual

13 New Evidence for Slave Names and Social Mobility in Archaic Greece

 Cameron G. Pearson



14 Curse-Writing and the Epigraphic Habit in Athens

 Jessica L. Lamont



15 Semitic Loanwords and Transcriptions in the Greek Epigraphy of Judaea-Palestine

 Michael Zellmann-Rohrer



16 The Epigraphic Habit in a Pompeian House: Rules of Good Manners

 Gianmarco Bianchini and Gian Luca Gregori



17 May the Thief Become as Liquid as Water: Persuasion and Power in a Curse Tablet from Roman Bath

 Sarah Brucia Breitenfeld



Conclusion: Epigraphic Habits and Epigraphic Communities

 Elizabeth A. Meyer



Index

Erscheinungsdatum
Reihe/Serie Brill Studies in Greek and Roman Epigraphy ; 20
Verlagsort Leiden
Sprache englisch
Maße 155 x 235 mm
Gewicht 845 g
Themenwelt Geschichte Allgemeine Geschichte Vor- und Frühgeschichte
Geschichte Allgemeine Geschichte Altertum / Antike
ISBN-10 90-04-68311-9 / 9004683119
ISBN-13 978-90-04-68311-2 / 9789004683112
Zustand Neuware
Informationen gemäß Produktsicherheitsverordnung (GPSR)
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