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9789042920040

The Sculptural Environment of the Roman Near East

by ; ;
  • ISBN13:

    9789042920040

  • ISBN10:

    9042920041

  • Format: Paperback
  • Copyright: 2008-09-30
  • Publisher: Peeters Pub & Booksellers
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List Price: $107.00

Summary

Public sculptures were the "mass media" of the Roman world. They populated urban centers throughout the empire, serving as a "plastic language" that communicated political, religious, and social messages. This book brings together twenty-eight experts who otherwise rarely convene: text-based scholars of the Greco-Roman, Jewish, and Christian realms from the fields of classics, history, and religion and specialists in the artistic traditions of Greece and Rome as well as art historians and archaeologists. Utilizing the full spectrum of ancient sources, the book examines the multiple, at times even contradictory, meanings and functions that statues served within the complex world of the Roman Near East. Moreover, it situates the discussion of sculpture in the broader context of antiquity in order to reevaluate long-held scholarly consensuses on such ideas as the essence of Hellenism (the culture that emerged from the encounter of Greco-Romans with the Near East) and the everlasting "conflict" among paganism, Christianity, and Judaism.

Table of Contents

List of Figures and Mapsp. IX
Acknowledgmentsp. XXIII
Introductionp. 1
List of Contributorsp. 13
Abbreviationsp. 17
Encompassing Hellenism: The Dynamics of Extended Cultures
Reconsidering Hellenism in the Roman Near East: Introductory Remarksp. 21
The Nature of Syrian Hellenism in the Late Roman and Early Byzantine Periodsp. 25
The Jews in the Roman Worldp. 51
Origin, Production, and Fate
Marble Sculpture of the Roman Period in the Near East and Its Hellenistic Originsp. 69
The Sculptor's Studio at Aphrodisias: The Working Methods and Varieties of Sculpture Producedp. 91
The Classical Heritage in Late Antique Palestine: The Fate of Freestanding Sculpturesp. 117
The Destruction of Pagan Statuary and Christianization (Fourth-Sixth Century C.E.)p. 143
The Imperial Cult in the East: Images of Power and the Power of Intolerancep. 165
Two-Dimensional Landscapes: Re-Presenting Statues in Other Media
Statues on the Wall: The Representation of Statuary in Roman Wall Paintingp. 197
Narrative and Identity in Mosaics from the Late Roman Near East: Pagan, Jewish, and Christianp. 225
The Missing Pieces: Miniature Reflections of the Hellenistic Artistic Landscape in the Eastp. 257
Statues and Inscriptions in Iudaea/Syria Palaestinap. 273
Engaging the Realm of the Gods
Baetyls as Statues? Cult Images in the Roman Near Eastp. 297
Visualizing Deities in the Roman Near East: Aspects of Athena and Athena-Allatp. 315
Roman Sculpture from the Exedra in the Temenos of the Qasr al-Bint at Petrap. 351
Sculptures from Southern Syrian Sanctuaries of the Roman Periodp. 363
The Statues of the Sanctuary of Allat in Palmyrap. 397
The Role of Sculpture in Worship at the Temples of Dura-Europosp. 413
Divine Statues in the Works of Libanius of Antioch: The Actual and Rhetorical Desacralization of Pagan Cult Furniture in the Late Fourth Century C.E.p. 437
Urban Landscapes and Perceptions
Imagining an Eastern Roman Empire: A Riot at Antioch in 387 C.E.p. 451
Sculpture in Roman Palestine and Its Architectural and Social Milieu: Adaptability, Imitation, Originality? The Ascalon Basilica as an Examplep. 483
Caesarean Sculpture in Contextp. 509
Caesarea's Fortune: Ancient Statuary and the Beholder in a Late Antique Cityp. 539
Sculptures and Sculptural Images in Urban Galileep. 559
Social, Political, and Religious Discourses
Roman Victory Displayed: Symbols, Allegories, Personifications?p. 575
The Desolating Sacrilege: A Jewish-Christian Discourse on Statuary, Space, and Sanctityp. 605
Idolatry in Late Antique Babylonia: The Evidence of the Babylonian Talmudp. 629
The Vitality of Egyptian Images in Late Antiquity: Christian Memory and Responsep. 659
Bibliographyp. 679
Indexp. 751
Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved.

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