Thursday, March 13, 2025

Poetry and Number in Graeco-Roman Antiquity

Leventhal, Max
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Ranges widely across Greek and Latin poetry to demonstrate the various roles played by number and how the treatment of counting and arithmetic was bound up with wider conceptions of the nature of poetry. Aimed at both classicists and those interested in the cultural history of mathematics.
Keywords
Greek literature; ancient mathematics
ISBN
9781009127295, 9781009123044, 9781009124171
Publication date and place
2022
Series
Humanities,
Classification
Ancient history
Philosophy
Poetry

Open Access Journal: Asia Anteriore Antica: Journal of Ancient Near Eastern Cultures (AsiAna)

[First posted in AWOL 23 July 2029, update 13  March 2025]

Asia Anteriore Antica: Journal of Ancient Near Eastern Cultures (AsiAna)
ISSN: 2611-8912

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Asia Anteriore Antica (AsiAnA) is an international Journal of Ancient Near Eastern Cultures studies founded and edited by scholars of different disciplines and approaches (philology, linguistics, history, archaeology), and cooperating in common researches and field projects based on an interdisciplinary perspective. 
FOCUS
Asia Anteriore Antica (AsiAnA) focuses on the variegated scenario of the emergence, development and crises of the ancient Near East cultures analysed in the plurality of their distinct and intertwining characters, languages, writing and literacy, administration and material culture, arts and politics, economy and trade, ideology and religion. All these lements shaped a civilization which strongly impacted on the history of the ancient world.  Exploring this plurality of issues from different perspectives can add to our understanding of the social dynamics and the spatial and chronological trajectories that forged the Near Eastern cultures over a long duration. 
AIM
Asia Anteriore Antica (AsiAnA) will present studies in different disciplines, Hittitology, Assyriology, Semitistics, History, Archaeology and Art History of the ancient Near East aiming to diffuse the results of researches such as excavation reports, edition of epigraphic sources, studies on philological data, visual arts, archaeology and archaeometry. With the intent of confronting different scientific voices of these disciplines and crossing their traditional borders the journal will supply a handy tool of scholarly information on various subjects, open to the international debate and innovative theoretical issues.
Published: 2025-02-03

Full Issue

Full Issue

 

 

Vol. 4 (2022)

Published: 2023-01-25

Full Issue

 

Full Issue

 

 

Vol. 2 (2020)

Full Issue

Vol 1 No 1 (2019) 

Digital Humanities Awards Voting Now Open

 
Several ancient focused  projects are nominated for  Digital Humanities Awards in this cycle including:
 
 
 AWOL won in 2015, and in 2021

A digital corpus for Greco-Arabic studies

 [First posted in AWOL 17 February 2014, updated 13 March 2025 (new URL)]

A digital corpus for Greco-Arabic studies 


Between the 8th and 10th centuries CE, hundreds of Greek philosophical, medical and scientific works were translated into Arabic. These translations helped shape the development of philosophy and science in the Islamic world. Through later Latin translations, they also exerted some influence in the Latin West.
Most importantly, Arabic translations were crucial for preserving, transmitting and extending ancient Greek thought: many Greek texts were lost in the intervening centuries and are now only extant in Arabic translation. The Arabic translators also had access to manuscripts that were often several centuries older and potentially closer to the Greek originals than those available to editors of ancient Greek texts today.
The Arabic translators’ understanding of their Greek sources was informed by their historical, cultural, religious and linguistic background. Their reading of these texts offers a new perspective on the ancient world that has the potential to enhance our own understanding.

The Digital Corpus

The Digital Corpus assembles a wide range of Greek texts and their Arabic counterparts. It also includes a number of Arabic commentaries and important secondary sources. The texts in the corpus can be consulted individually or side by side with their translation. The majority of texts can also be downloaded for further analysis.

Alexander of Aphrodisias
Anon.
Apollonius of Perga
Aristotle
ps-Aristotle
ps-Cebes
Euclid
al-Fārābī
Galen
ps-Galen
Gregory of Nazianzus
Gregory Thaumaturgus
ps-Hermes Trismegistus
Hippocrates
ps-Hippocrates
Ḥunayn ibn Isḥāq
ps-Ḥunayn ibn Isḥāq
Hypsicles
Ibn al-Nadīm
Ibn Riḍwān
Ibn Rušd
Ibn Sīnā
Ibn Suwār
Ibn Zurʾah
Maimonides
ps-Menander
al-Nayrīzī
Nicolaus of Damascus
Nicomachus of Gerasa
Pappus
ps-Plato
ps-Plutarch
Porphyry
Proclus Diadochus
al-Ruhāwī

 

Wednesday, March 12, 2025

Dossier : Soigner par les lettres: La bibliothérapie des Anciens

Dossier : Il est bien connu que les textes et leur méditation sont une thérapie pour l’âme. Dans l’Antiquité, les médecins grecs et romains ont même considéré la lecture, la déclamation ou la création poétique comme des remèdes pour soigner les maladies du corps. Ce dossier de Mètis explore l’aspect paradoxal de ces conceptions anciennes qui lient la santé du corps à des activités littéraires et présupposent une physiologie de la lecture et de l’écriture. Il questionne cette forme de « bibliothérapie » cultivée par l’élite dans le monde gréco-romain, à travers les exemples de l’épistolographie (Cicéron), de la rhétorique (Aelius Théon, Aelius Aristide) et de la médecine (Aristote, Antylle, Oribase). Le dossier cartographie ces pratiques et conceptions de l’Antiquité pour nourrir les réflexions contemporaines sur la bibliothérapie, les potentialités perdues du littéraire ou la médecine holistique.

Varia : Éléments de rituels (le chien guérisseur, les oiseaux migrants, le pais amphitalês, la supplication chez Euripide), effets d’intertextualité (Platon, Varron), questions d’historiographie aux lisières de la philosophie et de l’histoire des religions.


Le texte seul est utilisable sous licence Licence OpenEdition Books . Les autres éléments (illustrations, fichiers annexes importés) sont « Tous droits réservés », sauf mention contraire.

Éditeur : Éditions de l’École des hautes études en sciences sociales, Daedalus

Lieu d’édition : Paris ; Athènes

Publication sur OpenEdition Books : 7 novembre 2017

ISBN numérique : 978-2-7132-3074-5

DOI : 10.4000/books.editionsehess.4619 

Collection : Mètis | N.S.15

Année d’édition : 2017

ISBN (Édition imprimée) : 978-2-7132-2719-6

Nombre de pages : 412

Dossier : Soigner par les lettres : la bibliothérapie des Anciens

Emmanuelle Valette-Cagnac

« Cura ut valeas »

Santé et épistolarité dans la correspondance de Cicéron

Georgia Petridou

Poésie pour l’esprit, rhétorique pour le corps

Remèdes littéraires et cautions épistolaires dans les Hieroi logoi d’Aelius Aristide

Antoine Pietrobelli

Déclamer pour soigner son corps

L’anaphonèse chez Antylle et Oribase

Antoine Pietrobelli

Annexe

Édition et traduction des chapitres sur l’anaphonèse : Oribase, Collections médicales, VI, 8-10

Varia

Elena Franchi

Migration in Greek Origin Stories and Oracular Tales

The Phocian Ghost Soldiers Revisited

Létitia Mouze

Hésiode versus Homère

Les Travaux et les Jours, toile de fond des Lois de Platon

Irene Leonardis

Ἄλλος οὗτος ῾Ηρακλῆς

Tracce della riflessione sui tria genera theologiae nelle Menippeae di Varrone

Aurélien Gros

Penser sans arrêter le temps

Le concept de fonction psychologique chez Jean-Pierre Vernant