Curated BooksDespite widespread interest in the Greek hero as a cult figure, little was written about the relationship between the cult practices and the portrayals of the hero in poetry. The first edition of The Best of the Achaeans bridged that gap, raising new questions about what could be known or conjectured about Greek heroes. In this revised edition, which features a new preface by the author, Gregory Nagy reconsiders his conclusions in the light of the subsequent debate and resumes his discussion of the special status of heroes in ancient Greek life and poetry. His book remains an engaging introduction both to the concept of the hero in Hellenic civilization and to the poetic forms through which the hero is defined: the Iliad and Odyssey in particular and archaic Greek poetry in general
Second edition, originally published in 1999 by The Johns Hopkins University Press. Copyright, The Johns Hopkins University Press. First edition 1979. Available for purchase in print via The Johns Hopkins University Press.
Use the following persistent identifier: http://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:hul.ebook:CHS_NagyG.The_Best_of_the_Achaeans.1999.
Copyright, Johns Hopkins University Press. Published here online with permission.
Wednesday, March 18, 2026
The Best of the Achaeans: Concepts of the Hero in Archaic Greek Poetry
La Table des rois: Contribution à l’histoire textuelle des ›Tables faciles‹ de Ptolémée
Published by De GruyterHow could ancient astronomers accurately calculate celestial phenomena on the scale of several centuries? The Table of Kings is a simple list of rulers with the duration of their reigns, which allowed Ptolemy, an Alexandrian astronomer, to have a count of the years that had passed since the Babylonian king Nabonassar (8th century BC). Initially used for astronomy, this table captivated historians and chronology specialists from Antiquity. Rediscovered in Europe in the modern era, it is a crucial source for establishing a chronology of the Ancient Near East. The Table of Kings has always been a living text, modified by generations of scribes, completed over the centuries, sometimes up to the fall of Constantinople. This document with multiple lives is often quoted but has been little studied for its own sake. Historians of the Near East and specialists in the history of texts and sciences will find in this volume the first critical edition of Ptolemy’s Table of Kings based on all known manuscript witnesses, accompanied by an investigation of the history of this document from its elaboration by Ptolemy to its use by modern historians.
Comment les astronomes de l’Antiquité pouvaient-ils calculer avec précision des phénomènes célestes à l’échelle de plusieurs siècles? La Table des rois est une simple liste de souverains avec la durée de leurs règnes, qui permettait à Ptolémée, astronome alexandrin, de disposer d’un comput des années écoulées depuis le roi babylonien Nabonassar (VIIIe siècle av. J.-C.). D’abord mise au service de l’astronomie, cette table a captivé historiens et spécialistes de chronologie dès l’Antiquité. Redécouverte en Europe à l’Époque moderne, elle est une source cruciale pour l’établissement d’une chronologie du Proche-Orient ancien. La Table des rois a toujours été un texte vivant, modifié par des générations de copistes, complété au cours des siècles parfois jusqu’à la chute de Constantinople. Ce document aux multiples vies est souvent cité mais a été peu étudié pour lui-même. Historiens du Proche-Orient et spécialistes de l’histoire des textes et des sciences trouveront dans ce volume la première édition critique de la Table des rois réalisée sur la base de tous les témoins manuscrits connus, accompagnée d’une enquête sur l’histoire de ce document depuis son élaboration par Ptolémée jusqu’à son utilisation par les historiens modernes.
La Table des rois de Ptolémée, astronome alexandrin du IIe siècle, présente une liste continue de souverains depuis l’Empire néo-assyrien jusqu’à l’Empire romain. Elle est une source cruciale pour notre approche chronologique du Proche-Orient ancien et du monde méditerranéen. Cette étude présente une description des témoins manuscrits grecs de la Table des rois, une nouvelle édition critique et une histoire du texte jusqu’à l’époque moderne.
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379ISBNs
9783111304458 Paperback9783111303956
- Frontmatter
- Avant‐propos
- Sommaire
- Note sur les traductions et le système de notation des dates
- La Table des rois : éléments d’introduction
- Inventaire
- Chapitre 1 Le Leidensis BPG 78 et ses descendants
- Chapitre 2 La famille ω2
- Chapitre 3 Le Pluteus 28/26 et la famille de l’Ambrosianus h 57 sup
- Chapitre 4 La famille du Vaticanus gr. 175
- Chapitre 5 Le Vaticanus gr. 1291
- Conclusion et stemma codicum
- Sigles
- Ptolémée, Table des rois de nabonassar à Alexandre le Grand (C1a)
- Ptolémée, Table des rois de Philippe Arrhidée à Antonin (C1b)
- Commentaires
- Introduction
- Chapitre 1 Brève histoire des Tables faciles
- Chapitre 2 Listes de rois aux iiie et IV e siècles
- Chapitre 3 La Table des rois depuis Ptolémée jusqu’au VI e siècle
- Chapitre 4 La Table des rois aux VII e –XIII e siècles
- Chapitre 5 Des premiers Paléologues à l’époque moderne
- Chapitre 6 Les éditions imprimées
- Conclusion générale
- Annexe A Catalogue des scolies sur la Table des rois
- Annexe B Transcriptions des tables V, F 1 , H 1 et H 2
- Annexe C Édition de Jean Chortasménos
- Annexe D Rois de Babylone de nabonassar à Alexandre : Ptolémée et les sources babyloniennes
- Annexe E Liste des rois des Perses chez Eusèbe de Césarée, Georges le Syncelle et Ptolémée
- Annexe F Liste simplifiée des rois de Babylone, d’Égypte et des empereurs romains
- Bibliographie
- Index général
- Index des sources anciennes
- Index des manuscrits
Conceptions of Cyclicity in Babylonian and Greco-Roman Scholarship
Published by De GruyterWhat did ancient Mesopotamian, Greek, and Roman scholars know about the cyclicity of astronomical phenomena, how did they conceptualize cyclicity, and which other phenomena did they consider to be cyclical? This study explores astronomical, astrological, and other scholarly sources, including previously ignored ones, in order to answer these questions. Particular attention is paid to the role of planetary cycles and questions of cross-cultural knowledge transfer. A new account is given of how knowledge of cyclicity, its conceptualization, and its use in predictive practices developed in Babylonia and the Greco-Roman world from the first millennium BCE until Late Antiquity. It is argued that the predictive turn in Babylonian astronomy and astrology led to a new understanding of how astronomical and earthly phenomena are interconnected through time and space. The emergence of horoscopic astrology led to the question of whether human existence is determined by cycles. Even the universe as a whole is governed by cycles according to Plato and later Greco-Roman scholars.License
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- English
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114ISBN
9783112224250
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Introduction
- Mesopotamian scholarly conceptions of time and luni-solar cyclicity until ca. 750 BCE
- Conceptions of cyclicity in Mesopotamian celestial divination (ca. 750 – 200 BCE)
- Cyclicity in Babylonian astronomical diaries and related texts (ca. 750 BCE – 75 CE)
- Cyclicity in Babylonian mathematical astronomy (ca. 400 – 50 BCE)
- Planetary conjunctions in Babylonian astral science
- Babylonian evidence for cyclicity beyond astronomical phenomena
- Towards a new understanding of the Late Babylonian conceptions of time and cyclicity
- Cyclicity and cycle-based conceptions of time according to Plato and Aristotle
- Cycles and cyclicity in Greco-Roman astronomy
- Astronomical cycles and the Great Year in Greco-Roman astrology
- Concluding remarks
- Bibliography
Rome Unveiled: Cardinal Cesare Baronio and San Giovanni in Laterano
Published by De GruyterThis book offers new insights into the history of Rome’s Basilica of San Giovanni in Laterano through the perspective of curial ceremony. It traces the probable contribution by the eminent Oratorian and cardinal, Cesare Baronio, in designing a sophisticated iconographic program for the transept inside this prominent Roman church edifice during Clement VIII’s (Aldobrandini’s) pontificate. Moreover, the book provides the first full reconstruction of the history and curial interventions at the ancient Constantinian Patriarchum Lateranensis during the second half of the 16th century on the basis of hitherto unknown documents from Roman and other Italian archives and libraries.
Funded by: Schweizerischer Nationalfonds (SNF)
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- English
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478ISBNs
9783111586434 Hardback9783111434711
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations
- Introduction
- 1 The Basilica of San Giovanni in Laterano: Architectural Icon of a New Church Historiography
- 2 Creating a Ceremonial Sanctuary in Gregory XIII’s Roma Sancta
- 3 The Theater of Marvels: Reorganizing the Campus Lateranensis through Sistine Curial Ceremony
- 4 Magne parens, pastorque patrum, cui pascere greges: The Basilica of the “Good Shepherd”
- 5 Crafting a Curial Ceremony for the Sacred College
- 6 Conclusion: Reimagining San Giovanni in Laterano
- Bibliography
- Index of Names
- Image Credits
Tuesday, March 17, 2026
Rethinking Orality III:From Homer to Neuroscience
Book 9 in the Transcodification: Arts, Languages and Media seriesThis volume offers innovative perspectives that reassess and update so-called Oral Theory, bridging classical scholarship with cutting-edge theoretical contributions, and host a dialogue with cognitive sciences (linguistics and neuroscience), anthropology, and complexity theory. The book propounds theoretical perspectives alongside case-studies ranging from Homer and Athenian literacy to Roman law.
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258ISBNs
9783111434841 Hardback9783111431611
- Frontmatter
- Foreword
- Contents
- Introductory Remarks: “from Homer to Neuroscience”Manuela Giordano
- Orality’s Theory of Mind: the Necessity of PerformancePeter Meineck
- Oral Poetics and Multimodal Language ModelsCristóbal Pagán Cánovas
- New Dawns Forever: Orality and the Plasticity of Homer’s VerseAhuvia Kahane
- The Clever Deception and Mirror NeuronsRoberto Nicolai
- The Narrative Mind. Narrating, Listening, ReadingAlberto Oliverio
- Storytelling and Greek Epic: How to Put the Experience in (Some) OrderAndrea Ercolani
- Poetic Pains and Pleasures: Theory of Mind and the Reception of Epic Performance (Odyssey 8 and Beyond)Manuela Giordano
- Demodocus, Odysseus, and the Double Standard of Authority in SpeechRiccardo Palmisciano
- Was Classical Athens an Oral Society?Margalit Finkelberg
- The Need for Voice in Classical Greek: Reading, Complexity, and Prose RhythmAlessandro Vatri & Alessandro Vatri
- Solemn Words: Ritual Performance in Ancient Roman CourtsMaurizio Bettini
›Versus ad picturas‹ – Text/Image Relation in Greek, Latin and Arabic Poetry
Book 115 in the Millennium-Studien / Millennium Studies seriesOver the last 30 years, many books, conferences and volumes have been devoted to the relationship between text and image in the Late Antiquity and in the Middle Ages. But there has been little space for poetic texts, which, in addition to the direct or mediated message, also demand the attention of the analyst through the impact of the intertext of the entire Latin poetic tradition, multiplying the levels of meaning and therefore the possibilities of interpretation. In relation to the recognition of the need to consider texts (mental or written) as sources of inspiration for images, we are now in a position to take a further step by applying to medieval culture the concept of iconotext developed by Liliane Louvel (2018) for modern literature. In this vein, the Versus ad picturas conference therefore aims to contribute to the study of the relationship between the images we now call artistic, painted on walls, fabrics, stained glass or parchments, and the verses that often accompany them materially or ideally, and which are now increasingly recognised as essential to their cultural understanding and social framing, in the hope of bringing us closer to the meaning hidden in their combination and the meaning perceived by the commissioners, executors and viewers of the time.
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- French
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381ISBN
9783112212233
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Open Access Transformation of the Series Millennium Studies
- Avant-ProposFrancesco Stella
- Versus ad picturas ? Retour sur la question des tituli en vers du carmen 27 de Paulin de NoleGaëlle Herbert de la Portbarré-Viard
- Vignettes narratives et représentations figurées, le dialogue entre texte et image dans le Carmen Paschale de Sedulius et des ivoires contemporainsBruno Bureau
- Texte et image dans les carmina d’Ennode : les « leçons » des manuscritsCéline Urlacher-Becht
- Interaction des systèmes sémiotiques et combinaison médiale dans les inscriptions de Gaule et d’Italie du v e au viii e siècle : esquisse d’une étudeLuciana Furbetta
- Images et textes dans l’épigraphie métrique de l’Antiquité TardiveGianfranco Agosti
- Versus ad Picturas from Text to Context. The Biblical Tituli of the So–Called Bernowinus Episcopus (MGH PLAC I, 413–414) ReconsideredFrancesco Lubian
- La place de l’image dans la transmission du savoir à l’époque carolingienneEnimie Rouquette
- Cassiodore et la géométrie : le « feuillet Nordenfalk » et la théologie de l’ornementÉric Palazzo
- Pictorial Exegesis and Imagination in the Anonymous Pictor in Carmine (ca. 1200)Greti Dinkova-Bruun
- L’ Icon peregrini. La construction poétique de l’image de Jean Gerson (xv e –xvi e s.)Isabel Iribarren
- Les tituli métriques des fresques de l’église Saint-Georges d’Oberzell sur l’île de Reichenau (IX e –X e siècle)Walter Berschin
- , les tituli du cycle de Sant’Angelo in FormisLucinia Speciale
- Images and Inscriptions in Islamic Art of the Arab World. Some Basic PointsDoris Behrens-Abouseif
- Text and Image, Text as Image: The Beauty of the Book in Byzantine Book EpigramsRachele Ricceri
- Les échos de la Loire dans l’ Hortus deliciarum d’Herrade de HohenbourgRoberto Angelini
- et Sein d’Abraham : deux images allégoriques et poétiques de l’ Hortus deliciarumBéatrice Louys
- L’arbre généalogique du Christ dans l’ Hortus deliciarum (f. 80 v –83 r ). Une illustration exégétique en image, prose et versIlaria Ponti Grimm
- Herrade de Hohenbourg et l’iconotexte médiévalFrancesco Stella
The Ancestors of Genesis and the Exodus Traditions: A Festschrift for Thomas Römer
Book 568 in the Beihefte zur Zeitschrift für die alttestamentliche Wissenschaft seriesThe volume comprises various studies about Israel’s origins in Genesis and Exodus by a broad range of international scholars. The volume is divided into five parts of similar length. Parts One and Two are devoted to the stories about Abraham, Jacob and Joseph in Genesis from a literary and historical perspective. Part Three deals with the connection between Genesis and Exodus. Part Four is devoted to the Book of Exodus and includes contributions dealing with the origins of the Exodus traditions as well as various key themes and figures found in this book. The final section addresses the early reception of Genesis and Exodus outside of these books, in the Prophets, the Psalms, Chronicles and the Dead Sea Scrolls. Overall, the volume opens several new perspectives for the discussion on Genesis and Exodus and their significance for the construction of Israel’s origins. Combining archaeological, historical and textual perspectives, it provides in-depth discussion of a wide range of key topics, including the composition of these books, their social, historical and religious background, as well as their overall role in the shaping of the Hebrew Bible.
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726ISBN
9783111618517
- Introduction to the VolumeJean-Daniel Macchi & Christophe Nihan
- „Das ist die Schrift der Genealogien…“ -Michaela Bauks
- The Priestly Covenant with Abraham (Genesis 17)Christophe Nihan
- L’origine des Moabites et des fils d’AmmonAlfred Marx
- Isaac Blesses His Sons: Genesis 27:28-29 and 27:39-40Innocent Himbaza
- בני ישׂראלNathan MacDonald
- Genèse 38 et le débat sur les frontières de la communauté judéenneOlivier Artus
- Who was Perets? On the Literary Trail of a Judean AncestorJürg Hutzli
- Joseph, un Samarien en ÉgypteAxel Bühler
- Le « deuil de l’Égypte » ou l’internationalisation d’Israël.Dany R. Nocquet
- Machir, Gilead and the Mysterious Notion of the “Half-Tribe”Cynthia Edenburg
- The Ancestors of Genesis and the CultSaul M. Olyan
- The Altars of the Patriarchs in Genesis: Chronological, Geographical and Historiographic ObservationsIsrael Finkelstein
- Sanballat, Abraham, and JacobDiana Edelman
- Abraham in Ramat RaḥelOded Lipschits & Jakob Wöhrle
- Der Gott BethelHerbert Niehr
- Jacob, Laban and the Moon God of the Bashan: Another Contribution to the Debate over the Date and Origin of the Non-P Jacob StoryOmer Sergi & Ido Koch
- Flucht und Rückkehr Zyklen in den Erzelternerzählungen und die Strukturierung von Zeit und RaumAngelika Berlejung
- Endangering Moses, Endangering Israel, Endangering HumankindKonrad Schmid
- Firstborn, Farmer, Soldier, SpyAngela Roskop Erisman
- Mose der LevitReinhard Achenbach
- Die Schlangenstäbe Moses und Aarons im Buch Exodus (4,1-5; 7,8-12.15) und ihre möglichen ikonographischen BezügeSilvia Schroer
- Vom Tempel auf Zion zum am Sinai angefertigten BegegnungszeltMartin Leuenberger
- An Origin of the Violent Levites: Revisiting Exodus 32:25-29Jaeyoung Jeon
- Ich bin YHWH, dein Gott von Ägypten her? (Hos 12,14; 13,4) - Warum dazu eine Alternative notwendig istChristian Frevel
- La réception de l’Exode dans le Deutéro-ÉsaïeJean-Daniel Macchi
- The Exodus Tradition according to Chronicles: Another Look at Jehoshaphat’s War (2 Chr 20)Louis C. Jonker
- Les « pères » dans les livres des Rois: un cas surprenant (1 R 14,22)Matthieu Richelle
- The Patriarchs in KingsShuichi Hasegawa
- Vater DavidHans-Peter Mathys
- Resilience amid Ruins: The Trauma of Contested Space in Isaiah 60-62Elizabeth (Liza Esterhuizen & Alphonso Groenewald
- Abraham hat uns nicht gekannt: Zum Abraham- und Exodusbezug in Jes 63,7-64,11Ruth Ebach
- Écrire l’histoire. Le cas du livre d’ÉzéchielMarkus Saur
- Moïse et Aaron dans les PsaumesSophie Ramond
- Scripting Abraham and Joseph in the Bible and the Qur’anSteven L. McKenzie & John Kaltner
- Sklavin, Verwalterin, Gehilfin in Gefahr und Tyrannenmord, Fluchthelferin - und Partnerin? Die „Magd“ Judits in der Bibel und der ikonografischen RezeptionsgeschichteIrmtraud Fischer