Thursday, May 7, 2026

Synchronizing the Body in Ancient Medicine and Philosophy

Giouli Korobili,  Kassandra Miller, Philip van der Eijk 
book: Synchronizing the Body in Ancient Medicine and Philosophy 
This book is in the series

 Ancient physicians and philosophers explored how different temporal patterns interacted and overlapped. They were deeply concerned with the meaning of simultaneous events—those moments when natural, bodily, or social processes coincided in ways they considered significant. While Greek and Latin authors had no direct equivalents for what we now call “synchronicity” or “synchronization”, both ideas permeate their reflections on health and the cosmos. This volume adopts these modern terms as a framework for examining how Greco-Roman thinkers conceptualized meaningful coincidence and the effort to align temporal cycles—between body and environment, illness and therapy, or individual and world. Spanning medicine, philosophy, astrology, and meteorology from the fifth century BCE to the sixth CE, the chapters reveal how ancient conceptions of bodily time and cosmic rhythm shaped understandings of health, gender, and disease. By tracing these interconnections, the volume opens new perspectives for scholars of ancient science, philosophy, and culture about the roles of synchrony and asynchrony in understanding and intervening in bodily processes.

eBook published on:
May 18, 2026
eBook ISBN:
9783112235690
Paperback published on:
May 18, 2026
Paperback ISBN:
9783112235683
Main content:
191
Illustrations:
6
Tables:
1

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  • Lattanzio e la ›virtus‹: La critica a Lucilio e Cicerone nel VI libro delle ›Divinae Institutiones‹

    Andrea Perruccio
    book: Lattanzio e la ›virtus‹ 
    This book is in the series

    This volume assesses how the Satirist Lucilius (2nd century BC) and the statesman and orator Cicero (1st century BC), in their attempt at integrating mos maiorum and Greek virtue (ἀρετή), give the opportunity for the apologist Lactantius (3rd-4th century AD) to confront two witnesses of Roman cultural history in the field of “military” and “ethical” virtus: he remoulds their assertions through a strongly biased, but deeply conceived reenactment.

    In Div. inst. 6.5.1 ̶ 6.24, Lactantius rejects both the definitions of virtus exposed by Lucilius (vv. 1326 ̶ 1338 Marx) and Cicero’s reflections upon the officia vivendi and his notion of honestum (Off. 1.34 ̶ 41): one after the other, they are accordingly involved by the apologist in a vehement attack against the Roman empire.

    By regarding the pre-Christian empire as one based on injustice, Lactantius claims a demand for a restored virtus, grounded in agnitione Dei. After contrasting Lucilius’s stance about commoda patriai (v. 1337) as the peak of traditional Roman virtue, the apologist stigmatizes its underlying utilitarian ethics, and argues with the interplay between politics, law, and philosophy, on which Cicero allegedly founded the legitimacy of Roman expansionist imperialism.

    eBook published on:
    May 4, 2026
    eBook ISBN:
    9783112238684
    Hardcover published on:
    May 4, 2026
    Hardcover ISBN:
    9783112238677
    Front matter:
    8
    Main content:
    254

  • Open Access
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    Mulier taceat: A Study of 1 Corinthians 14:34–35

    Aļesja Lavrinoviča 
    Cover of 'undefined' 

    Wissenschaftliche Untersuchungen zum Neuen Testament 2. Reihe (WUNT II) 651

    2026. 352 pages.
    DOI 10.1628/978-3-16-200082-8
    Sponsored by: Schweizerische Nationalfonds (SNF)

  • eBook PDF
  • Open Access
    CC BY-NC 4.0
  • 978-3-16-200082-8
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    Die Jüngerinnen und Jünger im Thomasevangelium: Ein narratologisch inspirierter Zugang zum Text als Einheit

    Stephanie Janz 
    Cover of 'undefined' 

    Wissenschaftliche Untersuchungen zum Neuen Testament 2. Reihe (WUNT II) 656

    2026. 328 pages.

    DOI 10.1628/978-3-16-200064-4 
    2026. 328 pages.
    DOI 10.1628/978-3-16-200064-

  • eBook PDF
  • Open Access
    CC BY-SA 4.0
  • 978-3-16-200064-4
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    Wednesday, May 6, 2026

    MANTO data release

      

    Description

    This is a release of the most recent publication of the data behind MANTO's public interface, available at https://manto.unh.edu/publication.s/2616/. MANTO is a dataset that models the Greek mythic storyworld and its impacts on the historical landscape of the Mediterranean using evidence from ancient sources. It provides authoritative data for researchers that makes big questions about the dynamics of Greek myth answerable at unprecedented scale.

    Data

    A .ZIP file of the public MANTO data is released here on Zenodo https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19446254 with records of all previous versions. This .ZIP includes .CSV and .JSON files of public Objects and Classifications. If you would like only select Objects and Classifications (i.e., ‘tables’), then .CSV and .JSON files can be downloaded from the most recent release on NodeGoat, accessible at https://manto.unh.edu/publication.s/2616/.

    The data model is visualised and described at https://manto.unh.edu/publication.s/2616/. To understand more about the database, its creation and organisation, and the data captured by the various fields, please see the Manual for Data Collection at https://www.manto-myth.org/documentation.

    Use

    The data is shared under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License (CC-BY-NC).

    Contact

    If you have any queries about the data, its model, or collaborating with MANTO, please get in touch: https://www.manto-myth.org/contact

    Acknowledgements

    We are grateful for the funding and support we have received from: The University of New Hampshire: Center for the Humanities and Geospatial Services Center, the Dean of the College of Liberal Arts; Harvard’s Center for Hellenic StudiesMacquarie University: Data Horizons, Gale Fund; Australian National University: Centre for Digital Humanities Research, Classics Endowment Fund, College of Arts and Social Sciences, Research School of Humanities and the Arts, and School of Literature, Languages and Linguistics. Greta Hawes’ work on the project in the period 2017-21 was supported by an Australian Research Council DECRA Award (DE170101251); her work in the period 2023-30 is supported by an Australian Research Council Future Fellowship (FT220100543).


     

     

     

    Open Access Journal: Annual of the Japanese Biblical Institute (AJBI)

    [First posted in AWOL 12 March 2023, updated 6 May 2026]
     
    ISSN: 2435-6050 

    Volume XLIV/XLV (2018-2019)  [Front Matter (PDF: 120 KB)]

    Rei FUJIKATA, The Expression of שׁחת in the Elihu Speeches: A Comparison of Instances in Texts from Qumran  (PDF: 273 KB)
    David S. VANDERHOOFT, A Strategy for Overcoming Divine Silence in Psalm 77 and Habakkuk  (PDF: 242 KB)  

    Volume XLVI (2021) [Front Matter (PDF: 191 KB)]

    Nozomi Sophia MIURA, Dying for God and the Ancestral Laws: Jewish Identity Formulation through the Martyrdom Episodes in the Second Maccabees  (PDF: 401 KB)
    Manabu TSUJI, From the Baptism of John to the Baptism into the Name of Jesus Christ (Acts 18:24-19:7): Unification of Baptism in Earliest Christianity  (PDF: 286 KB)
    Nozomi Sophia MIURA, Mapping the Scholarship on 1 John: A History of Scholarship and Variations in Methodology  (PDF: 357 KB)

    Volume XLVII (2022) [Front Matter (PDF: 154 KB)]

    Shohei CHIGASAKI, Jesus as the Messiah in the Dialogue with John (Q 7:18-23): An Aspect of Q's Christology in Light of the Messianic Apocalypse (4Q521)  (PDF: 353 KB)
    Daichi OKAWA, Die Originalsprache des Muratorischen Fragments  (PDF: 525 KB)
    Mayuko YASUDA, Rethinking Eschatologies with Postcolonial and Queer Perspectives: A Provisionary Study toward Multiple Eschatalogies  (PDF: 356 KB)

    Volume XLVIII (2023) [Front Matter (PDF: 153 KB)]

    Kishiya HIDAKA, The Political Theology of Pg and Its Relation to the Contemporary Pro-Babylonian Golah Redaction in the Book of Ezekiel  (PDF: 372 KB)
    Natsumi KAWAGOE, Mary, the New Ark of the Covenant: Mary's Houses, the Temple, and the People in the Protoevangelium of James  (PDF: 357 KB) 

    Volume XLVIII (2023) [Front Matter (PDF: 153 KB)]

    Kishiya HIDAKA, The Political Theology of Pg and Its Relation to the Contemporary Pro-Babylonian Golah Redaction in the Book of Ezekiel  (PDF: 372 KB)
    Natsumi KAWAGOE, Mary, the New Ark of the Covenant: Mary's Houses, the Temple, and the People in the Protoevangelium of James  (PDF: 357 KB)

    Volume L (2025) [Front Matter (PDF: 512 KB)]

    Yutaka MAEKAWA, The Function of Confessions of Faith in the Gospel of John (PDF: 684 KB)
    Takashi ONUKI, „Das Reich Gottes ist ,innen‘ in euch“ (Lk 17,21) in Kontrast zum Geierlogion Lk 17,37 (PDF: 723 KB)
    Filip ČAPEK, Temples in the Southern Levant from the Late Bronze Age to the Iron Age – Analysing Changes in Material Culture and Textual Traditions (PDF: 769 KB)
    Aren M. MAEIR, The End and Disappearance of the Biblical Philistines: Archaeological and Historical Evidence and Comparison to the Israelite and Judahite Exiles  (PDF: 652 KB)
    Meira POLLIACK, What Goes Up: Tracing Vertical Directionality in Esther and its Reception Exegesis (PDF: 3,001 KB)
    Special Section: Lived Ancient Religion in the Circum-Mediterranean Region
    Maria DELL’ISOLA, The Experience of the Body: Forms of “Radical” Asceticism in Late Antique Christianity (PDF: 668 KB)
    Kumi MAKINO, Lids in Palestine during the Mishnaic Period: From the Lived Religion Perspective (PDF: 3,450 KB)
    Takahiko YAMANO, The Synagogue at Tel Rekhesh: An Archaeological Investigation of the Galilean Synagogue of the First Century CE (PDF: 2,085 KB)

    Volume XLIX (2024) [Front Matter (PDF: 516 KB)]
    Hisayasu ITO, Applying Modern Literary Methods to Ancient Texts such as the Gospel of John: In the Case of Famous Johannine Irony (PDF: 710 KB)
    Special Issue
    H. ICHIKAWA and J. RÜPKE, Lived Ancient Religion in the Circum-Mediterranean Region (PDF: 514 KB)
    J. RÜPKE, Lived Ancient Religion: A Change of Perspective (PDF: 655 KB)
    Sofia BIANCHI MANCINI, Narrating Divine Property: The Case of Sacred Groves in Statian Poetry (PDF: 702 KB)
    H. ICHIKAWA, The Origin of Judaism as an Institutional Religion: Reading of the Shema in the Public Sacrifice (PDF: 680 KB)
    Etsuko KATSUMATA, Intension and Impurity: Regulations on the Impurity of Objects in the Mishnah (PDF: 762 KB)
     

    Volume I-X | Volume XI-XX | Volume XXI-XLII/XLIII

    See the full List of Open Access Journals in Ancient Studies

    Poetry in the Name of God: (Self-)Representation of Clerical Spiritual Authorityin the Carmina Latina Epigraphica of Italy (4th–5th Centuries CE)

    Eleonora Maiello

    Dieses Buch untersucht die Selbstdarstellung von Bischöfen und Klerikern als Träger spiritueller und asketischer Autorität in den lateinischen metrischen Inschriften Italiens (4.–5. Jh. n. Chr.). Vier zentrale Aspekte dieser Autorität werden analysiert: erstens das Thema von Heil und Auferstehung; zweitens die Darstellung der Bischöfe als heilige Lehrer; drittens das Vorhandensein petrinischer Rhetorik; und schließlich das Thema der Taufe. Abschließend kommt das Buch zu dem Ergebnis, dass die metrische Epigraphik ein fundamentales Kommunikationsmedium der kirchlichen Eliten im Italien des 4. und 5. Jahrhunderts darstellte, das dazu diente, entweder die Legitimität des Bischofs zu stärken oder sein Charisma durch die Feier seiner Heiligkeit zu erhöhen.

    Zitationsvorschlag

    Maiello, Eleonora: Poetry in the Name of God: (Self-)Representation of Clerical Spiritual Authorityin the Carmina Latina Epigraphica of Italy (4th–5th Centuries CE), Heidelberg: Propylaeum, 2026 (Mainzer Althistorische Studien (MAS), Band 15). https://doi.org/10.11588/propylaeum.1754

    Identifier

    ISBN 978-3-96929-501-4 (PDF)
    ISBN 978-3-96929-502-1 (Hardcover)

    Veröffentlicht

    06.05.2026 
    Inhaltsverzeichnis
    Seiten
    PDF
    Titelei
    Contents
    V-VI
    Foreword
    1 Introduction
    1-44
    2 Priests in heaven
    45-81
    3 Soul searching teachers – bishops as spiritual guides in the Carmina Latina Epigraphica of fourth- and fifth-century Italy
    83-143
    4 Super hanc petram (Matt 16:18–19): the legacy of Peter and the Petrine discourse in the Carmina Latina Epigraphica dedicated by the ecclesiastical élite of fourth and fifth century Italy
    145-207
    5 Poetical representations of the ritual of baptism in the metrical inscriptions dedicated by bishops in late antique Italy (4th–5th century CE)
    209-257
    6 Conclusions
    259-263
    Bibliography
    265-288
    Indices
    289-297