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Apollo [Minkštas viršelis]

4.03/5 (78 ratings by Goodreads)
(Ohio State University, USA)
  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 208 pages, aukštis x plotis: 216x138 mm, weight: 258 g, 11 Illustrations, black and white
  • Serija: Gods and Heroes of the Ancient World
  • Išleidimo metai: 16-Oct-2008
  • Leidėjas: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 0415317118
  • ISBN-13: 9780415317115
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 208 pages, aukštis x plotis: 216x138 mm, weight: 258 g, 11 Illustrations, black and white
  • Serija: Gods and Heroes of the Ancient World
  • Išleidimo metai: 16-Oct-2008
  • Leidėjas: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 0415317118
  • ISBN-13: 9780415317115
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:

Fritz Graf here presents a survey of a god once thought of as the most powerful of gods, and capable of great wrath should he be crossed: Apollo the sun god.

From his first attestations in Homer, through the complex question of pre-Homeric Apollo, to the opposition between Apollo and Dionysos in nineteenth and twentieth-century thinking, Graf examines Greek religion and myth to provide a full account of Apollo in the ancient world.

For students of Greek religion and culture, of myth and legend, and in the fields of art and literature, Apollo will provide an informative and enlightening introduction to this powerful figure from the past.

Series foreword xi
Acknowledgments xv
List of illustrations
xvii
WHY APOLLO?
1(6)
Introduction: Why Write A Book On A God?
3(4)
KEY THEMES
7(136)
Apollo in Homer
9(24)
The god of the Iliad
9(5)
Archer, killer, and healer
14(5)
Festivals and sanctuaries of Apollo
19(6)
The Homeric Hymn to Apollo
25(7)
Summary
32(1)
Apollo the Musician
33(19)
The bow and the lyre
33(1)
Mousike and Archaic Greek society
34(3)
Lyre and flute
37(2)
Apollo leader of the Muses
39(2)
The paean
41(4)
Divine poets and inspired men
45(3)
Pythagoras and shamanism
48(2)
Apollo Citharoedus
50(1)
Summary
51(1)
Oracular Apollo
52(27)
Apollo's divination
54(2)
The history of the three major oracles of Apollo
56(6)
Methods of divination
62(2)
The prophets of Apollo
64(11)
Other prophets: Cassandra, Helenus, the Sibyl
75(3)
Summary
78(1)
Apollo, God of Healing
79(24)
Gods and epidemics
79(2)
Apollo (and) Paeon/Paean
81(3)
Other forms of Healing Apollo
84(2)
From Greece to Italy
86(4)
A healer among barbarians
90(1)
Apollo averter of evil
91(3)
Apollo and Asclepius
94(4)
Concepts of healing
98(3)
Summary
101(2)
Apollo, the Young, and the City
103(27)
The young god and the young men, 1: cutting one's hair
103(2)
The young god and the young men, 2: a hapless lover
105(1)
Groups and institutions
106(2)
Ancestral Apollo
108(1)
Apollo Delphinios
109(1)
Molpoi and Curetes
110(2)
Apollo, initiation, and ``Mannerbund''
112(1)
Archaic institutions in Ionia and Crete
113(3)
Spartan festivals and the adolescents
116(4)
Wolf-Apollo, the Dorian invasion, and the early city
120(2)
Apollo the herdsman and tricky frames of reference
122(2)
Apollo the leader through the ages
124(4)
Summary
128(2)
Origins
130(13)
The quest for origins
130(4)
Apollo's prehistories
134(5)
Mycenaean antecedents
139(1)
Near Eastern influences
139(3)
Summary
142(1)
APOLLO AFTERWARDS
143(36)
Apollo's Flourishing Aftermath
145(34)
Late antique allegory and other learned interpretations
146(5)
Apollo the sun
151(2)
Medieval and Renaissance interpreters
153(5)
The dawn of modern scholarship
158(1)
Apollo, god of poetry
159(10)
Apollo and Dionysus
169(3)
Apollo, art, and archaeology
172(4)
Summary
176(3)
Epilogue 179(2)
Further Reading 181(5)
Index 186
Fritz Graf is currently Professor of Greek and Latin and Director of the Center for Epigraphical Studies at The Ohio State University. His main research interests are the religions of the Greek and Roman world, and his numerous publications include Greek Mythology: An Introduction (1993), Magic in the Ancient World (1997), and with Sarah Iles Johnston, Ritual texts for th Afterlife: The Bacchic Gold Tablets (2006)