The Oracular Gods of Dodona Confronted with Legal Disputes, in M. Kalaitzi, P. Paschidis, C. Antonetti, and A.-M. Guimier-Sorbets (eds.), Boreio-Helladika. Tales from the Lands of the Ethne. Essays in Honour of Miltiades B. Hatzopoulos, Athens: Hellenic National Research Foundation 2018, 321-341, 2018
How divination in Dodona functioned as a form of dispute resolution.
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Contents
M. Tamiolaki: Emotions and historical representation in Xenophon’s Hellenika.
A. Chaniotis: Emotional display, empathy, theatricality, and illusion in Hellenistic historiography.
D. Cairns: A short history of shudders.
M. Patera: Reflections on the discourse of fear in Greek sources.
L. Rubinstein: Evoking anger through pity: portraits of the vulnerable and defenceless in Attic oratory.
N. Kanavou: ‘Negative’ emotions and Greek names.
T. Morgan: Is pistis/fides experuienced as an emotion in the Late Roman Republic, early Principate, and early Church?
Y. Baraz: Pride in the Roman world.
K. Mustakallio: Grief and mourning in Roman context.
D. King: Galen and grief: The construction of grief in Galen’s clinical work.
O. Bobou: Emotionality in Greek art.
J. Masséglia: The relationship between social status and emotional display in Hellenistic Art.
C. Bourbou: The imprint of emotions surrounding the death of children in antiquity.
O. van Nijf: The emotional regime in the Imperial Greek city.
Preface.
1 The Ubiquitous War.
2 Between Civic Duties and Oligarchic Aspirations: Devoted Citizens, Brave Generals, and Generous Benefactors.
3 The Age of War: Fighting Young Men.
4 The Interactive King: War and the Ideology of Hellenistic Monarchy.
5 War as a profession: Officers, Trainers, Doctors, Engineers.
6 The Gender of War: Masculine Warriors, Defenseless Women and Beyond.
7 The Cost and Profit of War: Economic Aspects of Hellenistic Warfare.
8 An Age of Miracles and Saviors. The Effects of Hellenistic Wars on Religion.
9 The Discourse of War.
10 Aesthetics of War.
11 The Memory of War.
12 Breaking Boundaries: How Warfare Shaped the Hellenistic World.
Bibliography.
Index
1. "Ein Berg im Meer": Die geographischen Grundlagen der Geschichte Kretas
2. Im Morgenlicht der Geschichte: Die minoische Hochkultur (ca. 3000–ca. 1450 v. Chr.)
3. Die Einwanderung der griechischen Stämme (ca. 1450–900 v. Chr.)
4. Brücke zwischen Orient und Hellas: Die kretische Renaissance (ca. 900–630 v. Chr.)
5. Die erstarrte Insel: Staat und Gesellschaft in Kreta zwischen Utopie und Wirklichkeit (ca. 630–300 v. Chr.)
6. Die Pirateninsel: Kreta in der hellenistischen Welt (ca. 300–67 v. Chr.)
7. Kreta in der römischen Welt (ca. 67 v. Chr.–ca. 640 n. Chr.)
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