Religious Individualisation : Archaeological, Iconographic and Epigraphic Case Studies from the Roman World

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Religious Individualisation : Archaeological, Iconographic and Epigraphic Case Studies from the Roman World

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  • 製本 Hardcover:ハードカバー版/ページ数 336 p.
  • 言語 ENG
  • 商品コード 9781789259650
  • DDC分類 292.07

Full Description

The Roman world was diverse and complex. And so were religious understandings and practices as mirrored in the enormous variety presented by archaeological, iconographic, and epigraphic evidence. Conventional approaches principally focus on the political role of civic cults as a means of social cohesion, often considered to be instrumentalised by elites. But by doing so, religious diversity is frequently overlooked, marginalising 'deviating' cult activities that do not fit the Classical canon, as well as the multitude of funerary practices and other religious activities that were all part of everyday life.

 

In the Roman Empire, a person's religious experiences were shaped by many and sometimes seemingly incompatible cult practices, whereby the 'civic' and 'imperial' cults might have had the least impact of all. The authors rethink these methodologies, arguing for a more dynamic image of religion that takes into account the varied and often contradictory choices and actions of individual, which reflects the discrepant religious experiences in the Roman world. Is it possible to 'poke into the mind' of an individual in Roman times, whatever his/her status and ethnicity, and try to understand the individual's diverse experiences in such a complex, interconnected empire, exploring the choices that were open to an individual? This also raises the question whether the concept of individuality is valid for Roman times. In some periods, the impact of individual actions can be more momentous: the very first adoption of Roman-style sculpture, cult practices or Latin theonyms for indigenous deities can set in motion long-term processes that will significantly influence people's perceptions of local deities, their characteristics, and functions. Do individual choices and preferences prevail over collective identities in the Roman Empire compared to pre-Roman times? To examine these questions, this volume presents case studies that analyse individual actions in the religious sphere.

Contents

List of figures

List of tables

Contributors

1. Introduction: the dynamics of religious individualisation

Ralph Haeussler, Anthony King, Francisco Marco Simón and Günther Schörner

2. Religious individualisation: a bottom-up approach to religious developments in the Roman world

Ralph Haeussler

3. Discrepant behaviour: on magical activities in the Latin West

Francisco Marco Simón

4. Individual religious choice: the case of the 'mystery' cults

Jaime Alvar Ezquerra

5. Sons and mothers: the matres, the military and religious choice in Roman Britain

Elizabeth Blanning

6. Pre-Roman deities along the north-eastern Adriatic: continuity, transformation, identification

Marjeta Šašel Kos

7. Private devotions at temples in Central and Eastern Gaul

Isabelle Fauduet

8. Tradition, diversity and improvisation in Romano-British cremation burials in south-east England

Jake Weekes

9. Individual choices in burial ritual and cult activity in and around the Iron Age and Romano-British town of Baldock, Hertfordshire, UK

Gilbert R. Burleigh

10. Religious individualisation in extremis: human remains from Romano-Celtic temples in Britain and Gaul

Anthony King

11. Indigenous arae and stelae: symbolic landscapes and individualisation in north-west Roman Hispania

Fernando Alonso Burgos

12. Indigenism and identity shaping: the case of the Irrico group in Central Spain

Jesús Alberto Arenas-Esteban

13. The religious construction of 'household' in Roman Italy: the case of the Casa dei Vettii

Günther Schörner

14. Types of Interpretatio and their users in the Keltiké: explicationes and translationes vs. identificationes and adaptationes

Patrizia de Bernardo Stempel

15. Religious individualisation in an entangled world: how to pick and mix favourite deities in the Roman Keltiké

Ralph Haeussler

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