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Shrines --- Sacred space --- Temples --- Religion and geography --- Sanctuaires --- Lieux sacrés --- Religion et géographie --- Greece --- Grèce --- Religion. --- Religion --- Lieux sacrés --- Religion et géographie --- Grèce --- Shrines - Greece --- Sacred space - Greece --- Temples - Greece --- Greece - Religion --- Géographie religieuse
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Shrines --- Egyptian language --- Papyri. --- -Shrines --- -Papyri --- -Sacred space --- Pilgrims and pilgrimages --- Afroasiatic languages --- Papyri --- Tutankhamen King of Egypt --- -Tomb --- Egypt --- Antiquities. --- Shrines - Egypt. --- Egyptian language - Papyri.
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Quelles étaient les circonstances et motivations de la fondation des lieux de culte antiques ? Qu’est-ce qui présidait au choix des dieux ? Quels étaient les agents et les processus d’exécution de la genèse des temples ? Quels étaient les critères qui prévalaient dans le choix des sites sacrés ou les modalités d’installation d’un temple sur des structures existantes ? L’enquête proposée dans cet ouvrage sur la naissance des dieux dans l’Antiquité méditerranéenne, à forte tonalité archéologique et présentant des dossiers inédits pour une grande part, permet de proposer un bilan collectif sur les multiples implications de la formation des lieux de culte dans l’Antiquité, en partant de la documentation fournie par les sanctuaires compris non pas seulement comme des lieux de culte, mais également comme des lieux de cristallisation de la mémoire collective des sociétés antiques. Un tel sujet, exploré dans le cadre d’un colloque organisé à Rome en 2015, se prêtait particulièrement bien au programme de recherches commun des Écoles françaises d’Athènes et de Rome qui proposait de réfléchir sur les lieux de culte. En partant des fouilles et études menées par les deux Écoles depuis le XIXe siècle, l’objectif annoncé de ce programme est avant tout de faire dialoguer l’Est et l’Ouest méditerranéen, souvent séparés par les cloisonnements disciplinaires de l’histoire et l’archéologie grecque et romaine, voire provinciale.
Sacred space --- Shrines --- Cults --- Religious architecture --- Archaeology and religion --- Excavations (Archaeology) --- Gods. --- Civilization, Ancient. --- Antiquities. --- Archaeology and religion. --- Cults. --- Religion. --- Religious architecture. --- Sacred space. --- Shrines. --- History. --- Mediterranean Region --- Mediterranean Region. --- Religion --- Religious life and customs. --- Antiquities --- Gods --- Civilization, Ancient --- History --- Sanctuaires --- Architecture religieuse --- Archéologie et religion --- Religious life and customs --- Antike. --- Antiquité. --- Architecture religieuse. --- Civilisation ancienne. --- Cultes --- Dieux. --- Fouilles (Archéologie) --- Heiligtum. --- Lieux sacrés --- Naissance. --- Sanctuaires. --- Actes de congrès --- Histoire --- Actes de congrès. --- Gaule. --- Griechenland --- Grèce antique. --- Italie. --- Italien. --- Méditerranée, Région de la --- Rome. --- Römisches Reich. --- Antiquités. --- Vie religieuse. --- Ancient. --- Archéologie et religion. --- Sacred space - Mediterranean Region - History --- Shrines - Mediterranean Region - History --- Cults - Mediterranean Region - History --- Religious architecture - Mediterranean Region - History --- Archaeology and religion - Mediterranean Region --- Excavations (Archaeology) - Mediterranean Region --- Archéologie et religion.
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Etruscans were deemed “the most religious of men” by their Roman successors and it is hardly surprising that the topic of Etruscan religion has been explored for some time now. This volume offers a contribution to the continued study of Etruscan religion and daily life, by focusing on the less explored issue of ritual. Ritual is approached through fourteen case studies, considering mortuary customs, votive rituals and other religious and daily life practices. The book gathers new material, interpretations and approaches to the less emphasized areas of Etruscan religion, especially its votive aspects, based on archaeological and epigraphic sources.
Etruscans --- Ritual --- Votive offerings --- Sacred space --- Etrusques --- Rituel --- Ex-voto --- Lieux sacrés --- Religion. --- Religion --- Turfa, Jean MacIntosh, --- Etruria --- Etrurie --- Antiquities. --- Antiquités --- 299.92 --- Religion of other ethnic origin (Austronesian, Oceanic, Basque, Elamite, Etruscan, Sumerian, Georgian, Irngush, Chechen, Circassian) --- Festschrift - Libri Amicorum --- Lieux sacrés --- Antiquités --- Etruskisk religion. --- Europe --- Etruscans - Religion. --- Etruria - Antiquities.
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This peer reviewed volume presents the proceedings of the international conference that took place in Brussels in 2015 and the sequel to the publication of the research that resulted from a three-year joint project between the University of Oxford and the Université libre de Bruxelles (ULB). The volume offers complementary approaches, both thematic and geographic, to the study of Early Greek ritual practices and expands into other areas, contexts, and materials the research undertaken in the volume Constructing Social Identities in Early Iron Age and Archaic Greece edited by Athena Tsingarida and Irene Lemos in 2017. The volume includes papers on theoretical approaches to the study of rituals, case studies from a number of regions and sites, and finally papers on the contribution of bio-archaeological research to our understanding of ritual practices in ancient Greece.
Sacred space --- Greeks --- Cults --- Architecture, Greek --- Congresses. --- Rites and ceremonies --- Greece --- Civilization --- Rituel --- Rites et cérémonies --- Archéologie --- Histoire. --- Ritual --- Iron age --- Archaeology --- History --- Archeology --- Anthropology --- Auxiliary sciences of history --- Antiquities --- Ceremonies --- Cult --- Cultus --- Ecclesiastical rites and ceremonies --- Religious ceremonies --- Religious rites --- Rites of passage --- Traditions --- Ritualism --- Manners and customs --- Mysteries, Religious --- Liturgies --- Public worship --- Symbolism --- Worship --- Conferences - Meetings
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Over the course of the second century CE, worship of the Persianate god Mithras swept across the whole of the Roman Empire. With its distinctive traces preserved in the material record - including cave-like sanctuaries and images of Mithras stabbing a bull - the cult has long been examined to reconstruct the thought-systems of Mithraism, its theology, through such monumental trappings. This volume starts from the premise that, like much eligion in the Roman world, the cult of Mithras must be examined through its practices, the ritual craft knowledge which enabled those rites, and the social structures thus created. What did Mithras-worshippers do How do we explain the unity and diversity of practices observed Archaeology has the potential to answer these questions and shed new light on Mithras-worship. Presenting new discoveries, higher resolution archaeological data on finds and assemblages, and re-evaluations of older discoveries, this volume charts new paths forward in understanding one of the Roman Empire's most distinctive cults
Mithraism. --- Mediterranean Region --- Religion. --- Antiquities. --- Mithras (Zoroastrian deity) --- Mithraism --- Mithraea --- Excavations (Archaeology) --- Rome --- Antiquities --- Social archaeology --- Sacred space --- Religion --- Mithraism in art --- Mithraeums --- Cave temples --- Zoroastrianism --- Mithra (Zoroastrian deity) --- Zoroastrian gods --- Art --- Circum-Mediterranean countries --- Mediterranean Area --- Mediterranean countries --- Mediterranean Sea Region --- Mediterranean Region - Religion --- Mediterranean Region - Antiquities
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Le site de Deir el-Médina est unique : ses vestiges archéologiques, particulièrement bien préservés, forment un ensemble exceptionnel en Égypte (constitué d’un village, d’une nécropole et d’un temple), et la riche documentation qu’il a livrée a traversé les millénaires. Artistes autant qu’artisans, les habitants de Deir el-Médina creusaient et décoraient les hypogées des souverains dans la Vallée des Rois et des Reines. Ils ne se limitaient pas à exercer leurs talents au bénéfice des souverains, ils ont aussi décoré, ou fait décorer par les plus habiles d’entre eux, leurs propres sépultures et se sont fait enterrer avec des centaines d’objets de culte et de mobilier funéraire. Les scribes tenaient des archives qui constituent une incroyable mine d’informations sur l’histoire du Nouvel Empire et le fonctionnement des chantiers royaux, mais ils avaient aussi des intérêts littéraires, et certains ont constitué des bibliothèques parmi les plus riches qui nous sont parvenues. Au gré de sa promenade sur le site de Deir el-Médina et à travers les peintures qui ornent les parois des caveaux rupestres, le visiteur pourra découvrir l’esprit de ses occupants, leurs aspirations terrestres, l'univers religieux et funéraire de leur conception de l’au-delà et les fêtes des multiples divinités qui composaient le panthéon local. La découverte du temple, élevé à l’époque ptolémaïque, constitue un épilogue heureux à cette promenade archéologique. The site of Deir el-Medina is unique in its particularly well-preserved archaeological remains, which represent an exceptional ensemble in Egypt (consisting of a village, a necropolis and a temple), and in the rich documentation that it has delivered across the millennia. The inhabitants of Deir el-Medina—artists as well as craftsmen—dug and decorated the hypogea of the sovereigns in the Valley of the Kings and Queens. They did not restrict the use of their talents to benefit only the sovereigns, but decorated, or had decorated by the most skilled amongst them, their own tombs and were buried with hundreds of cult objects and grave goods. The scribes kept archives, which constitute an incredible wealth of information for the history of the New Kingdom and the functioning of the royal sites. They also had literary interests, and some of them established libraries, which are considered among the richest of those that have survived. Walking around the site of Deir el-Medina and studying the paintings that adorn the walls of the rock tombs, the visitor will get to know the spirit of its occupants, their earthly ambitions, the religious and funerary universe of their conception of the afterlife and also the feasts of the multiple deities who composed the local pantheon. Coming upon the temple, built in the Ptolemaic period, comes as a perfect ending to this archaeological walk.
Fouilles archéologiques --- Tombes --- Cimetières --- Chapelles --- Temples --- Antiquités égyptiennes --- Deir el-Médineh (Égypte ; site archéologique) --- Égypte --- Fouilles archéologiques --- Cimetières --- Antiquités égyptiennes --- Deir el-Médina (Égypte ; site archéologique). --- Égypte --- Tombs --- Sacred space --- Architecture, Egyptian --- Mural painting and decoration, Egyptian --- Deir el-Medina Site (Egypt) --- Moeurs et coutumes --- Deir el-Medineh (Egypte ; site archéologique)
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Conferences - Meetings --- Mithraism --- Rome --- Europe --- Antiquities --- Antiquities, Roman --- Archeology --- Archéologie --- Revue, histoire --- Vlaanderen --- Monographic series --- Mithras (Zoroastrian deity) --- Zoroastrianism --- Rim --- Roman Empire --- Roman Republic (510-30 B.C.) --- Romi (Empire) --- Byzantine Empire --- Rome (Italy) --- Council of Europe countries --- Eastern Hemisphere --- Eurasia --- Excavations (Archaeology) --- Mithraea --- Architecture, Roman --- Sculpture, Roman --- Sacred space --- Mithraism - Rome - Congresses --- Mithraism - Europe - Congresses --- Rome - Antiquities - Congresses --- Europe - Antiquities, Roman - Congresses --- Godsdienstgeschiedenis --- Romeinse geschiedenis en cultuur --- Opgravingen
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Archéologie funéraire --- Rites et cérémonies funéraires --- Sanctuaires gallo-romains --- Religion gallo-romaine --- Actes de congrès. --- Cults --- Rites and ceremonies --- Material culture --- Sacred space --- Excavations (Archaeology) --- Roman provinces --- Congresses. --- Antiquities --- Archéologie funéraire. --- Rites et cérémonies funéraires. --- Sanctuaires gallo-romains. --- Religion gallo-romaine. --- Cults - Rome - Congresses --- Rites and ceremonies - Rome - Congresses --- Material culture - Rome - Congresses --- Archéologie funéraire. --- Rites et cérémonies funéraires.
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