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Los Thaumata de Sofronio : contribucion al estudio de la Incubatio cristiana
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ISBN: 8400041097 9788400041090 Year: 1975 Volume: 31 Publisher: Madrid: Instituto Antonio de Nebrija,

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Where dreams may come : incubation sanctuaries in the Greco-Roman world
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ISBN: 9789004299764 9789004330238 9004299769 9789004346215 9789004346222 900434621X 9004346228 9004330232 Year: 2017 Volume: 184/1-2 Publisher: Boston Leiden Brill

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In this book, Gil H. Renberg examines the ancient religious phenomenon of “incubation", the ritual of sleeping at a divinity’s sanctuary in order to obtain a prophetic or therapeutic dream. Most prominently associated with the Panhellenic healing god Asklepios, incubation was also practiced at the cult sites of numerous other divinities throughout the Greek world, but it is first known from ancient Near Eastern sources and was established in Pharaonic Egypt by the time of the Macedonian conquest; later, Christian worship came to include similar practices. Renberg’s exhaustive study represents the first attempt to collect and analyze the evidence for incubation from Sumerian to Byzantine and Merovingian times, thus making an important contribution to religious history.


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Greek Incubation Rituals in Classical and Hellenistic Times
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ISBN: 9782875620859 2875620851 287562377X Year: 2015 Volume: 29 Publisher: Liège Presses universitaires de Liège

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This study documents and analyses the structure and function of greek incubation rituals in classical and hellenistic times addressing all relevant and extant literary and epigraphical testimonia concerning the rites and rules surrounding incubation. It shows that previous approaches, which treated incubation as a chthonian phenomenon, as a rite of passage, or as comparable to initation in mystery cults are not supported by the available testimonia on these rites. An analysis of the social context of the rites surrounding incubation shows they differed surprisingly little from the rites performed by other worshippers at these sanctuaries. Various ritual factors are explored in order to explain why ordinary, or low-intensity, rites could create a high-intensity experience for the worshipper. Further, the structure of incubation rituals is examined in the light of the origins and development of the practice in is examined in the light of the origins and development of the practice in Greece. Contrary to previous theories on the origins of incubation, it is argued that the phenomenon began as an exclusive consultation technique for priests, magistrates and select worshippers and was a natural variant of oracular techniques in archaic and early classical Greece. When incubation became accessible to everyone in classical society as a part of the cult of Asklepios, rituals for the masses were then created. The ritual did not have one, coherent structure across all the sanctuaries which offered it ; rather, the ritual practice adapted to local customs and factors such as the size of the cult. Some rites for intermediaries were kept, but new motivational factors were added, which resulted in very popular cults.


Book
Incubation as a type-scene in the 'Aqhatu, Kirta, and Hannah stories : a form-critical and narratological study of KTU 1.14 i-1.15 III, 1.17 I-II, and 1 Samuel 1:1-2:11.
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ISSN: 00835889 ISBN: 9789004202399 9004202390 Year: 2011 Volume: 145 Publisher: Leiden Bril


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Incubation as a type-scene in the Aqhatu, Kirta, and Hannah stories : a form-critical and narratological study of KTU 1.14 i-1.15 III, 1.17 I-II, and 1 Samuel 1:1-2:11
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ISBN: 1283161427 9786613161420 9004207511 9004202390 9789004207516 9781283161428 9789004202399 Year: 2011 Publisher: Boston : Brill,

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Prior studies of incubation have approached it from a history of religions perspective, with a view to historically reconstruct the actual practice of incubation in ancient Near East. However, this approach has proven unfruitful, not due to the dearth of relevant data, but because of the confusion with regard to the definition of the term incubation. Suggesting a way out of this impasse in previous scholarship, this book proposes to read the so-called “incubation” texts from the perspective of incubation as a literary device, namely, as a type-scene. It applies Nagler’s definition of a type-scene to a literary analysis of two Ugaritic mythical texts, the Aqhatu and Kirta stories, and one biblical story, the Hannah story.

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