Preliminary material /Eugene N. Lane -- COINS /Eugene N. Lane -- GEMS /Eugene N. Lane -- ADDENDA AND CORRIGENDA TO VOLUME 1 /Eugene N. Lane -- PLATE /Eugene N. Lane.
Preliminary material /Eugene N. Lane -- THE ATTIC MATERIAL APART FROM THE SOUNION INSCRIPTIONS INCLUDING MATERIAL FROM THE AEGEAN ISLANDS /Eugene N. Lane -- THE CULT IN LYDIA /Eugene N. Lane -- THE CULT IN ASIA MINOR, APART FROM LYDIA AND ANTIOCH IN PISIDIA /Eugene N. Lane -- THE CULT AT ANTIOCH IN PISIDIA /Eugene N. Lane -- THE EPITHETS OF MEN AND OTHER ADJECTIVES APPLIED TO HIM /Eugene N. Lane -- ASSOCIATIONS OF MEN WITH OTHER DIVINITIES /Eugene N. Lane -- THE ICONOGRAPHY OF MEN /Eugene N. Lane -- THE WORSHIPPERS OF MEN; MISCELLANEOUS /Eugene N. Lane -- TESTIMONIA ANTIQUA /Eugene N. Lane -- ADDENDA AND CORRIGENDA TO VOLUMES I AND II /Eugene N. Lane -- ADDENDA ULTIMA /Eugene N. Lane -- INDEX RERUM, VERBORUM, ET AUCTORUM NOTABILIORUM /Eugene N. Lane -- CONCORDANCE /Eugene N. Lane.
In this work, Christina Harker deconstructs the prevailing treatment of the New Testament as anti-imperial by contextualizing both New Testament scholarship and the Galatian experience within imperialist discourses that survived the dissolution of conventional empires in the twentieth century. She critiques simplistic treatments of empire as post-imperial (that is, replicating patterns of imperialist ideology, albeit unwittingly). To solve the problem, a new interpretation of Galatians is proposed that reworks and complicates the portrait of the Galatians themselves, rather than Paul, within what then emerges as a diverse social world peopled by complex individuals with heterogeneous social and cultural identities. The author is thus able to show how New Testament scholars who rehabilitate the Bible and Paul as anti-empire perpetuate the same imperialist modes of interpretation they seek to repudiate.
Preliminary material -- EXACT PLACE WHERE THE FINDS WERE MADE KNOWN -- ASIA MINOR -- GRAECIA -- ITALIA -- AFRICA -- HISPANIA -- GALLIA -- GERMANIA -- MACEDONIA -- ILLYRICUM -- PANNONIA -- DACIA -- MOESIA -- CHERSONESUS TAURICA -- EXACT PLACE WHERE THE FINDS WERE MADE NOT KNOWN -- GENERAL INDEX -- ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS OF THE PLATES -- PLATE -- ÉTUDES PRÉLIMINAIRES AUX RELIGIONS ORIENTALES DANS L'EMPIRE ROMAIN.
This volume includes all of the Classical, Hellenistic, and Roman votive reliefs found to date in the excavations of the Athenian Agora. In addition to providing a catalogue of the reliefs arranged according to their subjects, the author treats the history of their discovery, their production and workmanship, iconography, and function. A large part of the study is devoted to discussion of the original contexts of the reliefs in an attempt to determine their relationship to shrines in the vicinity and to investigate what they can tell us about the character of religious activity in the vicinity of the Agora. The work will be an important reference for historians of Greek art as well as of Greek religion.