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The first comprehensive study of theoroi - sacred delegates sent by Greek city-states to represent them at common sanctuaries.
For at least a thousand years Greek cities took part in religious activities outside their territory by sending sacred delegates to represent them. The delegates are usually called the¿roi, literally 'observers', and a delegation made up of the¿roi, or the action of taking part in one, is called the¿ri¿. This is the first comprehensive study of the¿roi and the¿ri¿. It examines a number of key functions of the¿roi and explains who served in this role and what their…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
The first comprehensive study of theoroi - sacred delegates sent by Greek city-states to represent them at common sanctuaries.
For at least a thousand years Greek cities took part in religious activities outside their territory by sending sacred delegates to represent them. The delegates are usually called the¿roi, literally 'observers', and a delegation made up of the¿roi, or the action of taking part in one, is called the¿ri¿. This is the first comprehensive study of the¿roi and the¿ri¿. It examines a number of key functions of the¿roi and explains who served in this role and what their activities are likely to have been, both on the journey and at the sanctuary. Other chapters discuss the diplomatic functions of the¿roi, and what their activities tell us about the origins of the notion of Greek identity and about religious networks. Chapters are also devoted to the reception of the notion of the¿ri¿ in Greek philosophy and literature. The book will be essential for all scholars and advanced students of ancient religion.
Autorenporträt
Ian Rutherford is Professor in the Classics Department, University of Reading. He works mostly on Greek poetry, Greek religion and relations between Greece and other cultures: chiefly the Hittites and Egypt. For fifteen years he has published a great deal on 'pilgrimage' in the ancient world (e.g. Pilgrimage in Graeco-Roman and Early Christian Antiquity: Seeing the Gods, co-edited with Jas Elsner, 2005) with a related interest in travelling poets (Wandering Poets in Ancient Greek Culture, co-edited with Richard Hunter, 2009). He has also published a full commentary on Pindar's Paeans (2001) and has another volume forthcoming on Hittite and Greek religion.