The famous dedication by Xenokrateia to the river god Kephisos and other divinities not far from the city of Athens in c. 400 BC (NM 2756; IG I3 987; IG II2 4547) is a rare example of a sizeable, public ego-document by a citizen woman. Close reading of the iconography of the votive relief, of the dedicatory epigram and the inscribed offering list, and comparison with other private foundations allow reconstructing Xenokrateia’s sense of her identity and the religious, intellectual and economic competences she must have had to bring this dedication about. As a literate, self-confident and pious Athenian citizen, mother, widow and heiress, she spent on estimation several hundred drachmas on her dedication, pace the law quoted at Is. 10.10. The...
This study analyzes the impact of religious practices on the social status of women in the culture o...
Through the identification of a series of inscriptions, mainly datable to the Hellenistic era, a lin...
Various cases of human beings ‘dedicated’ to deities are attested in Greek epigraphic evidence. Are ...
The approximately 400 inscribed stone dedications published by A. E. Raubitschek in Dedications from...
The mechanics of Athenian society in many ways empowered citizen women as essential components of th...
Over the last fifteen years or so, scholars in the fields of anthropology, history, and classics hav...
Women appear frequently as donors in the Greek antiquity, an action that emphasizes their presence i...
In her study the author tries to show the influence of philosophy of Prodikos ofKeos on the Cyrope...
The roots of classical Greek public honorary display, often apparently secular in tone, can be found...
A society that regards nature as divine is constantly reminded of its dependence on the gods. It com...
Although the concept of philotimia was thought to be not totally unproblematic in ancient Greece and...
In the city of Corinth, after the battle of Salamis, the goddess Aphrodite receives an offering repr...
Although the social aspects of economical, juridical and religious activities in ancient Athens have...
This book argues that citizenship in Athens was primarily a religious identity, shared by male and f...
This article reevaluates the role of women, and more specifically of mothers, as representatives of ...
This study analyzes the impact of religious practices on the social status of women in the culture o...
Through the identification of a series of inscriptions, mainly datable to the Hellenistic era, a lin...
Various cases of human beings ‘dedicated’ to deities are attested in Greek epigraphic evidence. Are ...
The approximately 400 inscribed stone dedications published by A. E. Raubitschek in Dedications from...
The mechanics of Athenian society in many ways empowered citizen women as essential components of th...
Over the last fifteen years or so, scholars in the fields of anthropology, history, and classics hav...
Women appear frequently as donors in the Greek antiquity, an action that emphasizes their presence i...
In her study the author tries to show the influence of philosophy of Prodikos ofKeos on the Cyrope...
The roots of classical Greek public honorary display, often apparently secular in tone, can be found...
A society that regards nature as divine is constantly reminded of its dependence on the gods. It com...
Although the concept of philotimia was thought to be not totally unproblematic in ancient Greece and...
In the city of Corinth, after the battle of Salamis, the goddess Aphrodite receives an offering repr...
Although the social aspects of economical, juridical and religious activities in ancient Athens have...
This book argues that citizenship in Athens was primarily a religious identity, shared by male and f...
This article reevaluates the role of women, and more specifically of mothers, as representatives of ...
This study analyzes the impact of religious practices on the social status of women in the culture o...
Through the identification of a series of inscriptions, mainly datable to the Hellenistic era, a lin...
Various cases of human beings ‘dedicated’ to deities are attested in Greek epigraphic evidence. Are ...