This chapter introduces the topic of the spatial dynamics of myth in antiquity. It provides an overview of recent advances in this field relating both to the study of ancient Greece and to the interrelationship of stories to land in other cultures and at other periods. It argues that, although making connections between stories and landscape is a universal phenomenon, care must be taken to understand the exact dynamics of the story–landscape nexus in any particular culture. It uses the myths of Heracles to illustrate four key features of the spatial dynamics of myth in antiquity, and then provides an overview of the chapters of the volume
This chapter presents some initial attempts at exploring digital technologies for examining Herodotu...
Though the term geographia is not used until Eratosthenes (third century B.C.E.), the idea is presen...
This dissertation examines the underlying tension in Greek literature between an all-encompassing, s...
To understand the human perception of landscapes in the past, archaeologists would require knowledge...
This paper is based on the notion that the sea is a knowable, textured place that through senses, ob...
This volume brings together a wide range of different disciplinary approaches and evidence in order ...
Maps dominate the modern sense of place and geography. Yet, so far as we can tell, maps were rare in...
How does ‘digital’ apply to ancient pasts? Digital methods, especially methods relating to identifyi...
The central premise of this chapter is that, alongside conventional ‘topographical’ maps, spatial re...
This paper presents results from palaeogeographical studies carried out in the southeastern Acheloos...
How does ‘digital’ apply to ancient pasts? Digital methods, especially meth- ods relating to identif...
International audienceThe paper presents a spatial analysis of the myth of Io, the unfortunate maide...
This thesis examines the topographical relationship between religious sites and sanctuaries in rural...
When a geographical name enters the world of poetry, it is assimilated into the narrative milieu of ...
The thesis examines the religious topography of Arcadia through two particular aspects: the built an...
This chapter presents some initial attempts at exploring digital technologies for examining Herodotu...
Though the term geographia is not used until Eratosthenes (third century B.C.E.), the idea is presen...
This dissertation examines the underlying tension in Greek literature between an all-encompassing, s...
To understand the human perception of landscapes in the past, archaeologists would require knowledge...
This paper is based on the notion that the sea is a knowable, textured place that through senses, ob...
This volume brings together a wide range of different disciplinary approaches and evidence in order ...
Maps dominate the modern sense of place and geography. Yet, so far as we can tell, maps were rare in...
How does ‘digital’ apply to ancient pasts? Digital methods, especially methods relating to identifyi...
The central premise of this chapter is that, alongside conventional ‘topographical’ maps, spatial re...
This paper presents results from palaeogeographical studies carried out in the southeastern Acheloos...
How does ‘digital’ apply to ancient pasts? Digital methods, especially meth- ods relating to identif...
International audienceThe paper presents a spatial analysis of the myth of Io, the unfortunate maide...
This thesis examines the topographical relationship between religious sites and sanctuaries in rural...
When a geographical name enters the world of poetry, it is assimilated into the narrative milieu of ...
The thesis examines the religious topography of Arcadia through two particular aspects: the built an...
This chapter presents some initial attempts at exploring digital technologies for examining Herodotu...
Though the term geographia is not used until Eratosthenes (third century B.C.E.), the idea is presen...
This dissertation examines the underlying tension in Greek literature between an all-encompassing, s...