The word tyche (plural tychai) denotes an ancient Greek concept encompassing many aspects of fortune – chance, fate, luck, occurrence, even achievement, success, and wealth – both good and bad. As a personification of that concept, the goddess Tyche came to symbolize the fate and fortune of rulers and through them their cities; she thus emerged as the preeminent city goddess throughout the Hellenistic and Roman worlds. Her name is etymologically related to the verb tynchanein (“to hit, meet with, be favored with, happen accidentally”). The connection between the noun and verb is so close that it is difficult to distinguish in Greek literature between the deity and the abstraction
The possibility to speak of the Lithuanian concept of fortune takes its justification in the etymolo...
The terminology of personal power in Aristophanes’ plays presents two different uses depending on wh...
Chthonic deities are a category of Greek gods taking their name fromthe word chthon, meaning “earth....
This thesis is a study of tychē (success, good or bad fortune, chance, unexpected circumstances) and...
Tyche was a female, tutelar, individual divinity, whose value progressively shifted during the Hell...
This contribution deals with images of Tyche on the civic bronze coinage of the Roman colony of Bery...
Ve své práci se zabývám postavou bohyně Tyché a jejím působením v žánru řeckého románu. Oproti tradi...
x, 216 p. A print copy of this thesis is available through the UO Libraries. Search the library ca...
The Greek term “κάκη ” complicates various meanings and concepts—evil, deformity, disaster, trouble,...
In Late Antiquity, due to the influence of the Jewish-Christian monotheism, the pagan notion of "des...
After a brief discussion of earlier etymological theories, this article proposes a new analysis of t...
Ancient Age women were in a social order in which they do not haveany legal rights nor a social stat...
After a brief discussion of earlier etymological theories, this article proposes a new analysis of t...
When seen or presumed in the actions of gods rather than of men, phthonos (‘spite’) has traditional...
Stories of competition between two siblings are as common to Greco-Roman mythology as romantic comed...
The possibility to speak of the Lithuanian concept of fortune takes its justification in the etymolo...
The terminology of personal power in Aristophanes’ plays presents two different uses depending on wh...
Chthonic deities are a category of Greek gods taking their name fromthe word chthon, meaning “earth....
This thesis is a study of tychē (success, good or bad fortune, chance, unexpected circumstances) and...
Tyche was a female, tutelar, individual divinity, whose value progressively shifted during the Hell...
This contribution deals with images of Tyche on the civic bronze coinage of the Roman colony of Bery...
Ve své práci se zabývám postavou bohyně Tyché a jejím působením v žánru řeckého románu. Oproti tradi...
x, 216 p. A print copy of this thesis is available through the UO Libraries. Search the library ca...
The Greek term “κάκη ” complicates various meanings and concepts—evil, deformity, disaster, trouble,...
In Late Antiquity, due to the influence of the Jewish-Christian monotheism, the pagan notion of "des...
After a brief discussion of earlier etymological theories, this article proposes a new analysis of t...
Ancient Age women were in a social order in which they do not haveany legal rights nor a social stat...
After a brief discussion of earlier etymological theories, this article proposes a new analysis of t...
When seen or presumed in the actions of gods rather than of men, phthonos (‘spite’) has traditional...
Stories of competition between two siblings are as common to Greco-Roman mythology as romantic comed...
The possibility to speak of the Lithuanian concept of fortune takes its justification in the etymolo...
The terminology of personal power in Aristophanes’ plays presents two different uses depending on wh...
Chthonic deities are a category of Greek gods taking their name fromthe word chthon, meaning “earth....