Historians generally study elite public gift-giving in ancient Greek cities as a phenomenon that gained prominence only in the Hellenistic and Roman imperial periods. The contributors to this volume challenge this perspective by offering analyses of various manifestations of elite public giving in the Greek cities from Homeric times until Late Antiquity, highlighting this as a structural feature of polis society from its origins in the early Archaic age to the world of the Christian Greek city in the early Byzantine period. They discuss existing interpretations, offer novel ideas and arguments, and stress continuities and changes over time. Bracketed by a substantial Introduction and Conclusion, the volume is accessible both to ancient hist...
Of all types of Greek benefaction, agonistic festivals – that is, festivals that revolved around ath...
In the Hellenistic and Roman world of the eastern Mediterranean, Greek and Greco-Roman cities came t...
This chapter analyses the making, poiēsis, of citizens and the way in which status groups were recom...
Historians generally study elite public gift-giving in ancient Greek cities as a phenomenon that gai...
In this chapter the author identifies the chief continuities and changes in civic munificence in the...
In the first two centuries AD, the eastern Roman provinces experienced a proliferation of elite publ...
The giving and interchange of gifts, otherwise known as reciprocity or gift-giving, was a pervasive ...
The aim of this research is an interdisciplinary study. Having recourse to concepts and tools develo...
Studies in the cultic honours for Hellenistic leaders and benefactors mainly focus on the ideologica...
International audienceCitizenship is a major feature of contemporary national and international poli...
Although the concept of philotimia was thought to be not totally unproblematic in ancient Greece and...
Urban elites in the Hellenistic and Roman East often contributed as benefactors to public buildings ...
Although the concept of philotimia was thought to be not totally unproblematic in ancient Greece and...
When the Greek leader Agamemnon took for himself the woman awarded to Achilles as his spoils of batt...
This thesis aims to investigate the use of gifts of male elite clothing in Roman society and literat...
Of all types of Greek benefaction, agonistic festivals – that is, festivals that revolved around ath...
In the Hellenistic and Roman world of the eastern Mediterranean, Greek and Greco-Roman cities came t...
This chapter analyses the making, poiēsis, of citizens and the way in which status groups were recom...
Historians generally study elite public gift-giving in ancient Greek cities as a phenomenon that gai...
In this chapter the author identifies the chief continuities and changes in civic munificence in the...
In the first two centuries AD, the eastern Roman provinces experienced a proliferation of elite publ...
The giving and interchange of gifts, otherwise known as reciprocity or gift-giving, was a pervasive ...
The aim of this research is an interdisciplinary study. Having recourse to concepts and tools develo...
Studies in the cultic honours for Hellenistic leaders and benefactors mainly focus on the ideologica...
International audienceCitizenship is a major feature of contemporary national and international poli...
Although the concept of philotimia was thought to be not totally unproblematic in ancient Greece and...
Urban elites in the Hellenistic and Roman East often contributed as benefactors to public buildings ...
Although the concept of philotimia was thought to be not totally unproblematic in ancient Greece and...
When the Greek leader Agamemnon took for himself the woman awarded to Achilles as his spoils of batt...
This thesis aims to investigate the use of gifts of male elite clothing in Roman society and literat...
Of all types of Greek benefaction, agonistic festivals – that is, festivals that revolved around ath...
In the Hellenistic and Roman world of the eastern Mediterranean, Greek and Greco-Roman cities came t...
This chapter analyses the making, poiēsis, of citizens and the way in which status groups were recom...