UnrestrictedPerforming a sacrifice was one of the most sensorially full actions undertaken in the Greco-Roman world. The production and control of the correct movements, scents and sounds were prerequisites for summoning, communicating with and propitiating deities. Sacrifice was also ubiquitous, occurring on an almost continual basis as a range of sacrificial activities were celebrated publicly and privately in a variety of locations in urban areas. Cultivating a multi-sensory understanding of the full range of sensory elements that accompanied ancient cult rites – visual and auditory cues, things smelled, tasted and touched - provides a platform for achieving a more thorough knowledge of the meanings of the rites.; This dissertation exami...
Material remains and textual sources from throughout the Mediterranean World (Greece, North Africa, ...
Animal sacrifice in the Roman world was considered to be a form of communication with the divine sph...
Selected papers and discussions from the Tenth Anniversary Symposion of the Norwegian Institute at A...
This dissertation offers an archaeologically and art historically grounded inquiry into the actualit...
The archaeology of animal sacrifice has attracted considerable attention, although discussions on th...
The topic of human sacrifice, which tends to provoke both fascination and disgust, leaves few people...
Selected papers and discussions from the Tenth Anniversary Symposion of the Norwegian Institute at A...
Abstract: The article presents and discusses the custom of kynomartyrion (dog torture) which took pl...
The Roman empire afforded a kaleidoscope of sensations. Through a series of multisensory case studie...
In the ancient religious imagination, catastrophic events – plagues, droughts, natural disasters – w...
The practice of sacrifice (not confined to animal offerings) was the subject of crosscultural compar...
Humanity has practised animal sacrifice for the greater part of its history, from the time of the Ne...
This study questions the traditional view of sacrifices in hero-cults during the Archaic to the earl...
Ritual has long been a central concept in anthropological theories of religious transmission. Ritual...
This is the final version. Available on open access from de Gruyter via the DOI in this record.Love,...
Material remains and textual sources from throughout the Mediterranean World (Greece, North Africa, ...
Animal sacrifice in the Roman world was considered to be a form of communication with the divine sph...
Selected papers and discussions from the Tenth Anniversary Symposion of the Norwegian Institute at A...
This dissertation offers an archaeologically and art historically grounded inquiry into the actualit...
The archaeology of animal sacrifice has attracted considerable attention, although discussions on th...
The topic of human sacrifice, which tends to provoke both fascination and disgust, leaves few people...
Selected papers and discussions from the Tenth Anniversary Symposion of the Norwegian Institute at A...
Abstract: The article presents and discusses the custom of kynomartyrion (dog torture) which took pl...
The Roman empire afforded a kaleidoscope of sensations. Through a series of multisensory case studie...
In the ancient religious imagination, catastrophic events – plagues, droughts, natural disasters – w...
The practice of sacrifice (not confined to animal offerings) was the subject of crosscultural compar...
Humanity has practised animal sacrifice for the greater part of its history, from the time of the Ne...
This study questions the traditional view of sacrifices in hero-cults during the Archaic to the earl...
Ritual has long been a central concept in anthropological theories of religious transmission. Ritual...
This is the final version. Available on open access from de Gruyter via the DOI in this record.Love,...
Material remains and textual sources from throughout the Mediterranean World (Greece, North Africa, ...
Animal sacrifice in the Roman world was considered to be a form of communication with the divine sph...
Selected papers and discussions from the Tenth Anniversary Symposion of the Norwegian Institute at A...