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  1. (1 other version)Sur la lysis dionysiaque.Agatha Pitombo Bacelar - 2020 - Archai: Revista de Estudos Sobre as Origens Do Pensamento Ocidental 30:e03003.
    Cet article est une étude sur la lysis, la « libération » dionysiaque. On commence avec la suggestion que dans la description de la mania telestike dans le Phèdre 244d-245a, le meilleur candidat parmi les pratiques cultuelles dionysiaques à l’opération de soustraction résultante de la rhétorique socratique c’est la transe ménadique. Les références ménadiques accompagnent également les témoins sur Dionysos Lysios à Corinthe, Sicyone et Thèbes, mais ici les sources nous invitent à élargir l’horizon des pratiques cultuelles dionysiaques pour regarder (...)
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  • Ninfe ad Heraklea Lucana?Valle del Sinni - 2010 - Kernos 23:239-270.
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  • Ninfe ad Heraklea Lucana?Ilaria Battiloro, Antonio Bruscella & Massimo Osanna - 2010 - Kernos 23:239-270.
    During the 1970s, Dinu Adamesteanu uncovered a small sacred place within the chora of Heraklea. It is an open-air sanctuary, constituted by an area bounded by a temenos wall, with an altar and a small naiskos inside. A votive deposit was located within the temenos, which was filled with a large quantity of ritual and votive material, placed in the hole when the sacred place was abandoned. The architectural structures and a selection of the finds were first published by Dinu (...)
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  • (1 other version)Artemis Bear-Leader.Michael B. Walbank - 1981 - Classical Quarterly 31 (02):276-.
    Editors of Lysistrate have regarded this passage as a kind of cursus honorum of a well-brought-up young Athenian lady: the chorine first served at the age of seven as a bearer of the sacred casket ; then at the age of ten as miller of corn for Athena Archegetis ; then followed service as a ‘bear’ of Artemis at the Brauronia; finally, she returned to Athens as a basket-bearer , holding a string of figs, when a fair young girl. After (...)
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  • (1 other version)Artemis Bear-Leader.Michael B. Walbank - 1981 - Classical Quarterly 31 (2):276-281.
    Editors of Lysistrate have regarded this passage as a kind of cursus honorum of a well-brought-up young Athenian lady: the chorine first served at the age of seven as a bearer of the sacred casket ; then at the age of ten as miller of corn for Athena Archegetis ; then followed service as a ‘bear’ of Artemis at the Brauronia; finally, she returned to Athens as a basket-bearer, holding a string of figs, when a fair young girl. After this, (...)
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  • Polis Religion – A Critical Appreciation.Julia Kindt - 2009 - Kernos 22:9-34.
    This article explores the scope and limits of the model of “polis religion” as one of the most powerful interpretative concepts in current scholarship in the field. It examines the notion of the ‘embeddedness’ of ancient Greek religion in the polis as well as the unity and diversity of Greek religious beliefs and practices, and discusses in how far the model is able to capture developments beyond the Classical period. The article looks at religious phenomena and forms of religious organization (...)
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  • Lykophron and Epigraphy: The Value and Function of Cult Epithets in the Alexandra.Simon Hornblower - 2014 - Classical Quarterly 64 (1):91-120.
    The subject of this paper is a striking and unavoidable feature of theAlexandra: Lykophron's habit of referring to single gods not by their usual names, but by multiple lists of epithets piled up in asyndeton. This phenomenon first occurs early in the 1474-line poem, and this occurrence will serve as an illustration. At 152–3, Demeter has five descriptors in a row: Ἐνναία ποτὲ | Ἕρκυνν' Ἐρινὺς Θουρία Ξιφηφόρος, ‘Ennaian … Herkynna, Erinys, Thouria, Sword-bearing’. In the footnote I give the probable (...)
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