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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Die Pandekten des Antiochus Monachus : slavische Übersetzung und Überlieferung /

Popovski, Josif. January 1989 (has links)
Proefschrift--Amsterdam, 1989. / Contient des passages en slavon. Bibliogr. p. 147-159.
2

Antiochos III and the cities of Western Asia Minor /

Ma, John. January 1999 (has links)
Teilw. zugl.: Diss.
3

Les Amours d'Antiochus et Stratonice : un motif légendaire à la croisée des savoirs, des images et des formes, de l'Antiquité à l'Âge classique. Présentation générale et anthologie de textes annotés et commentés / The loves of Antiochus and Statonice : a legendary motif between knowledges, images and forms, from the Antiquity to the classical Age. General presentation and anthology of annotated an commented texts

Gorichon-Herren, Alexandra 17 December 2016 (has links)
Le présent travail est l'établissement minutieux, d'une anthologie non exhaustive, mais la plus représentative possible, des récits circonstanciés ou des allusions de connivence se rencontrant dans les textes de fiction, de morale ou de médecine, depuis l'Antiquité jusqu'à l'Âge classique, ayant pour sujet le motif légendaire des Amours d’ Antiochus et Stratonice. Cette légende prolifique a pour intérêt majeur d'utiliser les savoirs médico-moraux sur la souffrance amoureuse dans une perspective de fable théâtrale et mystificatrice, alliant l'imaginaire antique et ancien à l'histoire littéraire des narrations anecdotiques à usage exemplaire. L'analyse comparée du traitement du motif permet de mettre en lumière l'évolution conjointe de la psychologie de la maladie d'amour, de la poétique des exempla, et des réflexions menées sur les savoirs partagés et leur diffusion dans l'opinion éclairée, durant un millénaire. La longue durée, sur laquelle le corpus jamais encore réuni est examiné, tend à révéler une figure centrale de l'imaginaire collectif européen, celle de l'amoureux en souffrance, à l'origine des développements narratifs, poétiques et dramaturgiques les plus variés. L’étude s'épanouit dans une logique à la fois en diachronie et en synchronie : diachronie du passage du monde païen au monde chrétien, du monde antique au monde moderne, des temps des « légendes » à l'ère de la « raison » ; synchronie d'une narration assez simplement composée pour entrer dans la mémoire universelle, et suffisamment riche pour porter toute la complexité et les évolutions d'un thème majeur de l'Occident : la mélancolie d'amour. / The work herein is the careful establishment of an anthology, non-exhaustive yet as representative as possible, of circumstantial stories or connivance allusions occurring in fictional, moral, or medicine text from ancient times to the classical Age, dealing with the legendary motif of the Loves of Antiochus and Stratonice. This prolific legend has the major advantage of using medical-moral knowledge about love-sickness to feed a theatrical and mystifying fable, combining the ancient imaginary with the literary history of exemplary anecdotal narratives. The comparative analysis of the motif's treatment allows us to highlight the joint evolution of love-sickness psychology, poetic exempla, and reflections on the shared knowledge and its dissemination in enlightened opinion, over a millennium. This long term, over which this novel corpus is discussed, reveals a central figure in the European collective imagination, that of lovers in suffering, point of origin of varied narrative, poetic, and dramatic developments. The study flourishes in a logic both diachronic and synchronic: diachronic passage from the pagan world to the Christian world, from the ancient world to the modern world, from the time of "legends" to the age of "reason" ; synchrony on the other hand of a story simple enough to seep into universal memory, and nevertheless rich enough to bear all the complexity and evolutions of a major theme of the Occident: love melancholy.
4

Origines gentium Siciliae : Ellanico, Antioco, Tucidide /

Sammartano, Roberto. January 1998 (has links)
Texte remanié de: Dottorato di ricerca--Storia della Sicilia antica--Palermo--Università degli studi, 1992-1994. / Notes bibliogr.
5

An Empire on the Brink of Destruction: The Stability of the Seleucid Empire Under Antiochus IV (175 B.C. - 164 B.C.)

Campbell, Tyler 01 December 2014 (has links)
The Seleucid Empire expanded its territory to stretch from Thrace to India under the leadership of Antiochus III, making it one of the most expansive empires in the Hellenistic World. Antiochus III's subsequent loss at the Battle of Magnesia to Rome in 190 B.C. caused some of the satrapies of the empire to begin to rebel, and has led some historians to believe that the empire began an unrecoverable decline. In this investigation I will argue that the myth of decline in the post-Antiochus III era is invalid through analyzing the stability brought to the empire during the reign of his son, Antiochus IV. An investigation into Antiochus IV's stabilization of the Seleucid Empire has not been completed in English since 1966. Through analyzing his involvement in the southern and eastern regions of the Seleucid Empire as well as the internal reforms a clear picture of Antiochus IV's efforts towards stabilization becomes apparent.
6

Antiochos III and the cities of western Asia Minor

Ma, John Ta-Chiang January 1997 (has links)
No description available.
7

State Formation and Ethnic Identity in the Late-Seleucid Levant (200–63 BCE)

Ish-Shalom, Tal A. January 2023 (has links)
This dissertation provides a model for understanding the relation between shifting imperial and post-imperial geopolitics and cultural change in diverse local communities. Specifically, I offer a new perspective on the debate in ancient history regarding “Hellenization,” i.e., the adoption and adaptation of Greek cultural idioms by non-Greek communities. Despite recent advances in emphasizing local communities’ agency in the “Hellenization” process, scholars tend to maintain a rigid dichotomy of monolithic “Greek” vs. “local” culture, and do not offer a comprehensive model accounting for variations in changes, and continuity, by region or time. I propose such a model for the late- and post-Seleucid Levant, and offer significant insights into Hellenistic, Phoenician and Jewish history. I argue that following the Seleucid conquest in the early second century BCE, diverse local communities began competing against each other for imperial favor by often resorting to a form of particularistic ethnic discourse, which emphasized claims to ancestral, pre-Hellenistic identities. In a paradoxical process, however, competing communities often adopted Greek cultural idioms to support these particularistic claims. While it is shown how the specific Greek cultural idioms adapted, varied according to sub-region and period, leadership, and geopolitical situation, it is argued that the idiosyncratic competitive dynamic, fostered by Seleucid power, incentivizing both particularistic discourse and the adoption of new Greek cultural idioms, proved pivotal in allowing diverse communities to develop a Greek cultural “infrastructure.” The political-cultural analysis allows us to broaden and nuance our understanding of subsequent Seleucid disintegration. By better integrating the literary and epigraphical sources with a fresh approach to the numismatic evidence (including the study of some unpublished collections) and taking into account the dramatic archaeological advances of the past two decades, I propose a new model for Seleucid decline. The “concessionist” dynamic outlined by recent scholarship, according to which local elites exploited Seleucid dynastic rivalries to extract privileges, needs to be qualified. While describing well the situation in some communities, such as Hasmonaean Judaea, it is not adequate for cities on the Phoenician coast. Rather, I propose an alternative “loyalist-secessionist” model, stressing the greater importance of external actors, especially the underappreciated role of the Ptolemies and a new understanding of Rome’s indirect involvement. The cultural implications for this novel political-historical model come to the fore following a watershed in Seleucid political history, the death of King Antiochus VII in 129 BCE. In an anarchic late-Hellenistic world, smaller cities, such as Tyre and Sidon, upon becoming independent, sought new alliances by re-utilizing their Greek cultural “infrastructure” towards greater institutional and cultic homology with Greek peer polities. In the absence of Seleucid pressure towards particularism, by contrast, traditional elements were rendered obsolete or even counterproductive to these new efforts. Thus, only at this stage of independence from Hellenistic empire non-Greek cultural elements atrophied, explaining the loss of Phoenician language in this period and the decline in sites of native cult. In other words, it was not a long, linear process of “Hellenization” but concrete, largely contingent, historical factors that explain this development in the specific time and place. In the neighboring Hasmonaean kingdom, by contrast, a series of contingent events (e.g., the “Judaization” of the Idumaeans) created a power-multiplier that put the kingdom onto a different trajectory. Prioritizing imperialistic ambitions, and shifting their own Greek “infrastructure” accordingly, they were not incentivized to similarly abandon traditional language and cult. Rather, by adopting a new ethos of a Hellenistic court, the kingdom facilitated the coalescing of newly-Judaized elites around the Hasmonaean dynasty and Jerusalem, fostering a metrocentric imperialistic outlook which paradoxically complemented and cemented rather than replaced the Yahwistic cult and a sense of Jewish particularism. This, I argue, is a key, hitherto overlooked, factor in the continuity of particularistic Jewish identity, which may help historicize and elucidate the seeming Jewish “exceptionalism” in the region. Put differently, the observed cultural divergence between Levantine communities, clearly apparent by the Roman period, can, in fact, be traced to, and elucidated by a specific historical moment, the common experiences of Seleucid imperial domination and the contingent effects of it collapse in the course of the 2nd century BCE.
8

The impact of a change in political constitution on early Palestinian Judaism during the period 175-161 B.C.E.

Molyneaux, M. E. 03 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MA)--Stellenbosch University, 2002. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: This study looks at a watershed period in the history of Judaism. In 175 B.C.E. a group of Jews sought to break Judaea out of the isolation in which it had stood since the Persian period. They wished to develop closer ties with their neighbours in Coele-Syria and Phoenicia and the Greek world in general. Since the Persian period the people of Judaea had been governed by high priests according to the 'ancestral laws' i.e. the Torah and its interpretation by Ezra. This 'ancestral law' had been confirmed as binding on all Jews by Antiochus III in his decree of 198 B.C.E. In order to move beyond the restrictions placed on contact between Jews and other peoples, it would be necessary to have the political status of Judaea changed. A change of political status could only be brought about by the king or one of his successors. In 175 B.C.E. a group of Jews requested Antiochus IV to permit them to transform Judaea from an ethnos into a polis. He agreed and the transformation was begun. It is these events of 175 B.C.E. that form the base of this study. The writer uses the model of Cultural Anthropology to form a framework in which these and subsequent events can be analysed. In this way we can get a better understanding of how events progressed. How a political reform ended in a religious suppression and persecution and finally a successful revolt against the Seleucid kingdom. The Torah and its interpretation stood at the center of Jewish life. Each group interpreted the law in their own way and understood events in relation to this interpretation. Therefore no analysis of this period can be undertaken without taking the law and its various interpretations into account. The law is the thread that holds all facets of this work together. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Hierdie studie handeloor 'n tydperk van waterskeiding in die geskiedenis van die Judaïsme. In 175 ve. wou 'n groep Jode in Palestina wegbreek uit die isolasie waarin hulle hulleself bevind het sedert die oorname deur die Persiese ryk. Hulle wou graag nouer bande met hulle buurstate en die Griekse wêreld aanknoop. Sedert die Persiese tydperk is die mense van Juda deur hëepriesters regeer, volgens die 'voorvaderlike wette', dws die Torah en sy vertolking volgens Esra. Alle Jode was gebind deur hierdie 'voorvaderlike wette' deur Antiogus III se dekreet van 198 ve. Indien die mense die beperkings teen kontak met ander volke sou wou ophef, sou dit nodig wees om die politieke status van Juda te verander. Net die koning of een van sy opvolgers kon die politieke status van Juda verander. In 175 ve. word Antiogus IV deur 'n groep Jode gevra om verlof om Jerusalem in 'n Griekse polis te omskep. Hy het ingestem en die omskepping het begin. Hierdie gebeurtenisse van 175 ve. vorm die basis van hierdie studie. Die skrywer gebruik die kutuur-antropologiese teoretiese model as raamwerk vir die ontleding van hierdie en opvolgende gebeurtenisse. Hierdie model stelons in staat om die ontwikkelinge in Juda beter te verstaan en meer spesifiek 'n antwoord op die volgende vraag te kry: "Hoekom het politieke hervorming tot godsdienstige verdrukking en vervolging aanleiding gegee en in die finale instansie tot 'n suksesvolle opstand teen die Seleukied koninkryk gelei?" Die Torah en sy vertolking het die sentrum van die Joodse lewe gevorm. Elke groep in Juda het die 'wet' op sy eie manier vertolk en ontwikkelinge in verband daarmee probeer verstaan. Daarom is dit nie moontlik om hierdie tydperk te bestudeer sonder 'n erkenning van die waarde van die 'wet' en sy verskillende vertolkings nie. Die 'wet' is die goue draad wat hierdie studie byeen hou.

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