The land of the solstices: myth, geography and astronomy in ancient Greece
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Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
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Oxford
BAR Publishing
2021
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Schriftenreihe: | BAR international series
3039 |
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Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | xiii, 198 Seiten Diagramme |
ISBN: | 9781407358628 |
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adam_text | Contents List of figures..................................................................................................................................................................... xi Abstract............................................................................................................................................................................ x։fi 1. Introduction.................................................................................................................................................................... 1 1.1. Selective interpretation of myth............................................................................................................................... 3 1.2. Ethnographic context............................................................................................................................................... 4 1.3. Inclusive definitions of science................................................................................................................................ 5 1.4. Myth and physical phenomena................................................................................................................................. 6 1.5. Myth and ancient science......................................................................................................................................... 6 1.6. Anthropomorphisation and narrativisation............................................................................................................... 7 1.7. Observational data in
myths..................................................................................................................................... 8 1.8. Mythic models.......................................................................................................................................................... 9 1.9. Conclusion.............................................................................................................................................................. 10 Part One: Annual solar movement 2. The Laestrygonians and the geographical arctic circle.............................................................................................15 2.1. Interpreting the ‘meteorological’ facet of the Lastrygonian episode......................................................................16 2.2. Crates’ interpretation of the Laestrygonian passage...............................................................................................17 2.3. Crates’ interpretation and arctic circle....................................................................................................................18 2.4. The limits of the annual solar movement............................................................................................................... 21 2.5. Arctic circle in epic poetry..................................................................................................................................... 22 2.6. Laestrygonia, the sun and the
Otherworld............................................................................................................. 24 2.7. Conclusion.............................................................................................................................................................. 25 3. The Bear Mountain...................................................................................................................................................... 27 3.1. The Cyzicus episode.............................................................................................................................................. 27 3.2. Celestial bears at the solstice island....................................................................................................................... 28 3.3. A pre-Homeric Argonautica................................................................................................................................... 30 3.4. Conclusion.............................................................................................................................................................. 31 4. Snatched away by thegust of wind............................................................................................................................. 33 4.1. The island of turning.............................................................................................................................................. 33 4.2. The Harpies and
eschatology................................................................................................................................. 35 4.3. Other mythic snatchings......................................................................................................................................... 37 4.4. The snatchings in their solar context...................................................................................................................... 38 4.5. An alternative model—cosmological solstice mountain........................................................................................ 39 4.6. A reinterpretation of the northern mountains model.............................................................................................. 42 4.7. A region outside the sun’s course in non-Greek traditions..................................................................................... 42 4.8. Conclusion.............................................................................................................................................................. 44 5. The island of the sun’s turning ..................................... 45 5.1. The concept of solstices in early Greek tradition................................................................................................... 45 5.2. Heliotropia and the localisations of Homeric tropai êelioio.................................................................................. 47 5.3. The localisations of Homeric tropai êelioio in the context of solar
movement..................................................... 48 5.4. Pytheas’ Thule and the turnings of the sun............................................................................................................ 49 5.5. Conclusion.............................................................................................................................................................. 50 6. Pytheas and Hecataeus:Britain and Hyperborea............................................................................... 53 6.1. Pytheas and the northern barbarians...................................................................................................................... 53 6.2. Britain in the wake of Pytheas............................................................................................................................... 54 6.3. Hecataeus’ Hyperborea.......................................................................................................................................... 55 vii
The Land of the Solstices 6.4. Hyperboreans, Apollo and Celts............................................................................................................................57 6.5. Conclusion..............................................................................................................................................................58 7. Apollo’s Hyperborean voyage: a narrative model of solar movement.................................................................. .-61 7.1. Delphian traditions.................................................................................................................................................62 7.2. Athenian and Delian traditions...............................................................................................................................64 7.3. Beyond calendar.....................................................................................................................................................65 7.4. Apollo and the solstice island.................................................................................................................................67 7.5. Conclusion..............................................................................................................................................................69 8. ‘Hyperborean Apollo’s’ swan chariot........................................................................................................................ 71 8.1. Hyacinthus—a convergence of literary and iconographie
testimonies................................................................ 72 8.2. Archaeological evidence .......................................................................................................................................72 8.2.1. Dupljaja..........................................................................................................................................................73 8.2.2. Northern Europe.............................................................................................................................................74 8.2.3. Italy.................................................................................................................................................................74 8.2.4. Eastern Alpine region.....................................................................................................................................75 8.2.5. Possible Central European parallels...............................................................................................................75 8.2.6. The Aegean.....................................................................................................................................................76 8.3. Methodological procedure for comparison of literary and iconographie record................................................. 76 8.3.1. Material evidence for past beliefs.................................................................................................................76 8.3.2. Reading the visual
language..........................................................................................................................76 8.3.3. Structural analysis of visual language...........................................................................................................76 8.3.4. The transfer of meaning.................................................................................................................................77 8.3.5. The transfer of beliefs.....................................................................................................................................77 8.3.6. Transfer of complex symbolic structures......................................................................................................78 8.3.7. The Dupljaja model as a complex symbolic structure accompanied by a muthos....................................... 79 8.3.8. Comparison of literary sources with iconography ...................................................................................... 79 8.4. Concluding remarks: large-scale context, anthropomorphism and the contents of the muthos............................80 Part Two: Diurnal solar movement 9. Diurnal path of the Sun in Greek tradition...............................................................................................................85 9.1. The high northern mountain...................................................................................................................................85 9.2. The southerly path of the
sun................................................................................................................................87 9.3. Diurnal solar movement in Homer........................................................................................................................87 9.4. The sun’s cup and its southerly course..................................................................................................................88 9.5. Stesichorus’ account of the sun’s voyage in a cup................................................................................................88 9.6. Hesiod’s house of Night in the light of the ‘uni-polar’ model..............................................................................89 9.7. The sun’s cup and Heracles....................................................................................................................................93 9.8. Iconographical testimonies for the sun in a cup....................................................................................................94 9.9. The Presocratic tradition of the sun’s bowl.......................................................................................................... 94 9.10. Non-Greek traditions of the sun travelling in a boat............................................................................................95 9.11. Conclusion............................................................................................................................................................96 10. Liminal imagery in the accounts of
solar movement assimilated to the world of the dead............................... 99 10.1. Hesiods’ concept of the daylight/night exchange.................................................................................................99 10.2. Corresponding models in Mesopotamian tradition............................................................................................ 100 10.3. Homer, Hesiod and the liminal features in Hades.............................................................................................. 101 10.4. Gates of the otherworld assimilated to the gates of the sun............................................................................... 102 10.5. The Pylian gates................................................................................................................................................. 103 10.6. The White Rock and the Odyssey...................................................................................................................... 105 10.7. Pherecydes’ gates............................................................................................................................................... 106 10.8. Conclusion..........................................................................................................................................................106 11. Aea and the voyage of the Argonauts.....................................................................................................................109 11.1. The return of the
Argonauts................................................................................................................................ 110 11.2. Circe, Calypso and the Argonauts’ return voyage.............................................................................................112 11.3. Conclusion.......................................................................................................................................................... 114 viii
Contents 12. World of the Dead at the Antipodes....................................................................................................................... 115 12.1. Hades at the antipodes conceived in tenns of the diurnal solar movement...................................................... 116 12.2. Later testimonies for an antipodal Hades conceived in terms of solar movement............................................ 117 12.3. Hades at the celestial ‘antipodes’...................................................................................................................... 118 12.4. The antipodal world of the dead in non-Greek traditions ................................................................................ 118 12.5. Navigating to the Otherworld in Greek and non-Greek traditions.................................................................... 119 12.6. Conclusion..........................................................................................................................................................121 13. Beyond Odysseus: Gilgameš................................................................................................................................... 123 13.1. Gilgameš breaking a path for Odysseus............................................................................................................ 124 13.2. The twin mountain..............................................................................................................................................125 13.3. Scorpion-
men.................................................................................................................. 126 13.4. Gilgameš on the diurnal course of the sun........................................................................................................ 128 13.5. Gilgameš arrives at the mouth of the rivers........................................................................................................129 13.6. Dilmun................................................................................................................................................................. 130 13.7. ‘The mouth of the rivers’ outside the Mesopotamian tradition........................................................................ 132 13.8. From Gilgameš to Odysseus...............................................................................................................................133 13.9. Conclusion...........................................................................................................................................................135 14. Beyond Odysseus: Alexander...................................................................................................................................137 14.1. Hellenistic tradition.............................................................................................................................................137 14.2. Land of Darkness....................................................................................................................................... 138 14.3.
Mount Musas.......................................................................................................................................................139 14.4. Mount Musas in later tradition............................................................................................................................140 14.5. Alexander in the far north in the Islamic tradition............................................................................................ 141 14.6. Conclusion...........................................................................................................................................................143 15. Conclusion.................................................................................................................................................................145 15.1. An outline of the main argument of the book................................................................................................... 145 15.2. The ‘practical’ main points of the book..............................................................................................................148 15.3. Afinal word.........................................................................................................................................................148 List of citations................................................................................................................................................................151 Appendix 1. Diurnal solar movement in Mesopotamian
tradition....................................................... 187 ALL Solar mountains and gates..................................................................................................................................187 Al.2. Interacting conceptual domains: solar movement and eschatology...................................................................188 A1.3. The Mesopotamian sun-god’s ‘house of Night’.................................................................................................188 Appendix 2. Diurnal solar movement in Egyptian tradition......................................................................................191 A2.1. Books of the Netherworld..................................................................................................................................191 A2.2. Gates and mountains..........................................................................................................................................191 A2.3. The horizon-sign................................................................................................................................................193 Index.................................................................................................................................................................................195 ix
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adam_txt |
Contents List of figures. xi Abstract. x։fi 1. Introduction. 1 1.1. Selective interpretation of myth. 3 1.2. Ethnographic context. 4 1.3. Inclusive definitions of science. 5 1.4. Myth and physical phenomena. 6 1.5. Myth and ancient science. 6 1.6. Anthropomorphisation and narrativisation. 7 1.7. Observational data in
myths. 8 1.8. Mythic models. 9 1.9. Conclusion. 10 Part One: Annual solar movement 2. The Laestrygonians and the geographical arctic circle.15 2.1. Interpreting the ‘meteorological’ facet of the Lastrygonian episode.16 2.2. Crates’ interpretation of the Laestrygonian passage.17 2.3. Crates’ interpretation and arctic circle.18 2.4. The limits of the annual solar movement. 21 2.5. Arctic circle in epic poetry. 22 2.6. Laestrygonia, the sun and the
Otherworld. 24 2.7. Conclusion. 25 3. The Bear Mountain. 27 3.1. The Cyzicus episode. 27 3.2. Celestial bears at the solstice island. 28 3.3. A pre-Homeric Argonautica. 30 3.4. Conclusion. 31 4. Snatched away by thegust of wind. 33 4.1. The island of turning. 33 4.2. The Harpies and
eschatology. 35 4.3. Other mythic snatchings. 37 4.4. The snatchings in their solar context. 38 4.5. An alternative model—cosmological solstice mountain. 39 4.6. A reinterpretation of the northern mountains model. 42 4.7. A region outside the sun’s course in non-Greek traditions. 42 4.8. Conclusion. 44 5. The island of the sun’s turning . 45 5.1. The concept of solstices in early Greek tradition. 45 5.2. Heliotropia and the localisations of Homeric tropai êelioio. 47 5.3. The localisations of Homeric tropai êelioio in the context of solar
movement. 48 5.4. Pytheas’ Thule and the turnings of the sun. 49 5.5. Conclusion. 50 6. Pytheas and Hecataeus:Britain and Hyperborea. 53 6.1. Pytheas and the northern barbarians. 53 6.2. Britain in the wake of Pytheas. 54 6.3. Hecataeus’ Hyperborea. 55 vii
The Land of the Solstices 6.4. Hyperboreans, Apollo and Celts.57 6.5. Conclusion.58 7. Apollo’s Hyperborean voyage: a narrative model of solar movement. .-61 7.1. Delphian traditions.62 7.2. Athenian and Delian traditions.64 7.3. Beyond calendar.65 7.4. Apollo and the solstice island.67 7.5. Conclusion.69 8. ‘Hyperborean Apollo’s’ swan chariot. 71 8.1. Hyacinthus—a convergence of literary and iconographie
testimonies. 72 8.2. Archaeological evidence .72 8.2.1. Dupljaja.73 8.2.2. Northern Europe.74 8.2.3. Italy.74 8.2.4. Eastern Alpine region.75 8.2.5. Possible Central European parallels.75 8.2.6. The Aegean.76 8.3. Methodological procedure for comparison of literary and iconographie record. 76 8.3.1. Material evidence for past beliefs.76 8.3.2. Reading the visual
language.76 8.3.3. Structural analysis of visual language.76 8.3.4. The transfer of meaning.77 8.3.5. The transfer of beliefs.77 8.3.6. Transfer of complex symbolic structures.78 8.3.7. The Dupljaja model as a complex symbolic structure accompanied by a muthos. 79 8.3.8. Comparison of literary sources with iconography . 79 8.4. Concluding remarks: large-scale context, anthropomorphism and the contents of the muthos.80 Part Two: Diurnal solar movement 9. Diurnal path of the Sun in Greek tradition.85 9.1. The high northern mountain.85 9.2. The southerly path of the
sun.87 9.3. Diurnal solar movement in Homer.87 9.4. The sun’s cup and its southerly course.88 9.5. Stesichorus’ account of the sun’s voyage in a cup.88 9.6. Hesiod’s house of Night in the light of the ‘uni-polar’ model.89 9.7. The sun’s cup and Heracles.93 9.8. Iconographical testimonies for the sun in a cup.94 9.9. The Presocratic tradition of the sun’s bowl. 94 9.10. Non-Greek traditions of the sun travelling in a boat.95 9.11. Conclusion.96 10. Liminal imagery in the accounts of
solar movement assimilated to the world of the dead. 99 10.1. Hesiods’ concept of the daylight/night exchange.99 10.2. Corresponding models in Mesopotamian tradition. 100 10.3. Homer, Hesiod and the liminal features in Hades. 101 10.4. Gates of the otherworld assimilated to the gates of the sun. 102 10.5. The Pylian gates. 103 10.6. The White Rock and the Odyssey. 105 10.7. Pherecydes’ gates. 106 10.8. Conclusion.106 11. Aea and the voyage of the Argonauts.109 11.1. The return of the
Argonauts. 110 11.2. Circe, Calypso and the Argonauts’ return voyage.112 11.3. Conclusion. 114 viii
Contents 12. World of the Dead at the Antipodes. 115 12.1. Hades at the antipodes conceived in tenns of the diurnal solar movement. 116 12.2. Later testimonies for an antipodal Hades conceived in terms of solar movement. 117 12.3. Hades at the celestial ‘antipodes’. 118 12.4. The antipodal world of the dead in non-Greek traditions . 118 12.5. Navigating to the Otherworld in Greek and non-Greek traditions. 119 12.6. Conclusion.121 13. Beyond Odysseus: Gilgameš. 123 13.1. Gilgameš breaking a path for Odysseus. 124 13.2. The twin mountain.125 13.3. Scorpion-
men. 126 13.4. Gilgameš on the diurnal course of the sun. 128 13.5. Gilgameš arrives at the mouth of the rivers.129 13.6. Dilmun. 130 13.7. ‘The mouth of the rivers’ outside the Mesopotamian tradition. 132 13.8. From Gilgameš to Odysseus.133 13.9. Conclusion.135 14. Beyond Odysseus: Alexander.137 14.1. Hellenistic tradition.137 14.2. Land of Darkness. 138 14.3.
Mount Musas.139 14.4. Mount Musas in later tradition.140 14.5. Alexander in the far north in the Islamic tradition. 141 14.6. Conclusion.143 15. Conclusion.145 15.1. An outline of the main argument of the book. 145 15.2. The ‘practical’ main points of the book.148 15.3. Afinal word.148 List of citations.151 Appendix 1. Diurnal solar movement in Mesopotamian
tradition. 187 ALL Solar mountains and gates.187 Al.2. Interacting conceptual domains: solar movement and eschatology.188 A1.3. The Mesopotamian sun-god’s ‘house of Night’.188 Appendix 2. Diurnal solar movement in Egyptian tradition.191 A2.1. Books of the Netherworld.191 A2.2. Gates and mountains.191 A2.3. The horizon-sign.193 Index.195 ix |
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geographic | Griechenland Altertum (DE-588)4093976-5 gnd |
geographic_facet | Griechenland Altertum |
id | DE-604.BV047465144 |
illustrated | Not Illustrated |
index_date | 2024-07-03T18:07:34Z |
indexdate | 2024-07-10T09:12:54Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9781407358628 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-032866869 |
oclc_num | 1269389343 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-12 DE-M491 DE-19 DE-BY-UBM |
owner_facet | DE-12 DE-M491 DE-19 DE-BY-UBM |
physical | xiii, 198 Seiten Diagramme |
psigel | gbd_4_2109 BSB_NED_20211012 |
publishDate | 2021 |
publishDateSearch | 2021 |
publishDateSort | 2021 |
publisher | BAR Publishing |
record_format | marc |
series | BAR international series |
series2 | BAR international series |
spelling | Bilić, Tomislav Verfasser (DE-588)1030534071 aut The land of the solstices myth, geography and astronomy in ancient Greece Tomislav Bilić Oxford BAR Publishing 2021 xiii, 198 Seiten Diagramme txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier BAR international series 3039 Astronomie (DE-588)4003311-9 gnd rswk-swf Geografie (DE-588)4020216-1 gnd rswk-swf Sonnenwende (DE-588)4369408-1 gnd rswk-swf Mythologie (DE-588)4041005-5 gnd rswk-swf Griechenland Altertum (DE-588)4093976-5 gnd rswk-swf Astronomy, Greek Spherical astronomy / Early works to 1800 Mythology, Greek Spherical astronomy Early works Geographie, griechisch (DE-2581)TH000007603 gbd Astronomie (DE-2581)TH000007322 gbd Mythologie der Griechen (DE-2581)TH000006466 gbd Griechenland Altertum (DE-588)4093976-5 g Mythologie (DE-588)4041005-5 s Sonnenwende (DE-588)4369408-1 s Astronomie (DE-588)4003311-9 s Geografie (DE-588)4020216-1 s DE-604 Erscheint auch als Online-Ausgabe 978-1-4073-5863-5 BAR international series 3039 (DE-604)BV023549802 3039 Digitalisierung BSB München - ADAM Catalogue Enrichment application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=032866869&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Bilić, Tomislav The land of the solstices myth, geography and astronomy in ancient Greece BAR international series Astronomie (DE-588)4003311-9 gnd Geografie (DE-588)4020216-1 gnd Sonnenwende (DE-588)4369408-1 gnd Mythologie (DE-588)4041005-5 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4003311-9 (DE-588)4020216-1 (DE-588)4369408-1 (DE-588)4041005-5 (DE-588)4093976-5 |
title | The land of the solstices myth, geography and astronomy in ancient Greece |
title_auth | The land of the solstices myth, geography and astronomy in ancient Greece |
title_exact_search | The land of the solstices myth, geography and astronomy in ancient Greece |
title_exact_search_txtP | The land of the solstices myth, geography and astronomy in ancient Greece |
title_full | The land of the solstices myth, geography and astronomy in ancient Greece Tomislav Bilić |
title_fullStr | The land of the solstices myth, geography and astronomy in ancient Greece Tomislav Bilić |
title_full_unstemmed | The land of the solstices myth, geography and astronomy in ancient Greece Tomislav Bilić |
title_short | The land of the solstices |
title_sort | the land of the solstices myth geography and astronomy in ancient greece |
title_sub | myth, geography and astronomy in ancient Greece |
topic | Astronomie (DE-588)4003311-9 gnd Geografie (DE-588)4020216-1 gnd Sonnenwende (DE-588)4369408-1 gnd Mythologie (DE-588)4041005-5 gnd |
topic_facet | Astronomie Geografie Sonnenwende Mythologie Griechenland Altertum |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=032866869&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
volume_link | (DE-604)BV023549802 |
work_keys_str_mv | AT bilictomislav thelandofthesolsticesmythgeographyandastronomyinancientgreece |