EPOT seminars: "Dall'archeologia biblica al turismo religioso: vie di pace in Medio Oriente " - Lorenzo Verderame (30/05/23) - Sapienza (original) (raw)
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For this second edition of the Summer School in Religious Studies we want to focus on the interpreters and mediators between God and the community of believers. Which part of the community is legitimated to interpret the word of God, and – more radically – to speak with God and in the name of God? Who has the faculty and the power to obtain from God what the people need for the salvation? If everybody can speak to God, what is the role of the privileged charismas that the community recognizes? How are these charismas to be found and organized? Can a charisma be transmitted? What kind of conflicts can arise in the community between such different charismas and roles? The Summer School 2017 focuses on some important themes in the history of Christianity, but also of Hebraism and Islam - religious systems with strong links with the Christian world. The Summer School is meant to investigate the different meanings of priesthood and prophetism, and their polarization in these three religious traditions. Our aim is to consider the tensions and conflicts between the different charismas and their owners, and to enlighten historical paths by which they were (or weren’t) able to overcome these tensions.
Les Mélanges de l’École française de Rome – Antiquité (MEFRA), 2018
Villa A in Dragoncello (Acilia). Datas from the excavations and the study of the finds. Villa A of Dragoncello, perhaps the oldest among those found in the area between Via Ostiense and the river Tiber, has been the subject of two excavation campaigns in 2016 and 2017, that have permitted the excavations to other sectors extending from A. Pellegrino in the ‘80s and ‘90s of the last century. The excavations, preceded by geophysical prospecting, involved the area around the peristyle (sector A), the southern limit of the villa (sector B) and a rectangular underground environment (called V), partly still to be excavated, internally divided into 12 cells per side, and whose function is still uncertain, totaling 582 square meters. The stratigraphic data and the materials found provided an estimation for the periods of construction, use and abandonment of the villa and of the necropolis that overlapped the structures of sector A, dated between the end of the III century B.C. and the late Roman period. The continuation of the excavations is planned in 2019 and 2020, as well as the surveys aimed at exploring the surrounding territory up to the ancient Ficana site, and conducting a census of the rural structures and the territory storage areas.