A Kaleidoscope of Experiences on the Road in Late Antiquity: Graeco-Roman, Christian, and Jewish Literary Texts about Journeys and Travellers' Encounters in the Roman East (original) (raw)

(2022) Cities as Palimpsests. Responses to Antiquity in Eastern Mediterranean Urbanism. Edited by Elizabeth Key Fowden, Suna Cagaptay, Edward Zychowicz-Coghill and Louise Blanke. Oxbow (Open Access - full book available for download)

Series preface viii eries pre ace and Umayyad Spain (Sam Ottewill-Soulsby), an Arabist and historian of the medieval Middle East (Edward Zychowicz-Coghill), an archaeologist working on late antique and early Islamic Jordan and Egypt (Louise Blanke), an architectural historian exploring the transition from Byzantine to Ottoman (Suna a aptay), a late antique historian who has turned her attention to Ottoman Greece (Elizabeth Key Fowden), a PhD student with a background in Classics studying urban planning in nineteenth-and early twentieth-century Italy (Sofia Greaves) and a principal investigator specializing in Roman social history and urban archaeology in Italy (Andrew Wallace-Hadrill). Other Cambridge colleagues joined our discussions on a regular basis, notably Tom Langley, writing a PhD on ideas of the city in Greek Patristic writers, Professor Amira Bennison, a historian of the medieval Maghrib, especially its cities, Professor Rosamond McKitterick, a leading figure in the study of Carolingian France and papal Rome, and Professor Martin Millett, a Roman archaeologist with a longstanding interest in urbanism. We benefited from the support and advice of the members of our Advisory Committee, both in Cambridge (in addition to the above named, Cyprian Broodbank, Robin Cormack, Garth Fowden, Alessandro Launaro, Robin Osborne and John Patterson) and beyond-Luuk de Ligt (Leiden), i dem Kafescio lu (Istanbul), Ray Laurence (Sydney), Keith Lilley (Belfast) and from Oxford, Josephine Quinn, Bryan Ward-Perkins and Chris Wickham. We also enjoyed the invaluable support of two administrators, Nigel Thompson of the Classics Faculty and Beth Clark, whose calm efficiency facilitated conferences and seminars, enabled foreign travel and smoothed contact with the bureaucracies at both ends. We invited many scholars, from Cambridge or further afield, to share their knowledge with us at our weekly seminars. We also organised one-day workshops, including one on the Roman and Islamic city in North Africa and one on Cities and Citizenship after antiquity (that led to an l as special issue) 1 , as well a panel for the 2018 Leeds International Medieval congress on 'Memory' and two three-day conferences, one in Istanbul and one in Rome. The last three underlie the three volumes in the present series. In each of those conferences, the members of our group contributed, but we knew that to cover the ground we needed to bring in international colleagues. The three volumes that constitute the present series are far from exhausting the output of the project, and each of us has papers and monographs in the pipeline or already out. Each of the three volumes has its own set of questions, but together they build up an overriding collective agenda of exploring how the cities of the Greek and Roman past, and such ideas of the city that were articulated around them, have impacted on the city and the idea of the city in later periods.

Review of Travel and Religion in Antiquity

This interdisciplinary collection of essays tackles the complicated and significant role of travel and movement in ancient Mediterranean religions. Its chapters address issues of pilgrimage, travel narratives, ethnography, migration and occupational travel through the examination of literary, epigraphic, papyrological and archaeological sources. Focusing primarily on the eastern Mediterranean, it explores travel in the religious lives of ancient Mesopotamians, Judeans, Greeks, Romans, Nabateans, and Christians. Its chronological, geographic and methodological range is impressive and the chapters only grow stronger when seen in dialogue with one another.

Brill's companion to ancient geography : the inhabited world in Greek and Roman tradition

2016

Brill's Companion to Ancient Geography edited by S. Bianchetti, M. R. Cataudella, H. J. Gehrke is the first collection of studies on historical geography of the ancient world that focuses on a selection of topics considered crucial for understanding the development of geographical thought. In this work, scholars, all of whom are specialists in a variety of fields, examine the interaction of humans with their environment and try to reconstruct the representations of the inhabited world in the works of ancient historians, scientists, and cartographers. Topics include: Eudoxus, Dicaearchus, Eratosthenes, Hipparchus, Agatharchides, Agrippa, Strabo, Pliny and Solinus, Ptolemy, and the Peutinger Map. Other issues are also discussed such as onomastics, the boundaries of states, Pythagorism, sacred itineraries, measurement systems, and the Holy Land.

area, ranging from topics as diverse as the voyage and work of Pytheas of Massalia, the sitting and nature of the Pillars of Heracles, the geographic reception of Greek geography among Christian authors, or the relationship

2019

Oswald Dilke (Greek and Roman Maps, 1985) and, in particular, Pietro Janni ( , Rome 1984), opened a new era of studies in the geographic thought of the ancient Greeks and Romans. Shortly afterwards, interest in the publication and commentary of the texts of the ancient geographers also returned with renewed energy, giving way, among other things, to the wide-ranging projects aimed at the (re)edition of the Greek fragmentary geographers headed by Didier Marcotte (in the context of the Budé Collection) and HansJoachim Gehrke (FGrHist V). This Companion to Greek and Roman Geography should be regarded both as a result and as a testimony of the interest ancient geography has been eliciting in the last 30 years. The three editors are, to a great extent,

FEELING AT HOME: NOTES OF A JOURNEY BY A ROMAN TRAVELLER IN THE 2ND CENTURY PERGAMON

Meltem İzmir Akdeniz Akademisi Dergisi-Journal of the Izmir Mediterranean Academy, 2020

Western Anatolia was one of the first regions to come under the rule of the Roman Empire. For the region, the 2 nd century AD was marked by urban development that accelerated thanks to the ongoing period of peace under the Roman Empire around the Mediterranean. Without the burden of wars, cities concentrated all their efforts on trade and urbanization. While implementing a certain program envisaged by the empire, the ancient Greek cities of Anatolia preserved their identity and culture, while they welcomed the new elements of the Roman identity. Thus, the Roman cities of 2 nd century AD in western Ana-tolia were not created from nothing but rather adapted from a Greek past to a Roman future. In this respect, becoming Roman was equivalent to the creation of a Mediterranean identity through integrating the fragmented identities of the pre-Roman world into a unity. This paper discusses the transformation of post-Hellenistic western Anatolia into the Ro-man Imperial period with the help of an imaginary journey based on historical facts. The discussion focuses on 2 nd Century AD Pergamon to examine urbanization and architecture as transformation tools.