Browse
Publications
Preprints
About
About UCL Open: Env.
Aims and Scope
Editorial Board
Indexing
APCs
How to cite
Publishing policies
Editorial policy
Peer review policy
Equality, Diversity & Inclusion
About UCL Press
Contact us
For authors
Information for authors
How it works
Benefits of publishing with us
Submit
How to submit
Preparing your manuscript
Article types
Open Data
ORCID
APCs
Contributor agreement
For reviewers
Information for reviewers
Review process
How to peer review
Peer review policy
My ScienceOpen
Sign in
Register
Dashboard
Search
Browse
Publications
Preprints
About
About UCL Open: Env.
Aims and Scope
Editorial Board
Indexing
APCs
How to cite
Publishing policies
Editorial policy
Peer review policy
Equality, Diversity & Inclusion
About UCL Press
Contact us
For authors
Information for authors
How it works
Benefits of publishing with us
Submit
How to submit
Preparing your manuscript
Article types
Open Data
ORCID
APCs
Contributor agreement
For reviewers
Information for reviewers
Review process
How to peer review
Peer review policy
My ScienceOpen
Sign in
Register
Dashboard
Search
9
views
0
references
Top references
cited by
0
Cite as...
0 reviews
Review
0
comments
Comment
0
recommends
+1
Recommend
0
collections
Add to
0
shares
Share
Twitter
Sina Weibo
Facebook
Email
2,036
similar
All similar
Record
: found
Abstract
: not found
Book
: not found
Lived Religion in the Ancient Mediterranean World
edited_book
Editor(s):
Valentino Gasparini
,
Maik Patzelt
,
Rubina Raja
,
Anna-Katharina Rieger
,
Jörg Rüpke
,
Emiliano Urciuoli
Publication date:
April 06 2020
Publisher:
De Gruyter
Read this book at
Publisher
Further versions
open (via page says license)
oa repository (via OAI-PMH doi match)
oa repository (via OAI-PMH doi match)
oa repository (via OAI-PMH title match)
oa repository (via OAI-PMH title match)
oa repository (via OAI-PMH doi match)
Powered by
Buy book
Review
Review book
Invite someone to review
Bookmark
Cite as...
There is no author summary for this book yet. Authors can add summaries to their books on ScienceOpen to make them more accessible to a non-specialist audience.
Related collections
Trivent Medieval
Author and book information
Book
ISBN (Electronic):
9783110557596
Publication date:
April 06 2020
DOI:
10.1515/9783110557596
SO-VID:
66b1b9ec-e0de-4912-bf32-a0f097cd19f2
History
Data availability:
Comments
Comment on this book
Sign in to comment
Book chapters
pp. I
Frontmatter
pp. V
Contents
pp. 1
Pursuing lived ancient religion
pp. 11
Introduction to Section 1
pp. 23
(Re-)modelling religious experience: some experiments with hymnic form in the imperial period
pp. 49
Looking at the Shepherd of Hermas through the experience of lived religion
pp. 71
“They are not the words of a rational man”: ecstatic prophecy in Montanism
pp. 87
Kyrios and despotes: addresses to deities and religious experiences
pp. 117
About servants and flagellants: Seneca’s Capitol description and the variety of ‘ordinary’ religious experience at Rome
pp. 137
The experience of pilgrimage in the Roman Empire: communitas, paideiā, and piety-signaling
pp. 157
Experiencing curses: neurobehavioral traits of ritual and spatiality in the Roman Empire
pp. 181
Ego-documents on religious experiences in Paul’s Letters: 2 Corinthians 12 and related texts
pp. 201
Introduction to Section 2
pp. 209
Hand in hand: rethinking anatomical votives as material things
pp. 237
The “lived” body in pain: illness and initiation in Lucian’s Podagra and Aelius Aristides’ Hieroi Logoi
pp. 261
Divinity refracted: extended agency and the cult of Symeon Stylites the Elder
pp. 287
Food for the body, the body as food: Roman martyrs and the paradox of consumption
pp. 309
Introduction to Section 3
pp. 319
Renewing the past: Rufinus’ appropriation of the sacred site of Panóias (Vila Real, Portugal)
pp. 351
This god is your god, this god is my god: local identities at sacralized places in Roman Syria
pp. 385
Come and dine with us: invitations to ritual dining as part of social strategies in sacred spaces in Palmyra
pp. 405
Does religion matter? Life, death, and interaction in the Roman suburbium
pp. 437
Introduction to Section 4
pp. 447
Symbolic mourning
pp. 469
P.Oxy. 1.5 and the Codex Sangermanensis as “visionary living texts”: visionary habitus and processes of “textualization” and/or “scripturalization” in Late Antiquity
pp. 493
To convert or not to convert: the appropriation of Jewish rituals, customs and beliefs by non-Jews
pp. 517
Emperor Julian, an appropriated word, and a different view of 4th-century “lived religion”
pp. 531
The appropriation of the book of Jonah in 4th century Christianity by Theodore of Mopsuestia and Jerome of Stridon
pp. 553
Weapons of the (Christian) weak: pedagogy of trickery in Early Christian texts
pp. 581
Biographical Notes
pp. 587
Index
Similar content
2,036
Sociological Approaches to Leaving Religion
Authors:
In Pursuit of Consonance: Science and Religion in Modern Works of tafsīr
Authors:
Ayman A Shabana
Investigating ancient cemeteries on the island of Astypalaia, Greece
Authors:
Simon Hillson
See all similar