Some Considerations about Toponymic and Other Local Deities in the Roman Near East

Patterns of worship reflect ancient society. By studying the ways in which various deities received their cult, lessons can be learned about the local societies in which the worshippers lived. This paper focuses on what is perhaps the most obvious method to turn any deity into a specifically local o...

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Main Author: Ted Kaizer
Format: Article
Language:Italian
Published: Salvatore Sciascia Editore 2022-12-01
Series:Mythos
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/mythos/5218
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author Ted Kaizer
author_facet Ted Kaizer
author_sort Ted Kaizer
collection DOAJ
description Patterns of worship reflect ancient society. By studying the ways in which various deities received their cult, lessons can be learned about the local societies in which the worshippers lived. This paper focuses on what is perhaps the most obvious method to turn any deity into a specifically local one, namely the use of the toponymic epithet. By concentrating on the local perspective of religious life in the Roman Near East, and in particular on the close connection between deity and place (also related to questions of religious topography and the formation of religious identities), the paper aims to address a number of issues that play an important role in current debates about the relationship between localism, regionalism and globalism.
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spelling doaj.art-a56fa796951442faabc7f235b21df4222023-04-04T09:49:23ZitaSalvatore Sciascia EditoreMythos1972-25162037-77462022-12-011610.4000/mythos.5218Some Considerations about Toponymic and Other Local Deities in the Roman Near EastTed KaizerPatterns of worship reflect ancient society. By studying the ways in which various deities received their cult, lessons can be learned about the local societies in which the worshippers lived. This paper focuses on what is perhaps the most obvious method to turn any deity into a specifically local one, namely the use of the toponymic epithet. By concentrating on the local perspective of religious life in the Roman Near East, and in particular on the close connection between deity and place (also related to questions of religious topography and the formation of religious identities), the paper aims to address a number of issues that play an important role in current debates about the relationship between localism, regionalism and globalism.http://journals.openedition.org/mythos/5218toponymicepithetslocalityZeusTyche
spellingShingle Ted Kaizer
Some Considerations about Toponymic and Other Local Deities in the Roman Near East
Mythos
toponymic
epithets
locality
Zeus
Tyche
title Some Considerations about Toponymic and Other Local Deities in the Roman Near East
title_full Some Considerations about Toponymic and Other Local Deities in the Roman Near East
title_fullStr Some Considerations about Toponymic and Other Local Deities in the Roman Near East
title_full_unstemmed Some Considerations about Toponymic and Other Local Deities in the Roman Near East
title_short Some Considerations about Toponymic and Other Local Deities in the Roman Near East
title_sort some considerations about toponymic and other local deities in the roman near east
topic toponymic
epithets
locality
Zeus
Tyche
url http://journals.openedition.org/mythos/5218
work_keys_str_mv AT tedkaizer someconsiderationsabouttoponymicandotherlocaldeitiesintheromanneareast