Near Eastern and Egyptian Iconography for the Anthropomorphic Representation of Female Deities in Cypriote Iron Age Sanctuaries

Archaic and Classical anthropomorphic votive sculpture from Cypriote sanctuaries of female deities includes some figures which could represent the goddess proper. The identification of the latter, however, is often unclear and ambiguous since exclusively divine iconography and attributes are rare. T...

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Main Author: Ulbrich, A
Other Authors: Thuesen, I
Format: Book section
Published: Department of History and Cultures, University of Bologna/ Eisenbrauns Bologna 2016
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author Ulbrich, A
author2 Thuesen, I
author_facet Thuesen, I
Ulbrich, A
author_sort Ulbrich, A
collection OXFORD
description Archaic and Classical anthropomorphic votive sculpture from Cypriote sanctuaries of female deities includes some figures which could represent the goddess proper. The identification of the latter, however, is often unclear and ambiguous since exclusively divine iconography and attributes are rare. This also applies to the so-called Astarteand dea tyria gravida figurines, but not to Hathor-capitals, which all are the focus of this paper. The distribution of these types in Cypriote sanctuaries, their ways of transmission, adaptation and adaption, as well as their religious meaning and social significance will be addressed in an attempt to elucidate the question whether their appearance in Cypriote sanctuaries is due to an actual import of foreign cults or whether, and by whom, they were just adopted and adapted for Cypriote cultic needs.
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spelling oxford-uuid:205817a3-951d-431d-97e6-16ca40c339de2022-03-26T11:27:06ZNear Eastern and Egyptian Iconography for the Anthropomorphic Representation of Female Deities in Cypriote Iron Age SanctuariesBook sectionhttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_3248uuid:205817a3-951d-431d-97e6-16ca40c339deSymplectic Elements at OxfordDepartment of History and Cultures, University of Bologna/ Eisenbrauns Bologna2016Ulbrich, AThuesen, IArchaic and Classical anthropomorphic votive sculpture from Cypriote sanctuaries of female deities includes some figures which could represent the goddess proper. The identification of the latter, however, is often unclear and ambiguous since exclusively divine iconography and attributes are rare. This also applies to the so-called Astarteand dea tyria gravida figurines, but not to Hathor-capitals, which all are the focus of this paper. The distribution of these types in Cypriote sanctuaries, their ways of transmission, adaptation and adaption, as well as their religious meaning and social significance will be addressed in an attempt to elucidate the question whether their appearance in Cypriote sanctuaries is due to an actual import of foreign cults or whether, and by whom, they were just adopted and adapted for Cypriote cultic needs.
spellingShingle Ulbrich, A
Near Eastern and Egyptian Iconography for the Anthropomorphic Representation of Female Deities in Cypriote Iron Age Sanctuaries
title Near Eastern and Egyptian Iconography for the Anthropomorphic Representation of Female Deities in Cypriote Iron Age Sanctuaries
title_full Near Eastern and Egyptian Iconography for the Anthropomorphic Representation of Female Deities in Cypriote Iron Age Sanctuaries
title_fullStr Near Eastern and Egyptian Iconography for the Anthropomorphic Representation of Female Deities in Cypriote Iron Age Sanctuaries
title_full_unstemmed Near Eastern and Egyptian Iconography for the Anthropomorphic Representation of Female Deities in Cypriote Iron Age Sanctuaries
title_short Near Eastern and Egyptian Iconography for the Anthropomorphic Representation of Female Deities in Cypriote Iron Age Sanctuaries
title_sort near eastern and egyptian iconography for the anthropomorphic representation of female deities in cypriote iron age sanctuaries
work_keys_str_mv AT ulbricha neareasternandegyptianiconographyfortheanthropomorphicrepresentationoffemaledeitiesincyprioteironagesanctuaries