Nikolaos Papazarkadas
Sacred and Public Land in Ancient Athens
Nikolaos Papazarkadas
Sacred and Public Land in Ancient Athens
- Gebundenes Buch
- Merkliste
- Auf die Merkliste
- Bewerten Bewerten
- Teilen
- Produkt teilen
- Produkterinnerung
- Produkterinnerung
This book examines the ways by which the city-state of Athens, and its various associations, administrative and religious, managed their landed assets. It investigates the close connection between income and sacred property and it analyses notions of sacred and public ownership in antiquity by deconstructing earlier anachronistic interpretations.
Andere Kunden interessierten sich auch für
- Galit Noga-BanaiSacred Stimulus146,99 €
- Matthew TrundleGreek Mercenaries201,99 €
- Henry LansdellThe Sacred Tenth: Or, Studies in Tithe-giving, Ancient and Modern41,99 €
- Asylbek EshievAncient sacred world42,99 €
- AnonymousThe Classical Gazetteer: A Dictionary of Ancient Geography, Sacred and Profane39,99 €
- Augustus MitchellMitchell's Ancient Geography, Designed for Academies, Schools and Families; a System of Classical and Sacred Geography ... Together With an Ancient At36,99 €
- Lucia GahlinMyths & Monuments of Ancient Egypt: Two Illustrated Encyclopedias: A Guide to the History, Mythology, Sacred Sites and Everyday Lives of a Fascinating15,99 €
-
-
-
This book examines the ways by which the city-state of Athens, and its various associations, administrative and religious, managed their landed assets. It investigates the close connection between income and sacred property and it analyses notions of sacred and public ownership in antiquity by deconstructing earlier anachronistic interpretations.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Oxford University Press, USA
- Seitenzahl: 416
- Erscheinungstermin: 17. Dezember 2011
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 218mm x 142mm x 28mm
- Gewicht: 612g
- ISBN-13: 9780199694006
- ISBN-10: 0199694001
- Artikelnr.: 34552370
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
- Verlag: Oxford University Press, USA
- Seitenzahl: 416
- Erscheinungstermin: 17. Dezember 2011
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 218mm x 142mm x 28mm
- Gewicht: 612g
- ISBN-13: 9780199694006
- ISBN-10: 0199694001
- Artikelnr.: 34552370
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
Nikolaos Papazarkadas has taught at Oxford and Trinity College Dublin, and is currently an Assistant Professor of Classics at the University of California at Berkeley. He specializes in Greek Epigraphy and has published extensively on inscriptions from Athens and the Cyclades.
* 1. Introduction: Modern scholarly responses
* 2. The Athenian polis as administrator of sacred realty
* 2.1.: A preliminary note
* 2.2.: The landed wealth of Athena Polias and the Other Gods
* 2.3.: The sacred property of the Eleusinian Goddesses: administrative
aspects
* 2.4.: The new polis-gods as proprietors of realty
* 2.5.: Athenaion Politeia 47.4-5 and the leasing of sacred lands in
Classical Athens
* 2.6.: Investing sacred rentals
* 2.7.: The economic significance of sacred rentals
* 3. The constitutional subunits of Athens as administrators of realty
* 3.1.: The landed assets of the Attic tribes
* 3.1.i.: The early phase
* 3.1.ii.: The Athenian reacquisition of Oropos and the tribal land
allotment
* 3.1.iii.: Administration of phyle-properties and tribal economics
* 3.2.: The real property of the Attic demes
* 3.2.i.: Prolegomenon
* 3.2. ii.: The mechanism of leasing
* 3.2.iii.: Other forms of deme property administration
* 3.2.iv.: Sales of lands controlled by demes
* 3.2.v.: Rentals, deme economics, and religion
* 3.2.vi.: Non-sacral deme property
* 3.2.vii.: Lessees and purchasers of deme properties
* 3.2.viii.: The territorial aspect of the Attic demes
* 3.2.ix.: Epilogue
* 4. The non-constitutional associations of Athens as administrators of
realty
* 4.1.: The real property of the Attic phratries
* 4.1.i.: Types of phratric realty
* 4.1.ii.: Exploitation of phratric realty
* 4.2.: The Attic gene and their landed property
* 4.2.i.: Introductory remark
* 4.2.ii.: The landed wealth of the Salaminioi: a case-study
* 4.2.iii.: Gentilician property: beyond the Salaminioi
* 4.2.iv.: An overview
* 4.3.: The real property of the Attic orgeones
* 4.3.i.: Leasing out orgeonic property
* 4.3.ii.: Sales of orgeonic property and the problem of alienation
* 4.3.iii.: Lessees and purchasers of orgeonic property: some
considerations
* 4.4.: Other types of associations as property administrators
* 5. Public, non-sacred, realty in ancient Athens
* 5.1.: The evidence
* 5.2.: An interpretative analysis
* 6. Conspectus
* Appendices
* Appendix I:: The Sacred Orgas
* Appendix II:: Moriai: Sacred arboriculture in Classical Athens
* Appendix III:: IG
II2 1593 revisited
* Appendix IV:: The Theodoreion of the Prasieis
* Appendix V:: The genos of the Pyrrhakidai
* Appendix VI:: The split of the Salaminioi and the eponymous archon
Phanomachos
* Appendix VII:: Catalogue of lessees and guarantors of
polis-controlled temene
* Bibliography
* 2. The Athenian polis as administrator of sacred realty
* 2.1.: A preliminary note
* 2.2.: The landed wealth of Athena Polias and the Other Gods
* 2.3.: The sacred property of the Eleusinian Goddesses: administrative
aspects
* 2.4.: The new polis-gods as proprietors of realty
* 2.5.: Athenaion Politeia 47.4-5 and the leasing of sacred lands in
Classical Athens
* 2.6.: Investing sacred rentals
* 2.7.: The economic significance of sacred rentals
* 3. The constitutional subunits of Athens as administrators of realty
* 3.1.: The landed assets of the Attic tribes
* 3.1.i.: The early phase
* 3.1.ii.: The Athenian reacquisition of Oropos and the tribal land
allotment
* 3.1.iii.: Administration of phyle-properties and tribal economics
* 3.2.: The real property of the Attic demes
* 3.2.i.: Prolegomenon
* 3.2. ii.: The mechanism of leasing
* 3.2.iii.: Other forms of deme property administration
* 3.2.iv.: Sales of lands controlled by demes
* 3.2.v.: Rentals, deme economics, and religion
* 3.2.vi.: Non-sacral deme property
* 3.2.vii.: Lessees and purchasers of deme properties
* 3.2.viii.: The territorial aspect of the Attic demes
* 3.2.ix.: Epilogue
* 4. The non-constitutional associations of Athens as administrators of
realty
* 4.1.: The real property of the Attic phratries
* 4.1.i.: Types of phratric realty
* 4.1.ii.: Exploitation of phratric realty
* 4.2.: The Attic gene and their landed property
* 4.2.i.: Introductory remark
* 4.2.ii.: The landed wealth of the Salaminioi: a case-study
* 4.2.iii.: Gentilician property: beyond the Salaminioi
* 4.2.iv.: An overview
* 4.3.: The real property of the Attic orgeones
* 4.3.i.: Leasing out orgeonic property
* 4.3.ii.: Sales of orgeonic property and the problem of alienation
* 4.3.iii.: Lessees and purchasers of orgeonic property: some
considerations
* 4.4.: Other types of associations as property administrators
* 5. Public, non-sacred, realty in ancient Athens
* 5.1.: The evidence
* 5.2.: An interpretative analysis
* 6. Conspectus
* Appendices
* Appendix I:: The Sacred Orgas
* Appendix II:: Moriai: Sacred arboriculture in Classical Athens
* Appendix III:: IG
II2 1593 revisited
* Appendix IV:: The Theodoreion of the Prasieis
* Appendix V:: The genos of the Pyrrhakidai
* Appendix VI:: The split of the Salaminioi and the eponymous archon
Phanomachos
* Appendix VII:: Catalogue of lessees and guarantors of
polis-controlled temene
* Bibliography
* 1. Introduction: Modern scholarly responses
* 2. The Athenian polis as administrator of sacred realty
* 2.1.: A preliminary note
* 2.2.: The landed wealth of Athena Polias and the Other Gods
* 2.3.: The sacred property of the Eleusinian Goddesses: administrative
aspects
* 2.4.: The new polis-gods as proprietors of realty
* 2.5.: Athenaion Politeia 47.4-5 and the leasing of sacred lands in
Classical Athens
* 2.6.: Investing sacred rentals
* 2.7.: The economic significance of sacred rentals
* 3. The constitutional subunits of Athens as administrators of realty
* 3.1.: The landed assets of the Attic tribes
* 3.1.i.: The early phase
* 3.1.ii.: The Athenian reacquisition of Oropos and the tribal land
allotment
* 3.1.iii.: Administration of phyle-properties and tribal economics
* 3.2.: The real property of the Attic demes
* 3.2.i.: Prolegomenon
* 3.2. ii.: The mechanism of leasing
* 3.2.iii.: Other forms of deme property administration
* 3.2.iv.: Sales of lands controlled by demes
* 3.2.v.: Rentals, deme economics, and religion
* 3.2.vi.: Non-sacral deme property
* 3.2.vii.: Lessees and purchasers of deme properties
* 3.2.viii.: The territorial aspect of the Attic demes
* 3.2.ix.: Epilogue
* 4. The non-constitutional associations of Athens as administrators of
realty
* 4.1.: The real property of the Attic phratries
* 4.1.i.: Types of phratric realty
* 4.1.ii.: Exploitation of phratric realty
* 4.2.: The Attic gene and their landed property
* 4.2.i.: Introductory remark
* 4.2.ii.: The landed wealth of the Salaminioi: a case-study
* 4.2.iii.: Gentilician property: beyond the Salaminioi
* 4.2.iv.: An overview
* 4.3.: The real property of the Attic orgeones
* 4.3.i.: Leasing out orgeonic property
* 4.3.ii.: Sales of orgeonic property and the problem of alienation
* 4.3.iii.: Lessees and purchasers of orgeonic property: some
considerations
* 4.4.: Other types of associations as property administrators
* 5. Public, non-sacred, realty in ancient Athens
* 5.1.: The evidence
* 5.2.: An interpretative analysis
* 6. Conspectus
* Appendices
* Appendix I:: The Sacred Orgas
* Appendix II:: Moriai: Sacred arboriculture in Classical Athens
* Appendix III:: IG
II2 1593 revisited
* Appendix IV:: The Theodoreion of the Prasieis
* Appendix V:: The genos of the Pyrrhakidai
* Appendix VI:: The split of the Salaminioi and the eponymous archon
Phanomachos
* Appendix VII:: Catalogue of lessees and guarantors of
polis-controlled temene
* Bibliography
* 2. The Athenian polis as administrator of sacred realty
* 2.1.: A preliminary note
* 2.2.: The landed wealth of Athena Polias and the Other Gods
* 2.3.: The sacred property of the Eleusinian Goddesses: administrative
aspects
* 2.4.: The new polis-gods as proprietors of realty
* 2.5.: Athenaion Politeia 47.4-5 and the leasing of sacred lands in
Classical Athens
* 2.6.: Investing sacred rentals
* 2.7.: The economic significance of sacred rentals
* 3. The constitutional subunits of Athens as administrators of realty
* 3.1.: The landed assets of the Attic tribes
* 3.1.i.: The early phase
* 3.1.ii.: The Athenian reacquisition of Oropos and the tribal land
allotment
* 3.1.iii.: Administration of phyle-properties and tribal economics
* 3.2.: The real property of the Attic demes
* 3.2.i.: Prolegomenon
* 3.2. ii.: The mechanism of leasing
* 3.2.iii.: Other forms of deme property administration
* 3.2.iv.: Sales of lands controlled by demes
* 3.2.v.: Rentals, deme economics, and religion
* 3.2.vi.: Non-sacral deme property
* 3.2.vii.: Lessees and purchasers of deme properties
* 3.2.viii.: The territorial aspect of the Attic demes
* 3.2.ix.: Epilogue
* 4. The non-constitutional associations of Athens as administrators of
realty
* 4.1.: The real property of the Attic phratries
* 4.1.i.: Types of phratric realty
* 4.1.ii.: Exploitation of phratric realty
* 4.2.: The Attic gene and their landed property
* 4.2.i.: Introductory remark
* 4.2.ii.: The landed wealth of the Salaminioi: a case-study
* 4.2.iii.: Gentilician property: beyond the Salaminioi
* 4.2.iv.: An overview
* 4.3.: The real property of the Attic orgeones
* 4.3.i.: Leasing out orgeonic property
* 4.3.ii.: Sales of orgeonic property and the problem of alienation
* 4.3.iii.: Lessees and purchasers of orgeonic property: some
considerations
* 4.4.: Other types of associations as property administrators
* 5. Public, non-sacred, realty in ancient Athens
* 5.1.: The evidence
* 5.2.: An interpretative analysis
* 6. Conspectus
* Appendices
* Appendix I:: The Sacred Orgas
* Appendix II:: Moriai: Sacred arboriculture in Classical Athens
* Appendix III:: IG
II2 1593 revisited
* Appendix IV:: The Theodoreion of the Prasieis
* Appendix V:: The genos of the Pyrrhakidai
* Appendix VI:: The split of the Salaminioi and the eponymous archon
Phanomachos
* Appendix VII:: Catalogue of lessees and guarantors of
polis-controlled temene
* Bibliography