"Aeolic and Aeolians explores the origin of an ancient Greek language and the beginnings and evolution of the community of its speakers - the Aeolians. Roger Woodard argues that the starting point for both is situated in Asia Minor during the period of the Late Bronze Age"--
"Aeolic and Aeolians explores the origin of an ancient Greek language and the beginnings and evolution of the community of its speakers - the Aeolians. Roger Woodard argues that the starting point for both is situated in Asia Minor during the period of the Late Bronze Age"--Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Roger D. Woodard is the Andrew van Vranken Raymond Professor of the Classics at the University of Buffalo (The State University of New York). He has held fellowships and visiting appointments at, among other institutions, the Center for Hellenic Studies of Harvard University, the American Academy in Rome, and the University of Oxford. Woodard is author or editor of numerous books, including Divination and Prophecy in the Ancient Greek World (2023, CUP); The Textualization of the Greek Alphabet (2014, CUP); Myth, Ritual, and the Warrior in Roman and Indo-European Antiquity (2013, CUP); The Cambridge Companion to Greek Mythology (2007, CUP). He is series editor of Cambridge's Elements in Greek and Roman Mythology.
Inhaltsangabe
Introduction Part I. Aeolian and Aeolic: 1. Archaeology, language, and an Aeolian migration 2. The Aeolic dialects 3. More linguistic matters: Aeolic phonology and morphology as language complexification 4. Mycenaean dialects and Despót¿s 5. Aeolian patronymics and the Mycenaean Hekwetai 6. Mycenaean Epíkouros Part II. Aeolian Origins in Myth: 7. Aeolian self-identity and metapontium 8. Magnesia on the Maeander: Cretans, Aeolians, and a white-horse man 9. Metapontium: night and day black and white 10. Boeotian foundation Mûthoi: from Dioscuri to Cabiri Part III. Anatolian and Aeolian Myth and Cult: 11. Asian goddesses and bees 12. Ephesian Artemis' 'breasts' and the Hittite Kura 13. Aia and Argonauts 14. Parnassian divining bee nymphs and lot-divination 15. Honey and Theogonies: the west face of Sipylus 16. Bee and bird, Linear B Du-ma/Da-ma, Luvo-Hittite Dammara-, and Artemis/Artimis/Artamis 17. Conclusion.
Introduction Part I. Aeolian and Aeolic: 1. Archaeology, language, and an Aeolian migration 2. The Aeolic dialects 3. More linguistic matters: Aeolic phonology and morphology as language complexification 4. Mycenaean dialects and Despót¿s 5. Aeolian patronymics and the Mycenaean Hekwetai 6. Mycenaean Epíkouros Part II. Aeolian Origins in Myth: 7. Aeolian self-identity and metapontium 8. Magnesia on the Maeander: Cretans, Aeolians, and a white-horse man 9. Metapontium: night and day black and white 10. Boeotian foundation Mûthoi: from Dioscuri to Cabiri Part III. Anatolian and Aeolian Myth and Cult: 11. Asian goddesses and bees 12. Ephesian Artemis' 'breasts' and the Hittite Kura 13. Aia and Argonauts 14. Parnassian divining bee nymphs and lot-divination 15. Honey and Theogonies: the west face of Sipylus 16. Bee and bird, Linear B Du-ma/Da-ma, Luvo-Hittite Dammara-, and Artemis/Artimis/Artamis 17. Conclusion.
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