New volume
Religious Life in Ancient Cities, ELECTRUM, 2023, Volume 30. Published online 26 June 2023
see moreReligious Life in Ancient Cities, ELECTRUM, 2023, Volume 30. Published online 26 June 2023
see moreJournal publishes scholarly papers embodying studies in history and culture of Greece, Rome and Near East from the beginning of the First Millennium BC to about AD 400. Contributions are written in English, German, French and Italian. The journal publishes scientific articles and books reviews.
About the journalJournal of Ancient History
Description
Electrum has been published since 1997 by the Department of Ancient History at the Jagiellonian University in Cracow as a collection of papers and monographs. In 2010 it starts as journal with one issue per year.
Journal publishes scholarly papers embodying studies in history and culture of Greece, Rome and Near East from the beginning of the First Millennium BC to about AD 400. Contributions are written in English, German, French and Italian. The journal publishes scientific articles and books reviews.
ISSN: 1897-3426
eISSN: 2084-3909
MNiSW points: 100
UIC ID: 486190
DOI: 10.4467/20800909EL
Editorial team
Affiliation
Jagiellonian University in Kraków
Publication date: 17.05.2024
Editor-in-Chief: Edward Dąbrowa
Cover Design: Barbara Widłak.
Cover photography: The head of the statue of Serapis (photo by M. Bărbulescu)
The work was supported by a grant of the Romanian Ministry of Research, Innovation and Digitization, CNCS – UEFISCDI (project number PN-III-P1-1.1-TE-2021-0165, within PNCDI III), implemented through the Babeș Bolyai University (Cluj-Napoca), PI Dr. Rada Varga.
The research for this publication has been supported by a grant from the Priority Research Area Heritage under the Strategic Programme Excellence Initiative at Jagiellonian University.
Wolfgang Spickermann
ELECTRUM, Volume 31, 2024, pp. 13 - 28
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.24.001.19151Annamária Izabella Pázsint
ELECTRUM, Volume 31, 2024, pp. 29 - 38
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.24.002.19152Ivo Topalilov
ELECTRUM, Volume 31, 2024, pp. 39 - 49
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.24.003.19153Lucrețiu Mihailescu-Bîrliba, Petre Colțeanu
ELECTRUM, Volume 31, 2024, pp. 51 - 62
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.24.004.19154Roxana-Gabriela Curcă
ELECTRUM, Volume 31, 2024, pp. 63 - 69
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.24.005.19155Zdravko Dimitrov
ELECTRUM, Volume 31, 2024, pp. 71 - 82
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.24.006.19156Cristina Crizbășan
ELECTRUM, Volume 31, 2024, pp. 83 - 100
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.24.007.19157Ana Honcu
ELECTRUM, Volume 31, 2024, pp. 101 - 106
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.24.008.19158Sorin Nemeti
ELECTRUM, Volume 31, 2024, pp. 107 - 125
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.24.009.19159Rada Varga, Alexander Rubel, George Bounegru
ELECTRUM, Volume 31, 2024, pp. 127 - 141
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.24.010.19160Péter Kovács
ELECTRUM, Volume 31, 2024, pp. 143 - 151
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.24.011.19161Chiara Cenati, Peter Kruschwitz
ELECTRUM, Volume 31, 2024, pp. 153 - 183
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.24.012.19162Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 31, 2024, pp. 185 - 188
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.24.013.19163Tomasz Grabowski
ELECTRUM, Volume 31, 2024, pp. 189 - 191
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.24.014.19164Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 31, 2024, pp. 193 - 196
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.24.015.19165Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 31, 2024, pp. 197 - 200
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.24.016.19166Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 31, 2024, pp. 201 - 203
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.24.017.19167Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 31, 2024, pp. 205 - 207
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.24.018.19168Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 31, 2024, pp. 209 - 211
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.24.019.19169Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 31, 2024, pp. 213 - 215
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.24.020.19170Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 31, 2024, pp. 185 - 188
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.24.013.19163Tomasz Grabowski
ELECTRUM, Volume 31, 2024, pp. 189 - 191
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.24.014.19164Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 31, 2024, pp. 193 - 196
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.24.015.19165Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 31, 2024, pp. 197 - 200
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.24.016.19166Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 31, 2024, pp. 201 - 203
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.24.017.19167Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 31, 2024, pp. 205 - 207
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.24.018.19168Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 31, 2024, pp. 209 - 211
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.24.019.19169Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 31, 2024, pp. 213 - 215
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.24.020.19170Wolfgang Spickermann
ELECTRUM, Volume 31, 2024, pp. 13 - 28
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.24.001.19151Annamária Izabella Pázsint
ELECTRUM, Volume 31, 2024, pp. 29 - 38
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.24.002.19152Ivo Topalilov
ELECTRUM, Volume 31, 2024, pp. 39 - 49
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.24.003.19153Lucrețiu Mihailescu-Bîrliba, Petre Colțeanu
ELECTRUM, Volume 31, 2024, pp. 51 - 62
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.24.004.19154Roxana-Gabriela Curcă
ELECTRUM, Volume 31, 2024, pp. 63 - 69
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.24.005.19155Zdravko Dimitrov
ELECTRUM, Volume 31, 2024, pp. 71 - 82
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.24.006.19156Cristina Crizbășan
ELECTRUM, Volume 31, 2024, pp. 83 - 100
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.24.007.19157Ana Honcu
ELECTRUM, Volume 31, 2024, pp. 101 - 106
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.24.008.19158Sorin Nemeti
ELECTRUM, Volume 31, 2024, pp. 107 - 125
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.24.009.19159Rada Varga, Alexander Rubel, George Bounegru
ELECTRUM, Volume 31, 2024, pp. 127 - 141
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.24.010.19160Péter Kovács
ELECTRUM, Volume 31, 2024, pp. 143 - 151
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.24.011.19161Chiara Cenati, Peter Kruschwitz
ELECTRUM, Volume 31, 2024, pp. 153 - 183
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.24.012.19162Publication date: 26.06.2023
Editor-in-Chief: Edward Dąbrowa
Cover Design: Barbara Widłak
Cover photography: Sumatar, sacred mount, rock reliefs
The research for this publication has been supported by a grant from the Priority Research Area Heritage under the Strategic Programme Excellence Initiative at Jagiellonian University.
Edward Dąbrowa, Sławomir Sprawski
ELECTRUM, Volume 30, 2023, pp. 7 - 9
Micaela Canopoli
ELECTRUM, Volume 30, 2023, pp. 13 - 36
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.23.001.17318Nanaia is a Babylonian deity who was associated with Artemis in Hellenistic times. She is identified as a moon goddess as well as a deity of love and war, and as a protector of the sovereign and the country. The reason behind the assimilation between this oriental deity and Artemis lay in the commonality of functions between the two. The presence of a goddess called Artemis Nanaia is attested in Attica by an inscription found at Piraeus which is the only testimony of the presence of this cult in Greece. Like the goddess Nanaia, Artemis was a moon goddess, identified as a protector of political order. This function in Attica is expressed by the adjective Boulaia and by the practice, widespread since the second century B.C., of offering a sacrifice to Artemis Boulaia and Artemis Phosphoros before political assemblies in the Athenian Agora.
The aim of this paper is to put into perspective the characteristics of the cults of Artemis Nanaia as attested in two important sanctuaries in the Middle East, including the sanctuary of Nanaia at Susa and the sanctuary of Artemis Nanaia at Dura-Europos, with the testimonies related to the cult of Artemis attested at Piraeus. The testimonies, and the characteristics of the cult attested in these three areas will be analysed together in order to etter understand the reasons behind the dedication of Axios and Kapo and its original location.
Ivo Topalilov
ELECTRUM, Volume 30, 2023, pp. 37 - 53
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.23.002.17319The article deals with the early history of the politeia Messambria Pontica through the prysm of the foundation myth and cult. The almost simultaneous establishment of the cult and myth to the historical founder and mythical eponumous hero-founder attested on the silver coinage of Messambria may refer to a certain need of a group of Messambrian society to present itself in a certain way at-home and abroad. The author elieves that this should be considered within the ethnic discourse between Ionians and Dorians.
Elena Santagati
ELECTRUM, Volume 30, 2023, pp. 55 - 74
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.23.003.17320This paper aims to investigate the reasons why, since the reign of Philip II, the “national” Zeus, venerated on Olympus and Dion and characterized by the oak crown, was abandoned in favor of the Olympian Zeus of Elis, characterized by the olive/oleaster wreath. We notice that while the members of the royal family display, in life and death, an oak wreath as an insignia of their kingship, and at the same time also as a symbol of their highest divinity, the kings themselves issue the image of the panhellenic god with an olive/laurel wreath on their coins.
Stefano G. Caneva
ELECTRUM, Volume 30, 2023, pp. 75 - 101
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.23.004.17321The history of Hellenistic Pergamon is deeply affected by the dual status of a polis that also functioned as a dynastic residence. This overlap between civic and royal institutions significantly impacted the political life of the city. This paper contributes to the ongoing debate about honorific habits and the consolidation of the civic elite of Pergamon by focusing on the triangular interactions between the Attalids, their court, and the polis’ institutions in the period from Eumenes I to Attalos III. To do so, several dossiers concerning the priesthoods and religious liturgies of Attalid Pergamon will be reassessed by paying attention to their tenure, appointment, privileges, and the social groups that held these charges.
Catharine C. Lorber
ELECTRUM, Volume 30, 2023, pp. 103 - 195
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.23.005.17322The paper provides a dossier of honors offered to Seleukid and Ptolemaic kings, preceded by a brief introduction.
Hadrien Bru
ELECTRUM, Volume 30, 2023, pp. 197 - 209
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.23.006.17323In order to study the cult of Zeus Nikatôr, six Greek inscriptions (one from northern Syria and five from southern Anatolia) are gathered and commented. The origin, the diffusion and the longevity of the cult are evoked, since it was vivid until the IIIrd century A.D. in the eastern Mediterranean, mainly in southern Taurus (Pamphylia, Lycia, Pisidia and Phrygia Paroreios). Accordingly, also in connection with onomastics and numismatics, the Seleucid memory and the remembrance of Seleucos I are discussed, from Hellenistic times to the Roman Imperial period, and beyond.
Anna Heller
ELECTRUM, Volume 30, 2023, pp. 211 - 233
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.23.007.17324In ancient Greek cities, the organization of festivals generated its own institutional system, with various officials involved in various aspects of the celebration. One of these officials was the panegyriarch, in charge of the market that took place during the festival. On the basis of a systematic survey of the epigraphic documentation, this paper aims at defining the profile of the individuals attested as panegyriarchs. It presents the chronological and geographical distribution of the evidence, studies the offices associated with that of panegyriarch within civic careers and reflects on the level of prestige of this specific magistracy.
Axel Filges
ELECTRUM, Volume 30, 2023, pp. 235 - 272
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.23.008.17325The interpretation of figures of deities on the reverse of the coins of Asia Minor cities of the imperial period is usually done in several steps. The deity is generally quickly determined. It is difficult, however, to establish the superior intention behind the depiction. Does the figure refer to a real cult statue of the emitting city, is the image ‘only’ a reference to a local cult or was it chosen to symbolise, for instance, political connections of cities?
The essay brings together opinions from 140 years of international numismatic scholarship and thus offers an overview of the changing patterns of interpretation as well as their range in general. In the end, a more conscious approach to the figures of the gods on coins and a more reflective methodological approach are recommended.
Anna Tatarkiewicz
ELECTRUM, Volume 30, 2023, pp. 273 - 292
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.23.009.17326The article addresses the issue of Mithraism in Ostia. It discusses the latest discoveries, the nature of the Mithra cult in Ostia, with particular emphasis on the place of Mithra’s shrines in the city space.
Aleksandra Kubiak-Schneider
ELECTRUM, Volume 30, 2023, pp. 293 - 306
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.23.010.17327The epigraphic record from Palmyra brings light on the organization of the temples: personnel, management of feasts, economy and on the ritual practices towards certain deities like Allat and Shai ‘al-Qaum. These texts were previously called in the research literature “sacred laws”and what the scholarly debate nowadays labels with the term “ritual norms.”The aim of this paper, divided on the temple economy and personnel, and ritual behavior, is to understand through the scraps of information the administration of the Palmyrene temples and processes which shaped the life in the places of worship.
Michael Blömer
ELECTRUM, Volume 30, 2023, pp. 307 - 338
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.23.011.17328Today the city of Ḫarrān/Carrhae is mainly known for the famous battle, in which the Roman general Crassus was defeated by a Parthian army in 53 BCE. However, Ḫarrān was also one of the most important religious centres of North Mesopotamia. Since the Bronze Age, the moon god Sîn of Ḫarrān was popular in the wider region, and it is well known that the late Assyrian and Babylonian kings supported the cult and rebuilt the temple of Sîn. Archaeological evidence and written sources attest to the great popularity of Sîn of Ḫarrān at that time. Much less is known about the development of the cult in the subsequent periods, but the evidence assembled in this paper indicates that it continued to thrive. An important but so far largely ignored source for the study of Sîn are coins, which were minted at Ḫarrān in the second and third century CE. They suggest that some distinctive features of the Iron Age cult still existed in the Roman period. Most important in this regard is the predominance of aniconic symbolism. A cult standard, a crescent on a globe with tassels mounted on a pole, continued to be the main of representation of the god. In addition, two versions of an anthropomorphic image of the god can be traced in the coinage of Ḫarrān. The first shows him as an enthroned mature man. It is based on the model of Zeus, but his attributes identify the god as Sîn. The second version portrays him as a youthful, beardless god.
Late antique sources frequently mention that the people of Ḫarrān remained attached to pagan religion, but the veracity of these accounts must be questioned. A reassessment of the literary and archaeological evidence suggests that the accounts of a pagan survival at Ḫarrān are hyperbolic and exacer ated by negative sentiments towards Ḫarrān among writer from the neighbouring city of Edessa.
Carmen Alarcón Hernández, Fernando Lozano Gómez
ELECTRUM, Volume 30, 2023, pp. 339 - 352
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.23.012.17329There are abundant examples of negative assessments of cultic honors to Roman emperors by nineteenth- and twentieth-century researchers. In the minds of historians raised in modern societies, in which monotheistic Abrahamic religions usually reign supreme, this is a completely understandable a priori approach; nevertheless, it hinders a correct understanding of Roman society in antiquity. This paper examines the need to provide a complex answer to the question of whether the inhabitants of the Roman world really believed in the divinity of their rulers. A complex answer to the question can only emerge from a historical contextualization of the phenomenon under analysis, an examination of the imperial cult within the wider changes that were taking place in Roman religion at the time, and application of the necessary empathetic approach.
Martha W. Baldwin Bowsky
ELECTRUM, Volume 30, 2023, pp. 353 - 399
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.23.013.17330Forty years after the publication of Sanders’ Roman Crete, a broader range of evidence for the imperial cult on Crete is available—temples and other structures, monumental architectural members, imperial altars, portraiture and statuary, coinage, statue and portrait bases, other inscriptions, priest and high priests, members and archons of the Panhellenion, and festivals—and far more places can now be identified as cities participating in the imperial cult. This evidence can be set into multiple Cretan contexts, beginning with the establishment and evolution of the imperial cult across Crete, before locating the imperial cult in the landscape of Roman Crete. The ultimate Cretan contexts are the role of emperor worship in the lives of the island’s population, as it was incorporated into Cretan religious and social systems.
Marco Vitale
ELECTRUM, Volume 30, 2023, pp. 401 - 440
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.23.014.17331The provincial imperial cult represents one of the most relevant expressions of multiform relationship between provincial communities and Roman authorities especially in the East. During the Roman Principate in Syria, we can enumerate seven administrative districts (eparchies) which occur in connection with this political and religious phenomenon. The complicated question of how the province-wide worship of the Imperial family was organised in Roman Levant must be analysed in different terms. Important aspects are the Roman territorial framework of administration, the creation of autonomous city-leagues (koiná) and their cultic functions, the rules of membership within these federal organizations and their self-representation in coinages and inscriptions. On the level of political and financial management, we are dealing with federal officials and the festivities organized by them. Our paper aims to give a detailed overview of the Syrian imperial cult related not only to one specific site, but in the context of a large and culturally complex area.
Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 30, 2023, pp. 441 - 443
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.23.015.17332Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 30, 2023, pp. 445 - 447
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.23.016.17333Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 30, 2023, pp. 449 - 451
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.23.017.17334Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 30, 2023, pp. 453 - 455
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.23.018.17335Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 30, 2023, pp. 457 - 459
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.23.019.17336Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 30, 2023, pp. 461 - 463
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.23.020.17337Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 30, 2023, pp. 465 - 466
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.23.021.17338Chandler A. Collins
ELECTRUM, Volume 30, 2023, pp. 467 - 469
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.23.022.17339Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 30, 2023, pp. 441 - 443
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.23.015.17332Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 30, 2023, pp. 445 - 447
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.23.016.17333Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 30, 2023, pp. 449 - 451
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.23.017.17334Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 30, 2023, pp. 453 - 455
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.23.018.17335Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 30, 2023, pp. 457 - 459
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.23.019.17336Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 30, 2023, pp. 461 - 463
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.23.020.17337Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 30, 2023, pp. 465 - 466
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.23.021.17338Chandler A. Collins
ELECTRUM, Volume 30, 2023, pp. 467 - 469
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.23.022.17339Edward Dąbrowa, Sławomir Sprawski
ELECTRUM, Volume 30, 2023, pp. 7 - 9
Micaela Canopoli
ELECTRUM, Volume 30, 2023, pp. 13 - 36
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.23.001.17318Nanaia is a Babylonian deity who was associated with Artemis in Hellenistic times. She is identified as a moon goddess as well as a deity of love and war, and as a protector of the sovereign and the country. The reason behind the assimilation between this oriental deity and Artemis lay in the commonality of functions between the two. The presence of a goddess called Artemis Nanaia is attested in Attica by an inscription found at Piraeus which is the only testimony of the presence of this cult in Greece. Like the goddess Nanaia, Artemis was a moon goddess, identified as a protector of political order. This function in Attica is expressed by the adjective Boulaia and by the practice, widespread since the second century B.C., of offering a sacrifice to Artemis Boulaia and Artemis Phosphoros before political assemblies in the Athenian Agora.
The aim of this paper is to put into perspective the characteristics of the cults of Artemis Nanaia as attested in two important sanctuaries in the Middle East, including the sanctuary of Nanaia at Susa and the sanctuary of Artemis Nanaia at Dura-Europos, with the testimonies related to the cult of Artemis attested at Piraeus. The testimonies, and the characteristics of the cult attested in these three areas will be analysed together in order to etter understand the reasons behind the dedication of Axios and Kapo and its original location.
Ivo Topalilov
ELECTRUM, Volume 30, 2023, pp. 37 - 53
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.23.002.17319The article deals with the early history of the politeia Messambria Pontica through the prysm of the foundation myth and cult. The almost simultaneous establishment of the cult and myth to the historical founder and mythical eponumous hero-founder attested on the silver coinage of Messambria may refer to a certain need of a group of Messambrian society to present itself in a certain way at-home and abroad. The author elieves that this should be considered within the ethnic discourse between Ionians and Dorians.
Elena Santagati
ELECTRUM, Volume 30, 2023, pp. 55 - 74
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.23.003.17320This paper aims to investigate the reasons why, since the reign of Philip II, the “national” Zeus, venerated on Olympus and Dion and characterized by the oak crown, was abandoned in favor of the Olympian Zeus of Elis, characterized by the olive/oleaster wreath. We notice that while the members of the royal family display, in life and death, an oak wreath as an insignia of their kingship, and at the same time also as a symbol of their highest divinity, the kings themselves issue the image of the panhellenic god with an olive/laurel wreath on their coins.
Stefano G. Caneva
ELECTRUM, Volume 30, 2023, pp. 75 - 101
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.23.004.17321The history of Hellenistic Pergamon is deeply affected by the dual status of a polis that also functioned as a dynastic residence. This overlap between civic and royal institutions significantly impacted the political life of the city. This paper contributes to the ongoing debate about honorific habits and the consolidation of the civic elite of Pergamon by focusing on the triangular interactions between the Attalids, their court, and the polis’ institutions in the period from Eumenes I to Attalos III. To do so, several dossiers concerning the priesthoods and religious liturgies of Attalid Pergamon will be reassessed by paying attention to their tenure, appointment, privileges, and the social groups that held these charges.
Catharine C. Lorber
ELECTRUM, Volume 30, 2023, pp. 103 - 195
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.23.005.17322The paper provides a dossier of honors offered to Seleukid and Ptolemaic kings, preceded by a brief introduction.
Hadrien Bru
ELECTRUM, Volume 30, 2023, pp. 197 - 209
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.23.006.17323In order to study the cult of Zeus Nikatôr, six Greek inscriptions (one from northern Syria and five from southern Anatolia) are gathered and commented. The origin, the diffusion and the longevity of the cult are evoked, since it was vivid until the IIIrd century A.D. in the eastern Mediterranean, mainly in southern Taurus (Pamphylia, Lycia, Pisidia and Phrygia Paroreios). Accordingly, also in connection with onomastics and numismatics, the Seleucid memory and the remembrance of Seleucos I are discussed, from Hellenistic times to the Roman Imperial period, and beyond.
Anna Heller
ELECTRUM, Volume 30, 2023, pp. 211 - 233
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.23.007.17324In ancient Greek cities, the organization of festivals generated its own institutional system, with various officials involved in various aspects of the celebration. One of these officials was the panegyriarch, in charge of the market that took place during the festival. On the basis of a systematic survey of the epigraphic documentation, this paper aims at defining the profile of the individuals attested as panegyriarchs. It presents the chronological and geographical distribution of the evidence, studies the offices associated with that of panegyriarch within civic careers and reflects on the level of prestige of this specific magistracy.
Axel Filges
ELECTRUM, Volume 30, 2023, pp. 235 - 272
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.23.008.17325The interpretation of figures of deities on the reverse of the coins of Asia Minor cities of the imperial period is usually done in several steps. The deity is generally quickly determined. It is difficult, however, to establish the superior intention behind the depiction. Does the figure refer to a real cult statue of the emitting city, is the image ‘only’ a reference to a local cult or was it chosen to symbolise, for instance, political connections of cities?
The essay brings together opinions from 140 years of international numismatic scholarship and thus offers an overview of the changing patterns of interpretation as well as their range in general. In the end, a more conscious approach to the figures of the gods on coins and a more reflective methodological approach are recommended.
Anna Tatarkiewicz
ELECTRUM, Volume 30, 2023, pp. 273 - 292
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.23.009.17326The article addresses the issue of Mithraism in Ostia. It discusses the latest discoveries, the nature of the Mithra cult in Ostia, with particular emphasis on the place of Mithra’s shrines in the city space.
Aleksandra Kubiak-Schneider
ELECTRUM, Volume 30, 2023, pp. 293 - 306
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.23.010.17327The epigraphic record from Palmyra brings light on the organization of the temples: personnel, management of feasts, economy and on the ritual practices towards certain deities like Allat and Shai ‘al-Qaum. These texts were previously called in the research literature “sacred laws”and what the scholarly debate nowadays labels with the term “ritual norms.”The aim of this paper, divided on the temple economy and personnel, and ritual behavior, is to understand through the scraps of information the administration of the Palmyrene temples and processes which shaped the life in the places of worship.
Michael Blömer
ELECTRUM, Volume 30, 2023, pp. 307 - 338
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.23.011.17328Today the city of Ḫarrān/Carrhae is mainly known for the famous battle, in which the Roman general Crassus was defeated by a Parthian army in 53 BCE. However, Ḫarrān was also one of the most important religious centres of North Mesopotamia. Since the Bronze Age, the moon god Sîn of Ḫarrān was popular in the wider region, and it is well known that the late Assyrian and Babylonian kings supported the cult and rebuilt the temple of Sîn. Archaeological evidence and written sources attest to the great popularity of Sîn of Ḫarrān at that time. Much less is known about the development of the cult in the subsequent periods, but the evidence assembled in this paper indicates that it continued to thrive. An important but so far largely ignored source for the study of Sîn are coins, which were minted at Ḫarrān in the second and third century CE. They suggest that some distinctive features of the Iron Age cult still existed in the Roman period. Most important in this regard is the predominance of aniconic symbolism. A cult standard, a crescent on a globe with tassels mounted on a pole, continued to be the main of representation of the god. In addition, two versions of an anthropomorphic image of the god can be traced in the coinage of Ḫarrān. The first shows him as an enthroned mature man. It is based on the model of Zeus, but his attributes identify the god as Sîn. The second version portrays him as a youthful, beardless god.
Late antique sources frequently mention that the people of Ḫarrān remained attached to pagan religion, but the veracity of these accounts must be questioned. A reassessment of the literary and archaeological evidence suggests that the accounts of a pagan survival at Ḫarrān are hyperbolic and exacer ated by negative sentiments towards Ḫarrān among writer from the neighbouring city of Edessa.
Carmen Alarcón Hernández, Fernando Lozano Gómez
ELECTRUM, Volume 30, 2023, pp. 339 - 352
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.23.012.17329There are abundant examples of negative assessments of cultic honors to Roman emperors by nineteenth- and twentieth-century researchers. In the minds of historians raised in modern societies, in which monotheistic Abrahamic religions usually reign supreme, this is a completely understandable a priori approach; nevertheless, it hinders a correct understanding of Roman society in antiquity. This paper examines the need to provide a complex answer to the question of whether the inhabitants of the Roman world really believed in the divinity of their rulers. A complex answer to the question can only emerge from a historical contextualization of the phenomenon under analysis, an examination of the imperial cult within the wider changes that were taking place in Roman religion at the time, and application of the necessary empathetic approach.
Martha W. Baldwin Bowsky
ELECTRUM, Volume 30, 2023, pp. 353 - 399
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.23.013.17330Forty years after the publication of Sanders’ Roman Crete, a broader range of evidence for the imperial cult on Crete is available—temples and other structures, monumental architectural members, imperial altars, portraiture and statuary, coinage, statue and portrait bases, other inscriptions, priest and high priests, members and archons of the Panhellenion, and festivals—and far more places can now be identified as cities participating in the imperial cult. This evidence can be set into multiple Cretan contexts, beginning with the establishment and evolution of the imperial cult across Crete, before locating the imperial cult in the landscape of Roman Crete. The ultimate Cretan contexts are the role of emperor worship in the lives of the island’s population, as it was incorporated into Cretan religious and social systems.
Marco Vitale
ELECTRUM, Volume 30, 2023, pp. 401 - 440
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.23.014.17331The provincial imperial cult represents one of the most relevant expressions of multiform relationship between provincial communities and Roman authorities especially in the East. During the Roman Principate in Syria, we can enumerate seven administrative districts (eparchies) which occur in connection with this political and religious phenomenon. The complicated question of how the province-wide worship of the Imperial family was organised in Roman Levant must be analysed in different terms. Important aspects are the Roman territorial framework of administration, the creation of autonomous city-leagues (koiná) and their cultic functions, the rules of membership within these federal organizations and their self-representation in coinages and inscriptions. On the level of political and financial management, we are dealing with federal officials and the festivities organized by them. Our paper aims to give a detailed overview of the Syrian imperial cult related not only to one specific site, but in the context of a large and culturally complex area.
Publication date: 21.10.2022
Editor-in-Chief: Edward Dąbrowa
Dofinansowanie czasopism w modelu otwartego dostępu OA (edycja I) POB Heritage – Program Strategiczny Inicjatywa Doskonałości w Uniwersytecie Jagiellońskim
Cover design: Barbara Widłak
Cover photography: Aphrodite Anadyomene, Nisa
Sławomir Sprawski
ELECTRUM, Volume 29, 2022, pp. 11 - 12
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.22.001.15771Paola Piacentini
ELECTRUM, Volume 29, 2022, pp. 13 - 21
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.22.002.15772Thomas Harrison
ELECTRUM, Volume 29, 2022, pp. 23 - 37
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.22.003.15773This paper reviews the different models commonly used in understanding Herodotus’evidence on the Achaemenid Persian empire. It suggests that these approaches—for example, the assessment of Herodotus’accuracy, of the level of his knowledge, or of his sympathy for the Persians—systematically underestimate the complexity of his (and of the Greeks’) perspective on the Persian empire: the conflicted perspective of a participant rather than just a detached observer.
Sabine Müller
ELECTRUM, Volume 29, 2022, pp. 39 - 51
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.22.004.15774There is a lot of uncertainty about the attribution of fragments to either Marsyas of Pella or Marsyas of Philippi. This paper challenges the traditional attribution of BNJ 135–136 F 4 (mentioning Midas’chariot with the Gordian knot) to Marsyas of Philippi and argues in favor of the identification of Marsyas of Pella as the author. For ideological and propagandistic reasons, it would fit well into Marysas of Pella’s account of the roots of Argead rule in his first book. By referring to Midas, Marsyas would have been able to link his half-brother Antigonus as the contemporary governor of Phrygia not only with the legendary Phrygian king and his legacy, but also with a Macedonian logos attested by Herodotus, creating a connection between Midas and the foundation of Argead rule. According to this logos, there existed old kinship relations between Macedonians and Phrygians who used to dwell at the foot of Mt. Bermium and were called Briges. This tradition was of propagandistic value and could have served to increase the ideological value of Antigonus’satrapy and main base in the rivalry with the other Diadochs.
Catharine C. Lorber
ELECTRUM, Volume 29, 2022, pp. 53 - 72
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.22.005.15775Cultic and other honors offered to rulers by their subjects unambiguously express loyalty to the rulers. Based on data collected for the Seleukid and Ptolemaic empires, a comparison is offered emphasizing the particular qualities of the Seleukid record. The comparison considers geographic distribution, where the honors fell on a public to private spectrum, the occupations and ethnicities of the subjects who offered honors individually, the intensity of these practices, and changes in the patterns over time. We know in advance that honors for the rulers are weakly attested for the Seleukid east, and even in Koile Syria and Phoinike. Should this reticence be interpreted as a possible indication of tepid support for Seleukid rule in these regions? Alternative explanations or contributing factors include preexisting cultural habits, different royal policies, destruction of evidence by wars and natural disasters, and the unevenness of archaeological exploration.
Antonio Invernizzi
ELECTRUM, Volume 29, 2022, pp. 73 - 86
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.22.006.15776The name of Rodogune was not applied only to the well known statuette of Aphrodite Anadyomene from Parthian Nisa, but also to a seal impressed on a sealing from the Nisa Square House. Although the attribution of the seal, unlike that of the statuette, was not discussed in detail, the portrait depicted on it was recognized as that of the Arsacid princess. Actually, the head is not female, but male, and can in all likelihood be that of Apollo with a laurel wreath. The style of execution suggests a relatively late date for the seal, not before the end of the 1st century BC –1st century AD, and allows its impression to be included in the general group of sealings from the Square House of Nisa.
Fabrizio Sinisi
ELECTRUM, Volume 29, 2022, pp. 87 - 107
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.22.007.15777The question of the identity of the issuer of the so-called “Heraios”coinage is analysed, and it is proposed that these series be ascribed to Kujula Kadphises, as already suggested by some scholars. In this regard, the circulation of these coins and the connections established by their imagery are focused upon. Some possible inferences on the original location of Kujula Kadphises are discussed in the concluding part, hypothesizing a southern context different from the northern one commonly ascribed to the founder of the Kushan dynasty.
Achim Lichtenberger, Cornelius Meyer, Torben Schreiber, Mkrtich H. Zardaryan
ELECTRUM, Volume 29, 2022, pp. 109 - 125
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.22.008.15778In March of 2021, the Berlin-based company cmp continued geophysical prospection works at the ancient city of Artashat-Artaxata (Ararat Province, Armenia). The city was founded by Artashes-Artaxias I in the early 2nd century BC and served as his capital. First magnetic measurements were conducted by the Eastern Atlas company in September 2018. In 2021, during the 5-day survey a total surface of approximately 19.5 ha was investigated by use of the LEA MAX magnetic gradiometer array. This system was configured with seven fluxgate gradiometer probes, similar to the system used in the first survey of 2018. The investigated areas of the Eastern Lower City of Artaxata, located to the south of the investigated field of 2018, had good surface conditions with a moderate amount of sources causing disturbance. However, the general level of the magnetic gradient values measured was significantly lower compared to the 2018 data. Despite the lower magnetic field intensity, a continuation of linear structures towards the south was observed. These lines, most likely reflecting streets and pathways, criss-cross the central part of the Eastern Lower City in a NW–SE and NE–SW direction and exhibit partly positive, partly negative magnetic anomalies. Attached to them, some isolated spots with building remains were identified. The negative linear anomalies point to remains of limestone foundations, as detected in the northern part of the Lower City. The low magnetic intensity and fragmentation of the observed structures are most likely due to severe destruction of the ancient layers by 20th-century earthworks for agricultural purposes. Moreover, the southern part of the surveyed area was affected by major changes caused by modern quarries at Hills XI and XII. In general, the results of the two magnetic prospection campaigns greatly aid our understanding of the archaeological situation in the area of the Eastern Lower City of Artaxata, justifying further investigations that will surely contribute to greater contextualization of the identified archaeological structures. The full data sets are also published in open access on Zenodo.
Judean Piracy, Judea and Parthia, and the Roman Annexation of Judea: The Evidence of Pompeius Trogus
Kenneth Atkinson
ELECTRUM, Volume 29, 2022, pp. 127 - 145
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.22.009.15779Pompey the Great’s 63 BCE conquest of the Jewish kingdom known as the Hasmonean State has traditionally been viewed as an inevitable event since the Roman Republic had long desired to annex the Middle Eastern nations. The prevailing consensus is that the Romans captured the Hasmonean state, removed its high-priest kings from power, and made its territory part of the Republic merely through military force. However, Justin’s Epitome of the Philippic Histories of Pompeius Trogus is a neglected source of new information for understanding relations between the Romans and the Jews at this time. Trogus’s brief account of this period alludes to a more specific reason, or at least, circumstance for Pompey’s conquest of Judea. His work contains evidence that the Jews were involved in piracy, of the type the Republic had commissioned Pompey to eradicate. In addition to this activity that adversely affected Roman commercial interests in the Mediterranean, the Jews were also involved with the Seleucid Empire and the Nabatean Arabs, both of whom had dealings with the Parthians. Piracy, coupled with Rome’s antagonism towards the Parthians, negatively impacted the Republic’s attitude towards the Jews. Considering the evidence from Trogus, Roman fears of Jewish piracy and Jewish links to the Republic’s Parthian enemies were not unfounded.
Lucia Visonà
ELECTRUM, Volume 29, 2022, pp. 147 - 160
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.22.010.15780In the Parallel Lives, Aristides and Themistocles are two antithetical characters. This opposition, already present in Herodotus’work and common to the literary tradition of the Persian wars, is particularly emphasized by Plutarch who shapes two characters endowed with opposing character traits who adopt completely different behaviors towards friends or wealth. This profound contrast is intended to highlight the collaboration between the two Athenians, ready to put aside personal differences to devote themselves together to the war against the Persians. The episode of reconciliation is in fact located, unlike other sources (Aristotle, Diodorus), before the battle of Salamis. However, Aristides and Themistocles do not limit themselves to settling their differences : they also take on the role of mediators during the war in order to address the disagreements between Athens and the other Greek cities and avoid hindering the common struggle against the barbarians. To do this, Plutarch adapts some passages of Herodotus (directly or by choosing sources that made such changes) to insert the protagonists of the Lives and create a climate of tension that they can happily resolve. His authorial choices appear consistent with the criticisms against Herodotus in De Herodoti Malignitate. The reflection about the Persian wars in Plutarch’s corpus seems therefore to be animated by a coherent vision, born from the tradition elaborated by the Attic orators in the fourth century : the conflict is seen as a privileged moment of the union between the Greeks, capable of overcoming the almost endemic rivalries that oppose them in view of the common good.
Werner Eck
ELECTRUM, Volume 29, 2022, pp. 161 - 169
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.22.011.15781Several recently discovered lead ingots refer to mining districts in the region of present-day Kosovo. Of particular interest is an ingot with the inscription metallo(rum) Messalini, which refers to M. Valerius Messala Messalinus Corvinus (cos. ord. 3 BC), who was employed as a commander during the Pannonian-Dalmatian uprising of 6–9 AD. He was obviously one of the senators whom Augustus not only honoured with awards for their service, but whom he also supported economically, not unlike Cn. Calpurnius Piso (cos. ord. 7 BC), who had received saltus in Illyricum. These gifts served to create loyalty; but they were precarious gifts because when loyalty ceased, they were reclaimed for the imperial patrimonium.
David M. Jacobson
ELECTRUM, Volume 29, 2022, pp. 171 - 196
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.22.012.15782Without having any contemporaneous account of the Bar Kokhba Revolt comparable to the writings of Josephus that describe the First Jewish Revolt, our knowledge about many aspects of the later uprising is rather sketchy. The publication of Roman military diplomas and the remarkable series of documents recovered from caves in the Judaean Desert, along with other major archaeological findings, has filled in just some of missing details. This study is devoted to a reexamination of the rebel coinage. It has highlighted the importance of the numismatic evidence in helping to elucidate the religious ideology that succoured the rebellion and shaped its leadership.
Oliver Stoll
ELECTRUM, Volume 29, 2022, pp. 197 - 217
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.22.013.15783This article examines defeats and losses as phenomena of an ‘expanded military history’ of Roman History from the Republic to the Principate. It adopts a cultural historical perspective of the military historical phenomenon. “Patterns”and “strategies”are defined, that appear in the sources when dealing with Roman defeats, losses and losers (in particular the commanders or even the emperor himself). Above, the historiography of the Roman imperial period is exemplary examined to see what reasons, interpretations or explanations are given there for suffering a defeat and whether and how these are part of narrative strategies. Sometimes military catastrophes simply were concealed, belittled or reinterpreted. How Rome dealt with defeat tells something about Rome’s society and especially the elite: “Roman culture”or “Rome’s political culture” shaped the way how the military phenomenon of defeat was dealt with. Defeats could also be seen as chances for future victories, they were good for learning and examples for withstanding with the help of morale and disciplina. In the end Rome’s strategies in dealing with such catastrophic events of ‘military history’overall seem to paint the picture of Rome as a resilient socio-political and military system!
Aleksandra Kubiak-Schneider, Achim Lichtenberger
ELECTRUM, Volume 29, 2022, pp. 219 - 236
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.22.014.15784The finds from the ancient city of Gerasa brought in 1930’two inscriptions dated to the second half of the 1st century CE which mention the deity called Pakeidas. The aim of this paper is to discuss Pakeidas and his relation to another god labelled Theos Arabikos worshipped in the same city. The authors make a broad Semitic overview on the etymology of the name Pakeidas looking at the West and East (Akkadian) Semitic evidence. The authors discuss the possible location of the temple dedicated to this god beneath the Cathedral. They also reexamine in the light of epigraphic sources in comparison to the Aramaic material from the Near East the function of archibomistai, cultic agents who served to this local god.
Peter Franz Mittag
ELECTRUM, Volume 29, 2022, pp. 237 - 247
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.22.015.15785Especially in regard to the multitude of depictions on coins and medallions referring to the history of Rome in the early 140s, the omission of corresponding depictions in the year 147/148, when Rome’s birthday was celebrated for the 900th time, is remarkable. Instead of referring to this important event, the coins and medallions of Antoninus Pius present themselves entirely under the sign of his decennalia. Apparently, the reference to the anniversary of the reign was considered more important than Rome’s birthday. Reasons for this decision could have been problems of acceptance, which are only hinted at in the literary sources, which are consistently friendly to Antoninus.
Giusto Traina
ELECTRUM, Volume 29, 2022, pp. 249 - 259
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.22.016.15786Some evidence points at the presence of Orientals in late Roman Italy: traders (labelled “Syrians”), petty sellers (the pantapolae in Nov. Val. 5), but also students, professors such as Ammianus Marcellinus, or pilgrims. Although being Roman citizens, nonetheless they were considered foreign individuals, subject to special restrictions. The actual strangers made a different case, especially the Persians. The situation of foreign individuals was quite different. Chauvinistic attitudes are widely attested, and they worsened in critical periods, for example after Adrianople. This may explain the laws of early 397 and June 399, promulgated during Stilicho’s regency, which prohibited the wearing of trousers (bracae) and some fashionable boots called tzangae. Of course, some protégés of the imperial court had the right to enter Italy, as it was the case of the Sassanian prince Hormisdas, who accompanied Constantius II in his visit of Rome in 357.
Simone Rendina
ELECTRUM, Volume 29, 2022, pp. 261 - 266
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.22.017.15787In Themistius’orations there are many clear and direct references to the Greek literature of the 5th and 4th centuries BCE. However, there are also more subtle references to these classical texts. In this paper, two references to classical Greek historiography are identified in Themistius’Oration 18. As we shall see, in order to praise the refashioning of Constantinople by Theodosius the Great, Themistius subtly quoted a passage by Xenophon. In order to highlight the splendour of the city of Constantinople, he also used as a reference one of the most eminent classical encomia of cities, that is, Pericles’funeral oration from the second book of Thucydides’ History. Both references served to enhance Themistius’already good relations with Theodosius I, who had recently renovated Constantinople with new monuments. This research thus stresses the relevance of quotations in Themistius’orations when studying his political agenda, including quotations that are less obvious and less easily identifiable.
Touraj Daryaee
ELECTRUM, Volume 29, 2022, pp. 267 - 284
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.22.018.15788This essay discusses the importance of Ctesiphon in the historical and literary tradition of Sasanian and Post-Sasanian Iran. It is proposed that there was a significant buildup of the Ctesiphon’s defenses in the third century that it made its conquest by the Roman Empire impossible and its gave it an aura of impregnability. By the last Sasanian period the city was not only inhabited by Iranian speaking people and a capital, but it also became part of Iranian lore and tradition, tied to mythical Iranian culture-heroes and kings. Even with the fall of the Sasanian Empire, in Arabic and Persian poetry the grandeur and memory of Ctesiphon was preserved as part of memory of the great empires of the past.
Michael Whitby
ELECTRUM, Volume 29, 2022, pp. 285 - 300
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.22.019.15789The homily on the Avar siege of Constantinople in 626 attributed to Theodore Syncellus shares numerous linguistic features both with Theodore’s homily of 623 on the Virgin’s Robe and with George of Pisidia’s poem of 626/7 on the siege. Theodore and George both celebrate the combined efforts of Patriarch Sergius and the Virgin Mary in saving the city, but Theodore also highlights the involvement of other agents, in particular the patrician Bonus and the young Heraclius Constantine, who were jointly in charge of the city while Emperor Heraclius was campaigning against the Persians. The homily is structured around the exegesis of three Old Testament passages: the promise in Isaiah 7 to King Ahaz about the salvation of Jerusalem; the analysis of numbers in Zachariah 8.19; and God’s destruction of Gog and Magog in Ezekiel 38–39.
Simon James
ELECTRUM, Volume 29, 2022, pp. 301 - 328
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.22.029.16524The centenary of the establishment of the Department of Classics at the University of Kraków coincides with that of the beginnings of the study of the ‘Pompeii of the Syrian Desert.’In spring 1920, British Indian soldiers digging in the ruins known as Salihiyeh overlooking the Euphrates accidentally revealed ancient paintings. Recorded by archaeologist James Henry Breasted, these discoveries would soon lead to further excavations by Franz Cumont (1922–1923), and eventually to the great Yale-French Academy expedition under Mikhail Rostovtzeff (1928–1937). By then the site was famous as ‘Dura-Europos,’giving us remarkable insights into Hellenistic Greek, Parthian, Roman, early Christian and Jewish life in the Middle East. Not the least of the discoveries related to the soldiers of Dura’s Roman garrison. This paper traces the history of the revelation—and, in part, invention—of Dura-Europos in the 1920s. It is a story of eminent scholars, but also of others who actually revealed the evidence: soldiers, both officers and men, of the armies of the British and French empires which dominated the region at the time. Today, at a time of ‘decolonisation’of scholarship, the very formulation ‘Dura-Europos’itself is a subject of contention.
Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 29, 2022, pp. 329 - 332
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.22.020.15790Tomasz Zieliński
ELECTRUM, Volume 29, 2022, pp. 333 - 336
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.22.021.15791Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 29, 2022, pp. 337 - 339
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.22.022.15792Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 29, 2022, pp. 341 - 343
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.22.023.15793Maciej Piegdoń
ELECTRUM, Volume 29, 2022, pp. 345 - 346
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.22.024.15794Maciej Piegdoń
ELECTRUM, Volume 29, 2022, pp. 347 - 349
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.22.025.15795Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 29, 2022, pp. 351 - 353
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.22.026.15796Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 29, 2022, pp. 355 - 357
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.22.027.15797Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 29, 2022, pp. 359 - 361
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.22.028.15798Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 29, 2022, pp. 329 - 332
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.22.020.15790Tomasz Zieliński
ELECTRUM, Volume 29, 2022, pp. 333 - 336
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.22.021.15791Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 29, 2022, pp. 337 - 339
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.22.022.15792Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 29, 2022, pp. 341 - 343
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.22.023.15793Maciej Piegdoń
ELECTRUM, Volume 29, 2022, pp. 345 - 346
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.22.024.15794Maciej Piegdoń
ELECTRUM, Volume 29, 2022, pp. 347 - 349
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.22.025.15795Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 29, 2022, pp. 351 - 353
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.22.026.15796Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 29, 2022, pp. 355 - 357
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.22.027.15797Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 29, 2022, pp. 359 - 361
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.22.028.15798Sławomir Sprawski
ELECTRUM, Volume 29, 2022, pp. 11 - 12
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.22.001.15771Paola Piacentini
ELECTRUM, Volume 29, 2022, pp. 13 - 21
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.22.002.15772Thomas Harrison
ELECTRUM, Volume 29, 2022, pp. 23 - 37
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.22.003.15773This paper reviews the different models commonly used in understanding Herodotus’evidence on the Achaemenid Persian empire. It suggests that these approaches—for example, the assessment of Herodotus’accuracy, of the level of his knowledge, or of his sympathy for the Persians—systematically underestimate the complexity of his (and of the Greeks’) perspective on the Persian empire: the conflicted perspective of a participant rather than just a detached observer.
Sabine Müller
ELECTRUM, Volume 29, 2022, pp. 39 - 51
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.22.004.15774There is a lot of uncertainty about the attribution of fragments to either Marsyas of Pella or Marsyas of Philippi. This paper challenges the traditional attribution of BNJ 135–136 F 4 (mentioning Midas’chariot with the Gordian knot) to Marsyas of Philippi and argues in favor of the identification of Marsyas of Pella as the author. For ideological and propagandistic reasons, it would fit well into Marysas of Pella’s account of the roots of Argead rule in his first book. By referring to Midas, Marsyas would have been able to link his half-brother Antigonus as the contemporary governor of Phrygia not only with the legendary Phrygian king and his legacy, but also with a Macedonian logos attested by Herodotus, creating a connection between Midas and the foundation of Argead rule. According to this logos, there existed old kinship relations between Macedonians and Phrygians who used to dwell at the foot of Mt. Bermium and were called Briges. This tradition was of propagandistic value and could have served to increase the ideological value of Antigonus’satrapy and main base in the rivalry with the other Diadochs.
Catharine C. Lorber
ELECTRUM, Volume 29, 2022, pp. 53 - 72
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.22.005.15775Cultic and other honors offered to rulers by their subjects unambiguously express loyalty to the rulers. Based on data collected for the Seleukid and Ptolemaic empires, a comparison is offered emphasizing the particular qualities of the Seleukid record. The comparison considers geographic distribution, where the honors fell on a public to private spectrum, the occupations and ethnicities of the subjects who offered honors individually, the intensity of these practices, and changes in the patterns over time. We know in advance that honors for the rulers are weakly attested for the Seleukid east, and even in Koile Syria and Phoinike. Should this reticence be interpreted as a possible indication of tepid support for Seleukid rule in these regions? Alternative explanations or contributing factors include preexisting cultural habits, different royal policies, destruction of evidence by wars and natural disasters, and the unevenness of archaeological exploration.
Antonio Invernizzi
ELECTRUM, Volume 29, 2022, pp. 73 - 86
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.22.006.15776The name of Rodogune was not applied only to the well known statuette of Aphrodite Anadyomene from Parthian Nisa, but also to a seal impressed on a sealing from the Nisa Square House. Although the attribution of the seal, unlike that of the statuette, was not discussed in detail, the portrait depicted on it was recognized as that of the Arsacid princess. Actually, the head is not female, but male, and can in all likelihood be that of Apollo with a laurel wreath. The style of execution suggests a relatively late date for the seal, not before the end of the 1st century BC –1st century AD, and allows its impression to be included in the general group of sealings from the Square House of Nisa.
Fabrizio Sinisi
ELECTRUM, Volume 29, 2022, pp. 87 - 107
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.22.007.15777The question of the identity of the issuer of the so-called “Heraios”coinage is analysed, and it is proposed that these series be ascribed to Kujula Kadphises, as already suggested by some scholars. In this regard, the circulation of these coins and the connections established by their imagery are focused upon. Some possible inferences on the original location of Kujula Kadphises are discussed in the concluding part, hypothesizing a southern context different from the northern one commonly ascribed to the founder of the Kushan dynasty.
Achim Lichtenberger, Cornelius Meyer, Torben Schreiber, Mkrtich H. Zardaryan
ELECTRUM, Volume 29, 2022, pp. 109 - 125
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.22.008.15778In March of 2021, the Berlin-based company cmp continued geophysical prospection works at the ancient city of Artashat-Artaxata (Ararat Province, Armenia). The city was founded by Artashes-Artaxias I in the early 2nd century BC and served as his capital. First magnetic measurements were conducted by the Eastern Atlas company in September 2018. In 2021, during the 5-day survey a total surface of approximately 19.5 ha was investigated by use of the LEA MAX magnetic gradiometer array. This system was configured with seven fluxgate gradiometer probes, similar to the system used in the first survey of 2018. The investigated areas of the Eastern Lower City of Artaxata, located to the south of the investigated field of 2018, had good surface conditions with a moderate amount of sources causing disturbance. However, the general level of the magnetic gradient values measured was significantly lower compared to the 2018 data. Despite the lower magnetic field intensity, a continuation of linear structures towards the south was observed. These lines, most likely reflecting streets and pathways, criss-cross the central part of the Eastern Lower City in a NW–SE and NE–SW direction and exhibit partly positive, partly negative magnetic anomalies. Attached to them, some isolated spots with building remains were identified. The negative linear anomalies point to remains of limestone foundations, as detected in the northern part of the Lower City. The low magnetic intensity and fragmentation of the observed structures are most likely due to severe destruction of the ancient layers by 20th-century earthworks for agricultural purposes. Moreover, the southern part of the surveyed area was affected by major changes caused by modern quarries at Hills XI and XII. In general, the results of the two magnetic prospection campaigns greatly aid our understanding of the archaeological situation in the area of the Eastern Lower City of Artaxata, justifying further investigations that will surely contribute to greater contextualization of the identified archaeological structures. The full data sets are also published in open access on Zenodo.
Judean Piracy, Judea and Parthia, and the Roman Annexation of Judea: The Evidence of Pompeius Trogus
Kenneth Atkinson
ELECTRUM, Volume 29, 2022, pp. 127 - 145
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.22.009.15779Pompey the Great’s 63 BCE conquest of the Jewish kingdom known as the Hasmonean State has traditionally been viewed as an inevitable event since the Roman Republic had long desired to annex the Middle Eastern nations. The prevailing consensus is that the Romans captured the Hasmonean state, removed its high-priest kings from power, and made its territory part of the Republic merely through military force. However, Justin’s Epitome of the Philippic Histories of Pompeius Trogus is a neglected source of new information for understanding relations between the Romans and the Jews at this time. Trogus’s brief account of this period alludes to a more specific reason, or at least, circumstance for Pompey’s conquest of Judea. His work contains evidence that the Jews were involved in piracy, of the type the Republic had commissioned Pompey to eradicate. In addition to this activity that adversely affected Roman commercial interests in the Mediterranean, the Jews were also involved with the Seleucid Empire and the Nabatean Arabs, both of whom had dealings with the Parthians. Piracy, coupled with Rome’s antagonism towards the Parthians, negatively impacted the Republic’s attitude towards the Jews. Considering the evidence from Trogus, Roman fears of Jewish piracy and Jewish links to the Republic’s Parthian enemies were not unfounded.
Lucia Visonà
ELECTRUM, Volume 29, 2022, pp. 147 - 160
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.22.010.15780In the Parallel Lives, Aristides and Themistocles are two antithetical characters. This opposition, already present in Herodotus’work and common to the literary tradition of the Persian wars, is particularly emphasized by Plutarch who shapes two characters endowed with opposing character traits who adopt completely different behaviors towards friends or wealth. This profound contrast is intended to highlight the collaboration between the two Athenians, ready to put aside personal differences to devote themselves together to the war against the Persians. The episode of reconciliation is in fact located, unlike other sources (Aristotle, Diodorus), before the battle of Salamis. However, Aristides and Themistocles do not limit themselves to settling their differences : they also take on the role of mediators during the war in order to address the disagreements between Athens and the other Greek cities and avoid hindering the common struggle against the barbarians. To do this, Plutarch adapts some passages of Herodotus (directly or by choosing sources that made such changes) to insert the protagonists of the Lives and create a climate of tension that they can happily resolve. His authorial choices appear consistent with the criticisms against Herodotus in De Herodoti Malignitate. The reflection about the Persian wars in Plutarch’s corpus seems therefore to be animated by a coherent vision, born from the tradition elaborated by the Attic orators in the fourth century : the conflict is seen as a privileged moment of the union between the Greeks, capable of overcoming the almost endemic rivalries that oppose them in view of the common good.
Werner Eck
ELECTRUM, Volume 29, 2022, pp. 161 - 169
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.22.011.15781Several recently discovered lead ingots refer to mining districts in the region of present-day Kosovo. Of particular interest is an ingot with the inscription metallo(rum) Messalini, which refers to M. Valerius Messala Messalinus Corvinus (cos. ord. 3 BC), who was employed as a commander during the Pannonian-Dalmatian uprising of 6–9 AD. He was obviously one of the senators whom Augustus not only honoured with awards for their service, but whom he also supported economically, not unlike Cn. Calpurnius Piso (cos. ord. 7 BC), who had received saltus in Illyricum. These gifts served to create loyalty; but they were precarious gifts because when loyalty ceased, they were reclaimed for the imperial patrimonium.
David M. Jacobson
ELECTRUM, Volume 29, 2022, pp. 171 - 196
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.22.012.15782Without having any contemporaneous account of the Bar Kokhba Revolt comparable to the writings of Josephus that describe the First Jewish Revolt, our knowledge about many aspects of the later uprising is rather sketchy. The publication of Roman military diplomas and the remarkable series of documents recovered from caves in the Judaean Desert, along with other major archaeological findings, has filled in just some of missing details. This study is devoted to a reexamination of the rebel coinage. It has highlighted the importance of the numismatic evidence in helping to elucidate the religious ideology that succoured the rebellion and shaped its leadership.
Oliver Stoll
ELECTRUM, Volume 29, 2022, pp. 197 - 217
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.22.013.15783This article examines defeats and losses as phenomena of an ‘expanded military history’ of Roman History from the Republic to the Principate. It adopts a cultural historical perspective of the military historical phenomenon. “Patterns”and “strategies”are defined, that appear in the sources when dealing with Roman defeats, losses and losers (in particular the commanders or even the emperor himself). Above, the historiography of the Roman imperial period is exemplary examined to see what reasons, interpretations or explanations are given there for suffering a defeat and whether and how these are part of narrative strategies. Sometimes military catastrophes simply were concealed, belittled or reinterpreted. How Rome dealt with defeat tells something about Rome’s society and especially the elite: “Roman culture”or “Rome’s political culture” shaped the way how the military phenomenon of defeat was dealt with. Defeats could also be seen as chances for future victories, they were good for learning and examples for withstanding with the help of morale and disciplina. In the end Rome’s strategies in dealing with such catastrophic events of ‘military history’overall seem to paint the picture of Rome as a resilient socio-political and military system!
Aleksandra Kubiak-Schneider, Achim Lichtenberger
ELECTRUM, Volume 29, 2022, pp. 219 - 236
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.22.014.15784The finds from the ancient city of Gerasa brought in 1930’two inscriptions dated to the second half of the 1st century CE which mention the deity called Pakeidas. The aim of this paper is to discuss Pakeidas and his relation to another god labelled Theos Arabikos worshipped in the same city. The authors make a broad Semitic overview on the etymology of the name Pakeidas looking at the West and East (Akkadian) Semitic evidence. The authors discuss the possible location of the temple dedicated to this god beneath the Cathedral. They also reexamine in the light of epigraphic sources in comparison to the Aramaic material from the Near East the function of archibomistai, cultic agents who served to this local god.
Peter Franz Mittag
ELECTRUM, Volume 29, 2022, pp. 237 - 247
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.22.015.15785Especially in regard to the multitude of depictions on coins and medallions referring to the history of Rome in the early 140s, the omission of corresponding depictions in the year 147/148, when Rome’s birthday was celebrated for the 900th time, is remarkable. Instead of referring to this important event, the coins and medallions of Antoninus Pius present themselves entirely under the sign of his decennalia. Apparently, the reference to the anniversary of the reign was considered more important than Rome’s birthday. Reasons for this decision could have been problems of acceptance, which are only hinted at in the literary sources, which are consistently friendly to Antoninus.
Giusto Traina
ELECTRUM, Volume 29, 2022, pp. 249 - 259
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.22.016.15786Some evidence points at the presence of Orientals in late Roman Italy: traders (labelled “Syrians”), petty sellers (the pantapolae in Nov. Val. 5), but also students, professors such as Ammianus Marcellinus, or pilgrims. Although being Roman citizens, nonetheless they were considered foreign individuals, subject to special restrictions. The actual strangers made a different case, especially the Persians. The situation of foreign individuals was quite different. Chauvinistic attitudes are widely attested, and they worsened in critical periods, for example after Adrianople. This may explain the laws of early 397 and June 399, promulgated during Stilicho’s regency, which prohibited the wearing of trousers (bracae) and some fashionable boots called tzangae. Of course, some protégés of the imperial court had the right to enter Italy, as it was the case of the Sassanian prince Hormisdas, who accompanied Constantius II in his visit of Rome in 357.
Simone Rendina
ELECTRUM, Volume 29, 2022, pp. 261 - 266
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.22.017.15787In Themistius’orations there are many clear and direct references to the Greek literature of the 5th and 4th centuries BCE. However, there are also more subtle references to these classical texts. In this paper, two references to classical Greek historiography are identified in Themistius’Oration 18. As we shall see, in order to praise the refashioning of Constantinople by Theodosius the Great, Themistius subtly quoted a passage by Xenophon. In order to highlight the splendour of the city of Constantinople, he also used as a reference one of the most eminent classical encomia of cities, that is, Pericles’funeral oration from the second book of Thucydides’ History. Both references served to enhance Themistius’already good relations with Theodosius I, who had recently renovated Constantinople with new monuments. This research thus stresses the relevance of quotations in Themistius’orations when studying his political agenda, including quotations that are less obvious and less easily identifiable.
Touraj Daryaee
ELECTRUM, Volume 29, 2022, pp. 267 - 284
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.22.018.15788This essay discusses the importance of Ctesiphon in the historical and literary tradition of Sasanian and Post-Sasanian Iran. It is proposed that there was a significant buildup of the Ctesiphon’s defenses in the third century that it made its conquest by the Roman Empire impossible and its gave it an aura of impregnability. By the last Sasanian period the city was not only inhabited by Iranian speaking people and a capital, but it also became part of Iranian lore and tradition, tied to mythical Iranian culture-heroes and kings. Even with the fall of the Sasanian Empire, in Arabic and Persian poetry the grandeur and memory of Ctesiphon was preserved as part of memory of the great empires of the past.
Michael Whitby
ELECTRUM, Volume 29, 2022, pp. 285 - 300
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.22.019.15789The homily on the Avar siege of Constantinople in 626 attributed to Theodore Syncellus shares numerous linguistic features both with Theodore’s homily of 623 on the Virgin’s Robe and with George of Pisidia’s poem of 626/7 on the siege. Theodore and George both celebrate the combined efforts of Patriarch Sergius and the Virgin Mary in saving the city, but Theodore also highlights the involvement of other agents, in particular the patrician Bonus and the young Heraclius Constantine, who were jointly in charge of the city while Emperor Heraclius was campaigning against the Persians. The homily is structured around the exegesis of three Old Testament passages: the promise in Isaiah 7 to King Ahaz about the salvation of Jerusalem; the analysis of numbers in Zachariah 8.19; and God’s destruction of Gog and Magog in Ezekiel 38–39.
Simon James
ELECTRUM, Volume 29, 2022, pp. 301 - 328
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.22.029.16524The centenary of the establishment of the Department of Classics at the University of Kraków coincides with that of the beginnings of the study of the ‘Pompeii of the Syrian Desert.’In spring 1920, British Indian soldiers digging in the ruins known as Salihiyeh overlooking the Euphrates accidentally revealed ancient paintings. Recorded by archaeologist James Henry Breasted, these discoveries would soon lead to further excavations by Franz Cumont (1922–1923), and eventually to the great Yale-French Academy expedition under Mikhail Rostovtzeff (1928–1937). By then the site was famous as ‘Dura-Europos,’giving us remarkable insights into Hellenistic Greek, Parthian, Roman, early Christian and Jewish life in the Middle East. Not the least of the discoveries related to the soldiers of Dura’s Roman garrison. This paper traces the history of the revelation—and, in part, invention—of Dura-Europos in the 1920s. It is a story of eminent scholars, but also of others who actually revealed the evidence: soldiers, both officers and men, of the armies of the British and French empires which dominated the region at the time. Today, at a time of ‘decolonisation’of scholarship, the very formulation ‘Dura-Europos’itself is a subject of contention.
Publication date: 02.07.2021
Editor-in-Chief: Edward Dąbrowa
Cover photography: Cover photography: Tigranokert. A clay disc with Armenian inscriptions from the excavations of the Large Church
The publication of this volume was financed by the Jagiellonian University in Krakow – Faculty of History.
Edward Dąbrowa, Giusto Traina
ELECTRUM, Volume 28, 2021, pp. 7 - 8
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.21.001.13359Achim Lichtenberger, Giusto Traina
ELECTRUM, Volume 28, 2021, pp. 11 - 12
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.21.002.13360Giusto Traina
ELECTRUM, Volume 28, 2021, pp. 13 - 20
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.21.003.13361The history of the kingdom of Greater Armenia (after 188 BCE–428 CE) has been generally interpreted from two different standpoints, an ‘inner’ and an ‘outer’ one. Greater Armenia as a marginal entity or a sidekick of Rome during the endless war with Iran, and even Iranian scholars neglected or diminished the role of Armenia in the balance of power. This paper discussed some methodological issues.
Klaus Geus
ELECTRUM, Volume 28, 2021, pp. 21 - 40
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.21.004.13362Ptolemyʾs Geographike Hyphegesis (Introduction to Geography) (ca. AD 150) consists of a huge and invaluable stock of topographical information. More than 6,000 toponyms are even defined by coordinates. Nevertheless, Ptolemyʾs cities are often misplaced or pop up more than once in his maps. This is especially true with his confusing description of Armenia (geogr. 5.13), which caused a modern scholar to call it a ‘parody’ of his work and method. This paper aims at clarifying the basic error in all of Ptolemyʾs coordinates and proposes some explanations and corrections for his Armenian toponyms.
Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 28, 2021, pp. 41 - 57
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.21.005.13363The aim of this paper is to present Parthian-Armenian relations from the end of the 2nd century BCE to the so-called Treaty of Rhandeia (63 CE). This covers the period from the first contact of both states to the final conclusion of long-drawn-out military conflicts over Armenia between the Arsacids ruling the Parthian Empire and Rome. The author discusses reasons for the Parthian involvement in Armenia during the rule of Mithradates II and various efforts of the Arsacids to win control over this area. He also identifies three phases of their politics towards Armenia in the discussed period.
Touraj Daryaee
ELECTRUM, Volume 28, 2021, pp. 59 - 67
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.21.006.13364This paper discusses the idea of Armenian and Iranian identity in 3rd century CE. It is proposed that the bordering region of the Armeno-Iranian world, such as that of the Siwnik‘ and its house saw matters very differently from that of the Armenian kingdom. The Sasanians in return had a vastly different view of Armenia and Georgia as political entities, and used their differences to the benefit of their empire.
Carlo G. Cereti
ELECTRUM, Volume 28, 2021, pp. 69 - 87
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.21.007.13365Narseh son of Šābuhr I reigned from 293 to 302, once he had won the dynastic war that saw him opposing his grand-nephew, Wahrām III, he narrated the events in the great Paikuli inscription, which also contains the names of a long list of nobles and magnates, who paid obeisance to the new king. In Šābuhr’s inscription at Naqš-i Rustam Narseh bore the title of « King of Hindestān, Sagestān and Tūrān up to the seashore,” while later, likely under either Ohrmazd I or Wahrām I, he became King of the Armenians and stayed in office until 293, when he moved south to challenge his nephew’s right to the crown. Crossing the lower ranges of the Zagros mountains on his way to Mesopotamia, Narseh met the nobles loyal to his cause near the pass of Paikuli, about one hundred kilometres south of the modern city of Sulaimaniya. Recent archaeological excavations on the site have brought to light a number of new inscribed blocks that allow for a better understanding of the structure of the monument. In this paper the passages relative to Armenia will be presented and discussed, together with those containing the name of the goddess Anāhīd, whose cult was widely spread in Armenia.
Pierangelo Buongiorno
ELECTRUM, Volume 28, 2021, pp. 89 - 104
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.21.008.13366Even with the Principate, the Senate kept a major role in Rome’s diplomatic relations with Armenia. This paper will examine the extant evidence of the senatorial decrees, paying a special attention to the decrees dating to the reigns of Augustus and Tiberius. These decrees can be reconstructed analysing some relevant epigraphic texts (the Res Gestae divi Augusti, the Senatus consultum de Cn. Pisone patre, the Senatus consultum de honoribus Germanico decernendis) and a source of absolute importance as the Annales of Tacitus.
Anahide Kéfélian
ELECTRUM, Volume 28, 2021, pp. 105 - 134
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.21.009.13367Ancient Armenian sources are very scarce and do not permit a thorough understanding of Ancient Armenia. For this reason, all available sources relevant to Armenia need to be considered and studied. This is notably the case for Roman Coinage, where issues related to Armenia were struck over the course of 200 years. This paper examines how Roman coinage is able to influence our understanding of Roman, Armenian and Parthian relationships. The study begins with the analysis of the monetary iconography of Armenia and Armenians on Roman coinage through their attributes and postures. Following the first part, the study questions the Roman coinage as a source of ideological representations of the events. Indeed, the issues do not reflect the intricate relationships of the Romans, Armenians and Parthians, but rather highlight Roman victories and the image of the Emperor. Despite this Roman prism, the last part of the article shows that it is possible to use the coinage as a source for Roman, Armenian and Parthian reationship studies.
Michael Alexander Speidel
ELECTRUM, Volume 28, 2021, pp. 135 - 150
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.21.010.13368One very prominent context of the Pre-Christian history of Armenia of course lies with its relations with the great neighbouring empires of Parthia and Rome. These relations were mainly the result of Armenia’s geopolitical location between the two empires, its natural resources and its control of strategic long-distance routes. From a Roman point of view, Armenia certainly was the most important geopolitical concern in the East. Roman-Armenian relations therefore are a vast and complex subject, and their history extends over many centuries. In the years between 114 and 117 AD these relations assumed an extraordinary albeit short-lived condition when the kingdom of Greater Armenia became a Roman province. The present contribution reviews the Roman inscriptions that can be dated to this period, as well as the historical evidence they provide for the history of Greater Armenia as a Roman province.
Michał Marciak
ELECTRUM, Volume 28, 2021, pp. 151 - 161
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.21.011.13369The aim of this paper is to provide an overview of the geopolitical status of the Upper Tigris area in antiquity, with a special focus on the period between ca. 401 BCE and the 6th century CE. Despite the popular impression that this area had a distinctly Armenian character, a closer look at its history shows that it was rather a territory with many local geopolitical entities that many neighboring countries periodically fought to possess. This area was strategically significant as a transit region located on the crossroads of important long-distance communication lines. Likewise, its natural resources were undoubtedly crucial to the neighboring countries. Indeed, powerful neighbors around the Upper Tigris area, including Armenia, the Iranian kingdoms of the Parthians and Sasanians, and Rome, sought to control this area, which was often located on the fringes of their states and as such was inevitably doomed to be contested by these empires onmany occasions. This situation can be acutely seen in the conflict between Rome and the Iranian kingdoms of the Parthians and Sasanians, when northern Mesopotamia became a real battleground between the competing empires. In particular, the paper will sketch the development of the geopolitical status of several small geopolitical entities in this region—Sophene, Osrhoene, Gordyene, and Adiabene.
Hamlet Petrosyan
ELECTRUM, Volume 28, 2021, pp. 163 - 187
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.21.012.13370Tigranakert in Artsakh was founded at the end of 90s BC by the Armenian King Tigranes II the Great (95–55 BC) and in the Early Christian period continued to play a role of an important military-administrative and religious center. As аresult of excavations the Early Christian square of the Central district with two churches, remains of a monumental stela witha cross, as well as an Early Christian underground reliquary and a graveyard were unearthed.
The sepulchre-reliquary was opened under the floor of the small church of early Christian Square. It has only the eastern entrance. As had been shown by further excavations Saint Grigoris’s sepulchre-reliquary in Amaras also had an eastern entrance. Saint Stephanos’s reliquary in Vachar also has only an eastern entrance. All these three structures are dated from 5th–6th centuries. In early Christian East the only tomb that had an only eastern entrance is Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem.
Analysis of the data on Vachagan the Pious (end of 5th–early 6th centuries), king of Albania (which included since the middle of 5th century the eastern provinces of Greater Armenia – Artsakh and Utik), allows us to conclude that at the end of the 5th century the king initiated theecclesiastical reform, trying to link the origin of the Albanian church to Jerusalem. One ofthe manifestations of this reform was the creation of the legend of the Apostle Yeghisha arriving to Albania from Jerusalem. Comparative analysis of archaeological, architectural and written data leads to the conclusion that all three tombs with the single east entrance are the result of the reformist activity of Vachagan, and the idea of single eastern entrance, most likely, was taken from the tomb of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem.
A new approach to the localizations of Early Christian sanctuaries in and near Tigranakert allows to compare this sacred area with early Christian sacred topography of Jerusalem.
Timo Stickler
ELECTRUM, Volume 28, 2021, pp. 189 - 206
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.21.013.13371Murtazali S. Gadjiev
ELECTRUM, Volume 28, 2021, pp. 207 - 219
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.21.014.13372Since the early 4th century, ancient Armenian authors (P‘awstos Buzand, Movsēs Xorenac‘i, Agat‘angełos, Movsēs Dasxuranc‘i, the Ašxarac‘oyc) begin to mention the Land of the Mazk‘ut‘ (Arm. ašharh Mazk‘t‘acʻ), located in the East Caucasus. The Sarmato-Alan burial mounds of plain Daghestan of the 3rd–5th centuries (Lvov, Palasa-Syrt, etc.) are attributed to this ethnic community. In 216 AD these tribes invaded Armenia through the Derbent pass (Arm. durn Čoray) (Khorenatsi 2,65), and took part in the Armenian-Iranian war in the middle of the 3rd century.
At the beginning of the 4th century the post of “bdeašx from the Mazk‘ut‘s” (Agatangełos. 874) appears in administrative apparatus of Armenia, which shows the military and strategic value of the Land of Mazk‘ut‘s. At the same time, the family dynastic ties are apparently established between the ruling houses of Armenia and the kingdom of the Mazk‘ut‘ (Ašxen, Ašxadar, Trdat, Sanesan, Xosrow). The importance of this kingdom can be seen by the events of the 330s’—the struggle for the Armenian throne after the king Trdat’s death in c. 330 AD, in which the different tribes led by Sanesan, the King of the Mazk‘ut‘, took active part.
The discontinuance of the Mazk‘ut‘ burial mounds in the middle of the 5th century might be explained, on the one hand, by the possible annexation of the Mazk‘ut‘ by the Huns during the invasion of Transcaucasia and the seizure of the Derbent pass in circa 440 AD; on the other hand, by the subsequent forceful displacement of the Mazk‘ut‘s and the Huns from the territory to the south of Derbent along with the strengthening of Sasanian Iran in the East Caucasus in the 440s’ and regain of control over the Derbent pass, which can be traced both in written sources (Ełishe, History of Karka de Beth Selok) and fortification monuments (mud-brick fortifications of Derbent and Torpakh-kala).
Lara Fabian
ELECTRUM, Volume 28, 2021, pp. 221 - 244
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.21.015.13373The early relationships between the polities of Armenia and K‘art‘li in the South Caucasus and their neighbours in the North Caucasus is a central, but underappreciated, factor in the development of the South Caucasus’ social and political world in the Hellenistic period. Typically, only military aspects of these interactions are considered (e.g., Alan raids and control thereof). Hazy evidence of cross-Caucasus marriage alliances preserved in both the Armenian and Georgian historiographic traditions, however, hints at a far wider sphere of interaction, despite the inherent challenges in gleaning historical reality from these medieval accounts. This paper contextualizes two stories of cross-Caucasus marriage related to foundational dynastic figures in the Armenian and Georgian traditions, Artašēs and P‘arnavaz respectively, within a wider body of evidence for and thought about North-South Caucasus interaction. Taken as a whole, this consideration argues that North-South relationships should be seen as integral to the political development of the South Caucasus.
Achim Lichtenberger, Torben Schreiber, Mkrtich H. Zardaryan
ELECTRUM, Volume 28, 2021, pp. 245 - 276
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.21.016.13374The paper deals with the first results of the Armenian-German Artaxata Project which was initiated in 2018. The city of Artaxata was founded in the 2nd century BC as the capital of the Artaxiad kingdom. The city stretches over the 13 hills of the Khor Virap heights and the adjacent plain in the Ararat valley. The new project focusses on Hill XIII and the Lower city to the south and the north of it. This area was investigated by magnetic prospections in 2018 and on the basis of its results, in total eleven 5 × 5 m trenches were excavated in 2019. On the eastern part of Hill XIII several structures of possibly domestic function were uncovered. They were laid out according to a regular plan and in total three phases could be determined. According to 14C data, the first phase already dates to the 2nd century BC while the subsequent two phases continue into the 1st/2nd century AD. In the 2019 campaign, the overall layout and exact function of the structures could not be determined and more excavations will be undertaken in the forthcoming years. North of Hill XIII the foundations of piers of an unfinished Roman aqueduct on arches were excavated. This aqueduct is attributed to the period 114–117 AD when Rome in vain tried to establish the Roman province of Armenia with Artaxata being the capital.
Torben Schreiber
ELECTRUM, Volume 28, 2021, pp. 277 - 310
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.21.017.13375This article examines the seal impressions from Artaxata discovered in 1979/80 during excavations carried out by the Armenian Academy of Sciences on Hills V and VIII. As the archive on Hill VIII is quite small with only 20 to 25 seal impressions, the focus of this paper lies on the approximately 8,000 seal impressions found on hill V. The complex was dated to the period from 180 BC to 59 AD and it was assumed that it was a “private” archive or a kind of “chancellery.” An analysis of the finds in a wider context and the comparison with other archival complexes of the Hellenistic period as well as an examination of the characteristic features of “official” seals (size, image, shape, number of impressions) leads to the conclusion that it must have been a public archive, most probably it is the city archive of Artaxata.
Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 28, 2021, pp. 313 - 315
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.21.018.13376Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 28, 2021, pp. 317 - 320
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.21.019.13377Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 28, 2021, pp. 321 - 323
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.21.020.13378Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 28, 2021, pp. 325 - 328
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.21.021.13379Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 28, 2021, pp. 329 - 332
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.21.022.13380Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 28, 2021, pp. 313 - 315
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.21.018.13376Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 28, 2021, pp. 317 - 320
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.21.019.13377Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 28, 2021, pp. 321 - 323
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.21.020.13378Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 28, 2021, pp. 325 - 328
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.21.021.13379Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 28, 2021, pp. 329 - 332
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.21.022.13380Edward Dąbrowa, Giusto Traina
ELECTRUM, Volume 28, 2021, pp. 7 - 8
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.21.001.13359Achim Lichtenberger, Giusto Traina
ELECTRUM, Volume 28, 2021, pp. 11 - 12
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.21.002.13360Giusto Traina
ELECTRUM, Volume 28, 2021, pp. 13 - 20
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.21.003.13361The history of the kingdom of Greater Armenia (after 188 BCE–428 CE) has been generally interpreted from two different standpoints, an ‘inner’ and an ‘outer’ one. Greater Armenia as a marginal entity or a sidekick of Rome during the endless war with Iran, and even Iranian scholars neglected or diminished the role of Armenia in the balance of power. This paper discussed some methodological issues.
Klaus Geus
ELECTRUM, Volume 28, 2021, pp. 21 - 40
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.21.004.13362Ptolemyʾs Geographike Hyphegesis (Introduction to Geography) (ca. AD 150) consists of a huge and invaluable stock of topographical information. More than 6,000 toponyms are even defined by coordinates. Nevertheless, Ptolemyʾs cities are often misplaced or pop up more than once in his maps. This is especially true with his confusing description of Armenia (geogr. 5.13), which caused a modern scholar to call it a ‘parody’ of his work and method. This paper aims at clarifying the basic error in all of Ptolemyʾs coordinates and proposes some explanations and corrections for his Armenian toponyms.
Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 28, 2021, pp. 41 - 57
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.21.005.13363The aim of this paper is to present Parthian-Armenian relations from the end of the 2nd century BCE to the so-called Treaty of Rhandeia (63 CE). This covers the period from the first contact of both states to the final conclusion of long-drawn-out military conflicts over Armenia between the Arsacids ruling the Parthian Empire and Rome. The author discusses reasons for the Parthian involvement in Armenia during the rule of Mithradates II and various efforts of the Arsacids to win control over this area. He also identifies three phases of their politics towards Armenia in the discussed period.
Touraj Daryaee
ELECTRUM, Volume 28, 2021, pp. 59 - 67
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.21.006.13364This paper discusses the idea of Armenian and Iranian identity in 3rd century CE. It is proposed that the bordering region of the Armeno-Iranian world, such as that of the Siwnik‘ and its house saw matters very differently from that of the Armenian kingdom. The Sasanians in return had a vastly different view of Armenia and Georgia as political entities, and used their differences to the benefit of their empire.
Carlo G. Cereti
ELECTRUM, Volume 28, 2021, pp. 69 - 87
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.21.007.13365Narseh son of Šābuhr I reigned from 293 to 302, once he had won the dynastic war that saw him opposing his grand-nephew, Wahrām III, he narrated the events in the great Paikuli inscription, which also contains the names of a long list of nobles and magnates, who paid obeisance to the new king. In Šābuhr’s inscription at Naqš-i Rustam Narseh bore the title of « King of Hindestān, Sagestān and Tūrān up to the seashore,” while later, likely under either Ohrmazd I or Wahrām I, he became King of the Armenians and stayed in office until 293, when he moved south to challenge his nephew’s right to the crown. Crossing the lower ranges of the Zagros mountains on his way to Mesopotamia, Narseh met the nobles loyal to his cause near the pass of Paikuli, about one hundred kilometres south of the modern city of Sulaimaniya. Recent archaeological excavations on the site have brought to light a number of new inscribed blocks that allow for a better understanding of the structure of the monument. In this paper the passages relative to Armenia will be presented and discussed, together with those containing the name of the goddess Anāhīd, whose cult was widely spread in Armenia.
Pierangelo Buongiorno
ELECTRUM, Volume 28, 2021, pp. 89 - 104
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.21.008.13366Even with the Principate, the Senate kept a major role in Rome’s diplomatic relations with Armenia. This paper will examine the extant evidence of the senatorial decrees, paying a special attention to the decrees dating to the reigns of Augustus and Tiberius. These decrees can be reconstructed analysing some relevant epigraphic texts (the Res Gestae divi Augusti, the Senatus consultum de Cn. Pisone patre, the Senatus consultum de honoribus Germanico decernendis) and a source of absolute importance as the Annales of Tacitus.
Anahide Kéfélian
ELECTRUM, Volume 28, 2021, pp. 105 - 134
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.21.009.13367Ancient Armenian sources are very scarce and do not permit a thorough understanding of Ancient Armenia. For this reason, all available sources relevant to Armenia need to be considered and studied. This is notably the case for Roman Coinage, where issues related to Armenia were struck over the course of 200 years. This paper examines how Roman coinage is able to influence our understanding of Roman, Armenian and Parthian relationships. The study begins with the analysis of the monetary iconography of Armenia and Armenians on Roman coinage through their attributes and postures. Following the first part, the study questions the Roman coinage as a source of ideological representations of the events. Indeed, the issues do not reflect the intricate relationships of the Romans, Armenians and Parthians, but rather highlight Roman victories and the image of the Emperor. Despite this Roman prism, the last part of the article shows that it is possible to use the coinage as a source for Roman, Armenian and Parthian reationship studies.
Michael Alexander Speidel
ELECTRUM, Volume 28, 2021, pp. 135 - 150
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.21.010.13368One very prominent context of the Pre-Christian history of Armenia of course lies with its relations with the great neighbouring empires of Parthia and Rome. These relations were mainly the result of Armenia’s geopolitical location between the two empires, its natural resources and its control of strategic long-distance routes. From a Roman point of view, Armenia certainly was the most important geopolitical concern in the East. Roman-Armenian relations therefore are a vast and complex subject, and their history extends over many centuries. In the years between 114 and 117 AD these relations assumed an extraordinary albeit short-lived condition when the kingdom of Greater Armenia became a Roman province. The present contribution reviews the Roman inscriptions that can be dated to this period, as well as the historical evidence they provide for the history of Greater Armenia as a Roman province.
Michał Marciak
ELECTRUM, Volume 28, 2021, pp. 151 - 161
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.21.011.13369The aim of this paper is to provide an overview of the geopolitical status of the Upper Tigris area in antiquity, with a special focus on the period between ca. 401 BCE and the 6th century CE. Despite the popular impression that this area had a distinctly Armenian character, a closer look at its history shows that it was rather a territory with many local geopolitical entities that many neighboring countries periodically fought to possess. This area was strategically significant as a transit region located on the crossroads of important long-distance communication lines. Likewise, its natural resources were undoubtedly crucial to the neighboring countries. Indeed, powerful neighbors around the Upper Tigris area, including Armenia, the Iranian kingdoms of the Parthians and Sasanians, and Rome, sought to control this area, which was often located on the fringes of their states and as such was inevitably doomed to be contested by these empires onmany occasions. This situation can be acutely seen in the conflict between Rome and the Iranian kingdoms of the Parthians and Sasanians, when northern Mesopotamia became a real battleground between the competing empires. In particular, the paper will sketch the development of the geopolitical status of several small geopolitical entities in this region—Sophene, Osrhoene, Gordyene, and Adiabene.
Hamlet Petrosyan
ELECTRUM, Volume 28, 2021, pp. 163 - 187
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.21.012.13370Tigranakert in Artsakh was founded at the end of 90s BC by the Armenian King Tigranes II the Great (95–55 BC) and in the Early Christian period continued to play a role of an important military-administrative and religious center. As аresult of excavations the Early Christian square of the Central district with two churches, remains of a monumental stela witha cross, as well as an Early Christian underground reliquary and a graveyard were unearthed.
The sepulchre-reliquary was opened under the floor of the small church of early Christian Square. It has only the eastern entrance. As had been shown by further excavations Saint Grigoris’s sepulchre-reliquary in Amaras also had an eastern entrance. Saint Stephanos’s reliquary in Vachar also has only an eastern entrance. All these three structures are dated from 5th–6th centuries. In early Christian East the only tomb that had an only eastern entrance is Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem.
Analysis of the data on Vachagan the Pious (end of 5th–early 6th centuries), king of Albania (which included since the middle of 5th century the eastern provinces of Greater Armenia – Artsakh and Utik), allows us to conclude that at the end of the 5th century the king initiated theecclesiastical reform, trying to link the origin of the Albanian church to Jerusalem. One ofthe manifestations of this reform was the creation of the legend of the Apostle Yeghisha arriving to Albania from Jerusalem. Comparative analysis of archaeological, architectural and written data leads to the conclusion that all three tombs with the single east entrance are the result of the reformist activity of Vachagan, and the idea of single eastern entrance, most likely, was taken from the tomb of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem.
A new approach to the localizations of Early Christian sanctuaries in and near Tigranakert allows to compare this sacred area with early Christian sacred topography of Jerusalem.
Timo Stickler
ELECTRUM, Volume 28, 2021, pp. 189 - 206
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.21.013.13371Murtazali S. Gadjiev
ELECTRUM, Volume 28, 2021, pp. 207 - 219
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.21.014.13372Since the early 4th century, ancient Armenian authors (P‘awstos Buzand, Movsēs Xorenac‘i, Agat‘angełos, Movsēs Dasxuranc‘i, the Ašxarac‘oyc) begin to mention the Land of the Mazk‘ut‘ (Arm. ašharh Mazk‘t‘acʻ), located in the East Caucasus. The Sarmato-Alan burial mounds of plain Daghestan of the 3rd–5th centuries (Lvov, Palasa-Syrt, etc.) are attributed to this ethnic community. In 216 AD these tribes invaded Armenia through the Derbent pass (Arm. durn Čoray) (Khorenatsi 2,65), and took part in the Armenian-Iranian war in the middle of the 3rd century.
At the beginning of the 4th century the post of “bdeašx from the Mazk‘ut‘s” (Agatangełos. 874) appears in administrative apparatus of Armenia, which shows the military and strategic value of the Land of Mazk‘ut‘s. At the same time, the family dynastic ties are apparently established between the ruling houses of Armenia and the kingdom of the Mazk‘ut‘ (Ašxen, Ašxadar, Trdat, Sanesan, Xosrow). The importance of this kingdom can be seen by the events of the 330s’—the struggle for the Armenian throne after the king Trdat’s death in c. 330 AD, in which the different tribes led by Sanesan, the King of the Mazk‘ut‘, took active part.
The discontinuance of the Mazk‘ut‘ burial mounds in the middle of the 5th century might be explained, on the one hand, by the possible annexation of the Mazk‘ut‘ by the Huns during the invasion of Transcaucasia and the seizure of the Derbent pass in circa 440 AD; on the other hand, by the subsequent forceful displacement of the Mazk‘ut‘s and the Huns from the territory to the south of Derbent along with the strengthening of Sasanian Iran in the East Caucasus in the 440s’ and regain of control over the Derbent pass, which can be traced both in written sources (Ełishe, History of Karka de Beth Selok) and fortification monuments (mud-brick fortifications of Derbent and Torpakh-kala).
Lara Fabian
ELECTRUM, Volume 28, 2021, pp. 221 - 244
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.21.015.13373The early relationships between the polities of Armenia and K‘art‘li in the South Caucasus and their neighbours in the North Caucasus is a central, but underappreciated, factor in the development of the South Caucasus’ social and political world in the Hellenistic period. Typically, only military aspects of these interactions are considered (e.g., Alan raids and control thereof). Hazy evidence of cross-Caucasus marriage alliances preserved in both the Armenian and Georgian historiographic traditions, however, hints at a far wider sphere of interaction, despite the inherent challenges in gleaning historical reality from these medieval accounts. This paper contextualizes two stories of cross-Caucasus marriage related to foundational dynastic figures in the Armenian and Georgian traditions, Artašēs and P‘arnavaz respectively, within a wider body of evidence for and thought about North-South Caucasus interaction. Taken as a whole, this consideration argues that North-South relationships should be seen as integral to the political development of the South Caucasus.
Achim Lichtenberger, Torben Schreiber, Mkrtich H. Zardaryan
ELECTRUM, Volume 28, 2021, pp. 245 - 276
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.21.016.13374The paper deals with the first results of the Armenian-German Artaxata Project which was initiated in 2018. The city of Artaxata was founded in the 2nd century BC as the capital of the Artaxiad kingdom. The city stretches over the 13 hills of the Khor Virap heights and the adjacent plain in the Ararat valley. The new project focusses on Hill XIII and the Lower city to the south and the north of it. This area was investigated by magnetic prospections in 2018 and on the basis of its results, in total eleven 5 × 5 m trenches were excavated in 2019. On the eastern part of Hill XIII several structures of possibly domestic function were uncovered. They were laid out according to a regular plan and in total three phases could be determined. According to 14C data, the first phase already dates to the 2nd century BC while the subsequent two phases continue into the 1st/2nd century AD. In the 2019 campaign, the overall layout and exact function of the structures could not be determined and more excavations will be undertaken in the forthcoming years. North of Hill XIII the foundations of piers of an unfinished Roman aqueduct on arches were excavated. This aqueduct is attributed to the period 114–117 AD when Rome in vain tried to establish the Roman province of Armenia with Artaxata being the capital.
Torben Schreiber
ELECTRUM, Volume 28, 2021, pp. 277 - 310
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.21.017.13375This article examines the seal impressions from Artaxata discovered in 1979/80 during excavations carried out by the Armenian Academy of Sciences on Hills V and VIII. As the archive on Hill VIII is quite small with only 20 to 25 seal impressions, the focus of this paper lies on the approximately 8,000 seal impressions found on hill V. The complex was dated to the period from 180 BC to 59 AD and it was assumed that it was a “private” archive or a kind of “chancellery.” An analysis of the finds in a wider context and the comparison with other archival complexes of the Hellenistic period as well as an examination of the characteristic features of “official” seals (size, image, shape, number of impressions) leads to the conclusion that it must have been a public archive, most probably it is the city archive of Artaxata.
Publication date: 17.12.2020
Editor-in-Chief: Edward Dąbrowa
Cover design: Barbara Widłak
Cover photography: Cypriot Late Bronze Age copper ingot (Metropolitan Museum of Arts New York, no. 11.140.7)
The publication of this volume was financed by the Jagiellonian University in Krakow – Faculty of History.
Katarzyna Zeman-Wiśniewska
ELECTRUM, Volume 27, 2020, pp. 11 - 32
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.20.001.12791This article argues that it is possible to distinguish certain stages of development of the contact between Cyprus and Crete, from Early Bronze Age up to the LBA/EIA transition period. To thoroughly do that, areas in which the connections are most clearly expressed: written sources, pottery, copper trade and cult practice influences are discussed. Possible sea routes between two islands, direct and as a part of a major route between Aegean, Levant and Egypt are described. Discussed written sources include possible place-names connected with Cyprus/Alasia in linear scripts and usage of the so-called ‘Cypro-Minoan’writing. Examples of pots and sherds both Cypriot found in Crete and Cretan found in Cyprus are examined and possible copper trade (including lead isotope analysis) is considered. Further, alleged Minoan cult practice influences are thoroughly discussed. Finally all the above are chronologically reviewed and a course of development of contacts between Crete and Cyprus is proposed.
Paulina Komar
ELECTRUM, Volume 27, 2020, pp. 33 - 43
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.20.002.12792This paper argues that the rise and fall of north and central Aegean wine exportations was caused by economic factors, such as changes in wine supply. It demonstrates that these wines disappeared from southern Gaul and central Tyrrhenian Italy when these areas started to locally produce their own wine. At the same time, north and central Aegean wines were also ousted from the Black Sea region by both local products and cheaper imports from the southern Aegean. This shows that supply and demand governed commercial activities during the Classical and Hellenistic periods, which provides new evidence regarding the nature of the ancient Greek economy.
Jakub Kuciak
ELECTRUM, Volume 27, 2020, pp. 45 - 66
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.20.003.12793Described most exhaustively in Herodotus’ Histories, the navy commanded by tyrant Polycrates of Samos was allegedly one of the greatest in archaic Greece, but the extant sources provide conflicting information about its history of use, structure and role in Polycrates’grand strategy. The paper analyses the available evidence to throw light on selected unknowns regarding Polycrates’naval power. Considered matters include numbers and types of ships found in Polycrates’ navy: penteconters, triremes and samainae, the invention of the latter type traditionally ascribed to Polycrates. Relevantly to this article, the Greek historiographic tradition frequently ascribes famous inventions to famous personages: within this text, I attempt to untangle this association to test whether it holds true for Polycrates. Finally, I examine how the tyrant obtained funds to maintain his sizeable fleet, investigating whether Polycrates might have resorted to pillaging and privateering to pay for his navy’s upkeep.
Christian Körner
ELECTRUM, Volume 27, 2020, pp. 67 - 87
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.20.004.12794Until the middle of the 5th century BC, Athens and Persia were struggling for supremacy in the Eastern Mediterranean. Due to its strategic importance, the island of Cyprus was affected by this conflict. Several Athenian interventions in Cyprus can be reconstructed from the written sources. Parallel to this larger conflict, wars between Cypriot kingdoms seem to have been an essential feature of the island’s fragmented political landscape. Apparently, both forms of conflict—inner-Cypriot wars and interventions from the outside—affected each other.
In the following paper, I will analyse the interventions and conflicts in Cyprus in the 5th century BC and assess the role played by the Cypriot kings. In terms of method, I will approach these questions by analysing the written sources that provide information concerning political conflicts on the island during the 5th century BC. I will take a Cypriot perspective in order to show how inner-Cypriot rivalries intersected with the relationship to the major powers in the region. The overall impression is that between the unsuccessful Cypriot Revolt in 498 BC and the accession to the throne of the most powerful ruler of the island, Evagoras I of Salamis (before 411 BC), the local kingdoms were rather the objects of Athenian and Persian interests than active players in the larger conflicts.
Sławomir Sprawski
ELECTRUM, Volume 27, 2020, pp. 89 - 115
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.20.005.12795This article examines the role played by the sea in the policy of the tyrants of Pherae. Although it has often been emphasised that control over the port in Pagasae and the profits from the maritime trade were closely linked to the city’s increasing importance in the late 5th and first half of the 4th century, these issues are yet to be the subject of a more detailed analysis. This article is the first part of a comprehensive study on the maritime activity of the Pheraean tyrants in the period from Jason’s first documented political move to the end of the reigns of Lycophron and Peitholaus. It focuses on political moves, and especially on relations with Athens, as the largest maritime power of the period. One of the most important instruments of maritime policy was maintaining a fleet. The article considers the circumstances of its building, its size and its use.
Wojciech Duszyński
ELECTRUM, Volume 27, 2020, pp. 117 - 130
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.20.006.12796This article concerns the degree of direct involvement in the Athenian foreign policy in the 4th century BC. One of main questions debated by scholars is whether the Second Athenian Sea League was gradually evolving into an arche, to eventually resemble the league of the previous century. The following text contributes to the scholarly debate through a case study of relations between Athens and poleis on the island of Keos in 360s. Despite its small size, Keos included four settlements having the status of polis: Karthaia, Poiessa, Koresia and Ioulis, all members of the Second Athenian League. Around year 363/2 (according to the Attic calendar),anti-Athenian riots, usually described as revolts, erupted on Keos, to be quickly quelled by the strategos Chabrias. It is commonly assumed that the Athenians used the uprising to interfere directly in internal affairs on the island, enforcing the dissolution of the local federation of poleis. However, my analysis of selected sources suggests that such an interpretation cannot be readily defended: in fact, the federation on Keos could have broken up earlier, possibly without any external intervention. In result, it appears that the Athenians did not interfere in the local affairs to such a degree as it is often accepted.
Tomasz Grabowski
ELECTRUM, Volume 27, 2020, pp. 131 - 148
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.20.007.12797Ptolemy I, the founder of the Lagid dynasty, heavily invested in the navy and thus established the Ptolemies as a formidable sea power, his work continued by his successor Ptolemy II Philadelphus, who employed his fleet to pressure lesser powers of the Mediterranean. The following article examines the activity of Ptolemy II’s fleet in the Aegean Sea. At the end of the 270s, Ptolemy II sent a naval expedition to the Black Sea; the operation helped him establish a political relationship with Byzantion and demonstrated that maintaining a naval presence on foreign waters could influence other rulers to favor the Ptolemies. The Ptolemaic fleet under Ptolemy II Philadelphus operated in the Aegean during two major international conflicts, the Chremonidean War and the Second Syrian War. In this article I argue that the surviving evidence on the Chremonidean War indicates that Ptolemy II’s aim was not to subdue Greece or even Macedonia but to maintain the Ptolemaic hold over the Aegean with Egypt’s relatively small naval force under Patroclus. In turn, the outcome of the Second Syrian War led to a considerable weakening of the Lagids’ position in the Aegean. Ptolemy II adroitly cultivated international relations through diplomacy, propaganda, international euergetism and spreading his dynastic cult; sending the Ptolemaic fleet to patrol foreign seas constituted one crucial instrument Philadelphus could employ to shift the Mediterranean balance of power in his favor.
Hadrien Bru
ELECTRUM, Volume 27, 2020, pp. 149 - 171
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.20.008.12798In the perspective of a complete external prosopography of the Pisidians in progress, this article presents a commented catalogue of 61 persons who lived on the island of Rhodos and in its Carian Peraia from the 3rd century BCE to the beginning of the Roman Imperial period. Concerning those slaves, mercenaries, artists, craftsmen or merchants, a historical context is provided, then remarks on their juristic, social and economical status. The evoked documentation is based on inscribed monuments—mainly funerary—and amphora stamps.
Marcin N. Pawlak
ELECTRUM, Volume 27, 2020, pp. 173 - 188
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.20.009.12799Theophanes and Potamon of Mytilene, two Greek euergetes who sought to serve their home polis in a rapidly changing political landscape of the late Roman Republic and early Principate, took an active interest in the politics of the day and sought to lobby Roman elites on Mytilene’s behalf. Theophanes befriended and advised Pompey, contributing to Pompey’s decision to pardon and liberate Mytilene after the city’s ignominious participation in the Asiatic Vespers, whereas Potamon served as Mytilene’s ambassador in Rome, adroitly championing its city’s interests. Two politicians bettered Mytilene’s political status in the tumultuous period of transformation from a republic to an autocracy and ensured that the city maintained its freedom until the times of the Flavians.
Bartosz Jan Kołoczek
ELECTRUM, Volume 27, 2020, pp. 189 - 210
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.20.010.12800This article is devoted to the rarely addressed problem of Roman stereotypes and associations connected with the Aegean Sea and its islands in the works of Roman authors in the first three centuries of the Empire. The image of the Aegean islands in the Roman literature was somewhat incongruously compressed into contradictory visions: islands of plenty, desolate prisons, always located far from Italy, surrounded by the terrifying marine element. The positive associations stemmed from previous cultural contacts between the Aegean and Rome: the Romans admired the supposedly more developed Greek civilisation (their awe sometimes underpinned by ostensible disparagement), whereas their elites enjoyed their Aegean tours and reminisced about past glories of Rhodes and Athens. The negative associations came from the islands’desolation and insignificance; the imperial authors, associating the Aegean islets with exile spots, borrowed such motifs from classical and Hellenistic Greek predecessors. The Aegean Sea, ever-present in the rich Greek mythical imaginarium, inspired writers interested in myth and folklore; other writers associated islands with excellent crops and products, renowned and valued across the Empire.
Wojciech Duszyński
ELECTRUM, Volume 27, 2020, pp. 213 - 216
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.20.011.12801Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 27, 2020, pp. 217 - 219
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.20.012.12802Maciej Piegdoń
ELECTRUM, Volume 27, 2020, pp. 221 - 224
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.20.013.12803Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 27, 2020, pp. 225 - 227
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.20.014.12804Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 27, 2020, pp. 229 - 233
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.20.015.12805Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 27, 2020, pp. 235 - 237
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.20.016.12806Bartosz Jan Kołoczek
ELECTRUM, Volume 27, 2020, pp. 239 - 241
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.20.017.12807Bartosz Jan Kołoczek
ELECTRUM, Volume 27, 2020, pp. 243 - 244
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.20.018.12808Bartosz Jan Kołoczek
ELECTRUM, Volume 27, 2020, pp. 245 - 246
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.20.019.12809Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 27, 2020, pp. 247 - 249
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.20.020.12810Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 27, 2020, pp. 251 - 254
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.20.021.12811Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 27, 2020, pp. 255 - 258
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.20.022.12812Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 27, 2020, pp. 259 - 261
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.20.023.12813Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 27, 2020, pp. 263 - 265
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.20.024.12814Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 27, 2020, pp. 267 - 271
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.20.025.12815Wojciech Duszyński
ELECTRUM, Volume 27, 2020, pp. 213 - 216
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.20.011.12801Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 27, 2020, pp. 217 - 219
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.20.012.12802Maciej Piegdoń
ELECTRUM, Volume 27, 2020, pp. 221 - 224
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.20.013.12803Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 27, 2020, pp. 225 - 227
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.20.014.12804Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 27, 2020, pp. 229 - 233
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.20.015.12805Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 27, 2020, pp. 235 - 237
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.20.016.12806Bartosz Jan Kołoczek
ELECTRUM, Volume 27, 2020, pp. 239 - 241
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.20.017.12807Bartosz Jan Kołoczek
ELECTRUM, Volume 27, 2020, pp. 243 - 244
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.20.018.12808Bartosz Jan Kołoczek
ELECTRUM, Volume 27, 2020, pp. 245 - 246
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.20.019.12809Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 27, 2020, pp. 247 - 249
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.20.020.12810Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 27, 2020, pp. 251 - 254
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.20.021.12811Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 27, 2020, pp. 255 - 258
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.20.022.12812Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 27, 2020, pp. 259 - 261
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.20.023.12813Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 27, 2020, pp. 263 - 265
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.20.024.12814Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 27, 2020, pp. 267 - 271
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.20.025.12815Katarzyna Zeman-Wiśniewska
ELECTRUM, Volume 27, 2020, pp. 11 - 32
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.20.001.12791This article argues that it is possible to distinguish certain stages of development of the contact between Cyprus and Crete, from Early Bronze Age up to the LBA/EIA transition period. To thoroughly do that, areas in which the connections are most clearly expressed: written sources, pottery, copper trade and cult practice influences are discussed. Possible sea routes between two islands, direct and as a part of a major route between Aegean, Levant and Egypt are described. Discussed written sources include possible place-names connected with Cyprus/Alasia in linear scripts and usage of the so-called ‘Cypro-Minoan’writing. Examples of pots and sherds both Cypriot found in Crete and Cretan found in Cyprus are examined and possible copper trade (including lead isotope analysis) is considered. Further, alleged Minoan cult practice influences are thoroughly discussed. Finally all the above are chronologically reviewed and a course of development of contacts between Crete and Cyprus is proposed.
Paulina Komar
ELECTRUM, Volume 27, 2020, pp. 33 - 43
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.20.002.12792This paper argues that the rise and fall of north and central Aegean wine exportations was caused by economic factors, such as changes in wine supply. It demonstrates that these wines disappeared from southern Gaul and central Tyrrhenian Italy when these areas started to locally produce their own wine. At the same time, north and central Aegean wines were also ousted from the Black Sea region by both local products and cheaper imports from the southern Aegean. This shows that supply and demand governed commercial activities during the Classical and Hellenistic periods, which provides new evidence regarding the nature of the ancient Greek economy.
Jakub Kuciak
ELECTRUM, Volume 27, 2020, pp. 45 - 66
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.20.003.12793Described most exhaustively in Herodotus’ Histories, the navy commanded by tyrant Polycrates of Samos was allegedly one of the greatest in archaic Greece, but the extant sources provide conflicting information about its history of use, structure and role in Polycrates’grand strategy. The paper analyses the available evidence to throw light on selected unknowns regarding Polycrates’naval power. Considered matters include numbers and types of ships found in Polycrates’ navy: penteconters, triremes and samainae, the invention of the latter type traditionally ascribed to Polycrates. Relevantly to this article, the Greek historiographic tradition frequently ascribes famous inventions to famous personages: within this text, I attempt to untangle this association to test whether it holds true for Polycrates. Finally, I examine how the tyrant obtained funds to maintain his sizeable fleet, investigating whether Polycrates might have resorted to pillaging and privateering to pay for his navy’s upkeep.
Christian Körner
ELECTRUM, Volume 27, 2020, pp. 67 - 87
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.20.004.12794Until the middle of the 5th century BC, Athens and Persia were struggling for supremacy in the Eastern Mediterranean. Due to its strategic importance, the island of Cyprus was affected by this conflict. Several Athenian interventions in Cyprus can be reconstructed from the written sources. Parallel to this larger conflict, wars between Cypriot kingdoms seem to have been an essential feature of the island’s fragmented political landscape. Apparently, both forms of conflict—inner-Cypriot wars and interventions from the outside—affected each other.
In the following paper, I will analyse the interventions and conflicts in Cyprus in the 5th century BC and assess the role played by the Cypriot kings. In terms of method, I will approach these questions by analysing the written sources that provide information concerning political conflicts on the island during the 5th century BC. I will take a Cypriot perspective in order to show how inner-Cypriot rivalries intersected with the relationship to the major powers in the region. The overall impression is that between the unsuccessful Cypriot Revolt in 498 BC and the accession to the throne of the most powerful ruler of the island, Evagoras I of Salamis (before 411 BC), the local kingdoms were rather the objects of Athenian and Persian interests than active players in the larger conflicts.
Sławomir Sprawski
ELECTRUM, Volume 27, 2020, pp. 89 - 115
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.20.005.12795This article examines the role played by the sea in the policy of the tyrants of Pherae. Although it has often been emphasised that control over the port in Pagasae and the profits from the maritime trade were closely linked to the city’s increasing importance in the late 5th and first half of the 4th century, these issues are yet to be the subject of a more detailed analysis. This article is the first part of a comprehensive study on the maritime activity of the Pheraean tyrants in the period from Jason’s first documented political move to the end of the reigns of Lycophron and Peitholaus. It focuses on political moves, and especially on relations with Athens, as the largest maritime power of the period. One of the most important instruments of maritime policy was maintaining a fleet. The article considers the circumstances of its building, its size and its use.
Wojciech Duszyński
ELECTRUM, Volume 27, 2020, pp. 117 - 130
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.20.006.12796This article concerns the degree of direct involvement in the Athenian foreign policy in the 4th century BC. One of main questions debated by scholars is whether the Second Athenian Sea League was gradually evolving into an arche, to eventually resemble the league of the previous century. The following text contributes to the scholarly debate through a case study of relations between Athens and poleis on the island of Keos in 360s. Despite its small size, Keos included four settlements having the status of polis: Karthaia, Poiessa, Koresia and Ioulis, all members of the Second Athenian League. Around year 363/2 (according to the Attic calendar),anti-Athenian riots, usually described as revolts, erupted on Keos, to be quickly quelled by the strategos Chabrias. It is commonly assumed that the Athenians used the uprising to interfere directly in internal affairs on the island, enforcing the dissolution of the local federation of poleis. However, my analysis of selected sources suggests that such an interpretation cannot be readily defended: in fact, the federation on Keos could have broken up earlier, possibly without any external intervention. In result, it appears that the Athenians did not interfere in the local affairs to such a degree as it is often accepted.
Tomasz Grabowski
ELECTRUM, Volume 27, 2020, pp. 131 - 148
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.20.007.12797Ptolemy I, the founder of the Lagid dynasty, heavily invested in the navy and thus established the Ptolemies as a formidable sea power, his work continued by his successor Ptolemy II Philadelphus, who employed his fleet to pressure lesser powers of the Mediterranean. The following article examines the activity of Ptolemy II’s fleet in the Aegean Sea. At the end of the 270s, Ptolemy II sent a naval expedition to the Black Sea; the operation helped him establish a political relationship with Byzantion and demonstrated that maintaining a naval presence on foreign waters could influence other rulers to favor the Ptolemies. The Ptolemaic fleet under Ptolemy II Philadelphus operated in the Aegean during two major international conflicts, the Chremonidean War and the Second Syrian War. In this article I argue that the surviving evidence on the Chremonidean War indicates that Ptolemy II’s aim was not to subdue Greece or even Macedonia but to maintain the Ptolemaic hold over the Aegean with Egypt’s relatively small naval force under Patroclus. In turn, the outcome of the Second Syrian War led to a considerable weakening of the Lagids’ position in the Aegean. Ptolemy II adroitly cultivated international relations through diplomacy, propaganda, international euergetism and spreading his dynastic cult; sending the Ptolemaic fleet to patrol foreign seas constituted one crucial instrument Philadelphus could employ to shift the Mediterranean balance of power in his favor.
Hadrien Bru
ELECTRUM, Volume 27, 2020, pp. 149 - 171
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.20.008.12798In the perspective of a complete external prosopography of the Pisidians in progress, this article presents a commented catalogue of 61 persons who lived on the island of Rhodos and in its Carian Peraia from the 3rd century BCE to the beginning of the Roman Imperial period. Concerning those slaves, mercenaries, artists, craftsmen or merchants, a historical context is provided, then remarks on their juristic, social and economical status. The evoked documentation is based on inscribed monuments—mainly funerary—and amphora stamps.
Marcin N. Pawlak
ELECTRUM, Volume 27, 2020, pp. 173 - 188
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.20.009.12799Theophanes and Potamon of Mytilene, two Greek euergetes who sought to serve their home polis in a rapidly changing political landscape of the late Roman Republic and early Principate, took an active interest in the politics of the day and sought to lobby Roman elites on Mytilene’s behalf. Theophanes befriended and advised Pompey, contributing to Pompey’s decision to pardon and liberate Mytilene after the city’s ignominious participation in the Asiatic Vespers, whereas Potamon served as Mytilene’s ambassador in Rome, adroitly championing its city’s interests. Two politicians bettered Mytilene’s political status in the tumultuous period of transformation from a republic to an autocracy and ensured that the city maintained its freedom until the times of the Flavians.
Bartosz Jan Kołoczek
ELECTRUM, Volume 27, 2020, pp. 189 - 210
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.20.010.12800This article is devoted to the rarely addressed problem of Roman stereotypes and associations connected with the Aegean Sea and its islands in the works of Roman authors in the first three centuries of the Empire. The image of the Aegean islands in the Roman literature was somewhat incongruously compressed into contradictory visions: islands of plenty, desolate prisons, always located far from Italy, surrounded by the terrifying marine element. The positive associations stemmed from previous cultural contacts between the Aegean and Rome: the Romans admired the supposedly more developed Greek civilisation (their awe sometimes underpinned by ostensible disparagement), whereas their elites enjoyed their Aegean tours and reminisced about past glories of Rhodes and Athens. The negative associations came from the islands’desolation and insignificance; the imperial authors, associating the Aegean islets with exile spots, borrowed such motifs from classical and Hellenistic Greek predecessors. The Aegean Sea, ever-present in the rich Greek mythical imaginarium, inspired writers interested in myth and folklore; other writers associated islands with excellent crops and products, renowned and valued across the Empire.
Publication date: 18.12.2019
Editor-in-Chief: Edward Dąbrowa
„Digitalizacja czasopisma naukowego (rocznika) „Electrum” w celu zapewnienia otwartego dostępu do nich przez sieć Internet – zadanie finansowane w ramach umowy 606/P-DUN/2018 ze środków Ministra Nauki i Szkolnictwa Wyższego przeznaczonych na działalność upowszechniającą naukę.”
Catharine C. Lorber
ELECTRUM, Volume 26, 2019, pp. 9 - 23
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.19.001.11204This paper examines the circulation of Ptolemaic silver in the closed monetary zone of Seleucid Coele Syria and Phoenicia. No new silver coinage entered the zone under Antiochus III and Seleucus IV, though hoards were deposited in the Transjordan and eastern Judah in the early years of Antiochus IV. Trade between Phoenicia and Egypt is excluded as an explanatory factor, but the patterns are consistent with Josephus’ account of the dowry of Cleopatra I and Tobiad tax farming. In the 160s BCE fresh Ptolemaic silver began to enter the closed monetary zone, with the earliest finds in Judah, Samaria, and “southern Palestine.” This new influx, like the didrachms “of an uncertain era,” may represent a subsidy from Ptolemy VI to the Maccabees and other dissidents from Seleucid rule.
Donald T. Ariel
ELECTRUM, Volume 26, 2019, pp. 25 - 52
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.19.002.11205Alongside a critique of a new analysis of Josephus’ long account of Antiochus VII Sidetes’ siege of Jerusalem in his Antiquities, this paper presents new archaeological support for the conclusion that, at the time of the siege, the “First Wall” enclosed the Southwestern Hill of the city. Further examination of the stratigraphic summaries of the Hellenistic fortification system at the Giv‘ati Parking Lot proposes that the system constituted part of the western city-wall for the City of David hill. The addition of a lower glacis to the wall was made in advance of Sidetes’ siege. In other words, in addition to the “First Wall” protecting the western side of an expanded Jerusalem, John Hyrcanus also reinforced the City of David’s wall, as an additional barrier to the Seleucid forces. Later, after the high priest’s capitulation to Sidetes (132 BC) and the king’s death in Media (129 BC), Hyrcanus again reinforced the same fortification with an upper glacis, which never was tested.
Orit Peleg-Barkat
ELECTRUM, Volume 26, 2019, pp. 53 - 72
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.19.003.11206Despite Josephus’ detailed description of Herod’s palace built on the Southwestern Hill of Jerusalem in Bellum Judaicum, book 5, only scant archaeological remains from its substructure were revealed so far, and only few scholars have attempted reconstructing its plan and decoration. A group of monumental Ionic columns, alongside a sculpted head of a lion, found in the Southwestern Hill in the vicinity of the supposed location of the palace, seems to have originated from the palace complex, attesting to its grandeur and unique character. Combining this evidence with Josephus’ description and our vast knowledge of Herod’s palatial architecture, based on excavated palace remains in other sites, such as Jericho, Herodium, Masada, Caesarea Maritima and Machaerus, allows us to present a clearer picture of the main palace of this great builder.
David M. Jacobson
ELECTRUM, Volume 26, 2019, pp. 73 - 96
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.19.004.11207This article examines the motifs on the coins struck in Judaea under the auspices of local Roman governors (prefects and procurators) between the dismissal of the ethnarch, Herod Archelaus, in 6 CE and the eve of the First Jewish Revolt which broke out in 66 CE. Although the governors were only designated by the title procurator from the mid-first century onwards, this series of coins is conventionally referred to as “procuratorial.” All are bronzes minted in Jerusalem in a single denomination, generally identified as the prutah, and bear aniconic motifs. Because they carry year dates, we know that these coins were issued fairly sporadically and the possible reasons for this are reviewed. The coin types are analysed and their respective origins and meanings identified. An attempt is made to assess the extent to which their motifs support the picture presented in the literary sources of the changing political climate in both in Judaea and Rome over the period in which these coins were minted.
Omri Abadi, Boaz Zissu
ELECTRUM, Volume 26, 2019, pp. 97 - 108
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.19.005.11208The monumental burial complex known as the “Tombs of the Kings” is regarded by scholars as the burial plot of Queen Helena of Adiabene and her family, who lived in Jerusalem in the firstcentury CE. In this paper we reconsider the original purpose of the two large ritual baths in the burial compound, based on the location of the site relative to its surroundings. The scholarship assumes that ritual baths situated next to tombs were intended for use by participants in funerals or memorial ceremonies. In this paper we suggest that in the case of the Tombs of the Kings, the adjacent baths were meant for purificationof pilgrims en route to Jerusalem, as can be understood from their geographical location.
Avner Ecker
ELECTRUM, Volume 26, 2019, pp. 109 - 117
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.19.006.11209This paper suggests to locate the training ground (campus) of the legio X Fretensis in the shallow valley north of the Damascus Gate, perhaps where once the siege camp of Titus was built. Topographically it is the most level ground around Jerusalem, hence fitting for a campus. Furthermore, the area was devoid of structures between 70 CE and the 4th century, except for two monuments erected by legionary forces and dedicated to the emperors: one monument definitely dedicated to Hadrian (upon his visit) and the other either to Hadrian or less likely to Antoninus Pius. Positioning the campus in this area neatly explains why it was empty for centuries and why the cemetery of Aelia Capitolina was pushed north of the line of the “Third Wall”.
Miriam Ben Zeev Hofman
ELECTRUM, Volume 26, 2019, pp. 119 - 128
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.19.007.11210From numismatic findings and recent excavations in the Old City of Jerusalem it emerges that the preparatory work on Aelia Capitolina started at the very beginning of Hadrian’ reign, most probably in the 120s, more than a decade before the Bar Kokhba war. The question then arises as how it happened that Eusebius mentions the founding of this colony as a consequence of the war. The answer lies both in the source he depends upon, possibly Ariston of Pella, and also in Eusebius’ own conception of Jewish history.
Werner Eck
ELECTRUM, Volume 26, 2019, pp. 129 - 139
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.19.008.11211The colonia Aelia Capitolina, founded by Hadrian instead of Jerusalem, was certainly established only after summer 130, as a letter of the emperor to Hierapolis shows, which was written at this time in Jerusalem. One can conjecture who was settled in the colonia at that time, but concrete evidence is hardly to be found in the epigraphic tradition. The territory of the colonia might have been quite large, but cannot be determined in detail. The Roman character of the new city is most evident in the inscriptions, the vast majority of which are written in Latin. The name Aelia is still used for the city well into the Christian era.
Eran Almagor
ELECTRUM, Volume 26, 2019, pp. 141 - 157
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.19.009.11212This note examines again the overall significance of Jerusalem within the Bar Kokhba revolt. It does so firstly by suggesting a better way to read our texts: Cassius Dio (69.12.1–4) wrote in a partially thematic way, and Eusebius (HE 4.6.1–4) merged several sources together, so that there is no real difference between the two texts in terms of the sequence of the revolt and the establishment of the colony Aelia Capitolina. Secondly, the examination of other sources, different types of evidence and several traditions, may suggest that the Roman reconstruction works in the city did not finish before the revolt, but in fact were halted by it, even without assuming that the rebels actually controlled Jerusalem.
Michaël Girardin
ELECTRUM, Volume 26, 2019, pp. 159 - 176
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.19.010.11213In the third year of his fight against Rome (134/135 CE), Bar Kokhba minted coins with the slogan “leḥerut Yerushalayim: For the freedom of Jerusalem”. In this paper, I argue that what was meant by this expression was not the geographic place but a powerful idea: the worship center of the Jewish identity. Jerusalem as a slogan seems to be a metonymy for the temple, and the temple was the link between God and the Jews. By proclaiming the necessity to liberate Jerusalem, Bar Kokhba actually tried to regroup all the Jews under his banner, exploiting the theocratic ideals and the eschatological hopes of the time. However, the documents found in the desert reveal that this propagandist expectancy was not universally shared by his own troops. For the political needs of the leader, “Jerusalem” was probably the best slogan possible, but it appears to have meant little in real life, even perhaps in the eyes of Bar Kokhba himself.
Yana Tchekhanovets
ELECTRUM, Volume 26, 2019, pp. 177 - 185
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.19.011.11214The article is dedicated to a Byzantine—Early Islamic ring decorated with a representation of the Resurrection scene, recently discovered in salvage excavations in Jerusalem, at the Givati Parking Lot site. Well-dated stratified context of the find, first of its kind discovered in archaeological excavationns, enables to confirm the traditional dating of similar rings kept in the museums’ collections and to discuss their possible function in early Christian pilgrimage practice.
Jakub Kuciak
ELECTRUM, Volume 26, 2019, pp. 189 - 190
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.19.012.11215Jakub Kuciak
ELECTRUM, Volume 26, 2019, pp. 191 - 193
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.19.013.11216David Engels
ELECTRUM, Volume 26, 2019, pp. 195 - 196
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.19.014.11217Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 26, 2019, pp. 197 - 200
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.19.015.11218Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 26, 2019, pp. 201 - 203
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.19.016.11219Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 26, 2019, pp. 205 - 207
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.19.017.11220Bartosz Jan Kołoczek
ELECTRUM, Volume 26, 2019, pp. 209 - 210
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.19.018.11221Bartosz Jan Kołoczek
ELECTRUM, Volume 26, 2019, pp. 211 - 213
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.19.019.11222Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 26, 2019, pp. 215 - 218
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.19.020.11223Maciej Piegdoń
ELECTRUM, Volume 26, 2019, pp. 219 - 221
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.19.021.11224Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 26, 2019, pp. 223 - 225
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.19.022.11225Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 26, 2019, pp. 227 - 229
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.19.023.11226David Engels
ELECTRUM, Volume 26, 2019, pp. 231 - 233
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.19.024.11227Catharine C. Lorber
ELECTRUM, Volume 26, 2019, pp. 9 - 23
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.19.001.11204This paper examines the circulation of Ptolemaic silver in the closed monetary zone of Seleucid Coele Syria and Phoenicia. No new silver coinage entered the zone under Antiochus III and Seleucus IV, though hoards were deposited in the Transjordan and eastern Judah in the early years of Antiochus IV. Trade between Phoenicia and Egypt is excluded as an explanatory factor, but the patterns are consistent with Josephus’ account of the dowry of Cleopatra I and Tobiad tax farming. In the 160s BCE fresh Ptolemaic silver began to enter the closed monetary zone, with the earliest finds in Judah, Samaria, and “southern Palestine.” This new influx, like the didrachms “of an uncertain era,” may represent a subsidy from Ptolemy VI to the Maccabees and other dissidents from Seleucid rule.
Donald T. Ariel
ELECTRUM, Volume 26, 2019, pp. 25 - 52
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.19.002.11205Alongside a critique of a new analysis of Josephus’ long account of Antiochus VII Sidetes’ siege of Jerusalem in his Antiquities, this paper presents new archaeological support for the conclusion that, at the time of the siege, the “First Wall” enclosed the Southwestern Hill of the city. Further examination of the stratigraphic summaries of the Hellenistic fortification system at the Giv‘ati Parking Lot proposes that the system constituted part of the western city-wall for the City of David hill. The addition of a lower glacis to the wall was made in advance of Sidetes’ siege. In other words, in addition to the “First Wall” protecting the western side of an expanded Jerusalem, John Hyrcanus also reinforced the City of David’s wall, as an additional barrier to the Seleucid forces. Later, after the high priest’s capitulation to Sidetes (132 BC) and the king’s death in Media (129 BC), Hyrcanus again reinforced the same fortification with an upper glacis, which never was tested.
Orit Peleg-Barkat
ELECTRUM, Volume 26, 2019, pp. 53 - 72
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.19.003.11206Despite Josephus’ detailed description of Herod’s palace built on the Southwestern Hill of Jerusalem in Bellum Judaicum, book 5, only scant archaeological remains from its substructure were revealed so far, and only few scholars have attempted reconstructing its plan and decoration. A group of monumental Ionic columns, alongside a sculpted head of a lion, found in the Southwestern Hill in the vicinity of the supposed location of the palace, seems to have originated from the palace complex, attesting to its grandeur and unique character. Combining this evidence with Josephus’ description and our vast knowledge of Herod’s palatial architecture, based on excavated palace remains in other sites, such as Jericho, Herodium, Masada, Caesarea Maritima and Machaerus, allows us to present a clearer picture of the main palace of this great builder.
David M. Jacobson
ELECTRUM, Volume 26, 2019, pp. 73 - 96
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.19.004.11207This article examines the motifs on the coins struck in Judaea under the auspices of local Roman governors (prefects and procurators) between the dismissal of the ethnarch, Herod Archelaus, in 6 CE and the eve of the First Jewish Revolt which broke out in 66 CE. Although the governors were only designated by the title procurator from the mid-first century onwards, this series of coins is conventionally referred to as “procuratorial.” All are bronzes minted in Jerusalem in a single denomination, generally identified as the prutah, and bear aniconic motifs. Because they carry year dates, we know that these coins were issued fairly sporadically and the possible reasons for this are reviewed. The coin types are analysed and their respective origins and meanings identified. An attempt is made to assess the extent to which their motifs support the picture presented in the literary sources of the changing political climate in both in Judaea and Rome over the period in which these coins were minted.
Omri Abadi, Boaz Zissu
ELECTRUM, Volume 26, 2019, pp. 97 - 108
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.19.005.11208The monumental burial complex known as the “Tombs of the Kings” is regarded by scholars as the burial plot of Queen Helena of Adiabene and her family, who lived in Jerusalem in the firstcentury CE. In this paper we reconsider the original purpose of the two large ritual baths in the burial compound, based on the location of the site relative to its surroundings. The scholarship assumes that ritual baths situated next to tombs were intended for use by participants in funerals or memorial ceremonies. In this paper we suggest that in the case of the Tombs of the Kings, the adjacent baths were meant for purificationof pilgrims en route to Jerusalem, as can be understood from their geographical location.
Avner Ecker
ELECTRUM, Volume 26, 2019, pp. 109 - 117
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.19.006.11209This paper suggests to locate the training ground (campus) of the legio X Fretensis in the shallow valley north of the Damascus Gate, perhaps where once the siege camp of Titus was built. Topographically it is the most level ground around Jerusalem, hence fitting for a campus. Furthermore, the area was devoid of structures between 70 CE and the 4th century, except for two monuments erected by legionary forces and dedicated to the emperors: one monument definitely dedicated to Hadrian (upon his visit) and the other either to Hadrian or less likely to Antoninus Pius. Positioning the campus in this area neatly explains why it was empty for centuries and why the cemetery of Aelia Capitolina was pushed north of the line of the “Third Wall”.
Miriam Ben Zeev Hofman
ELECTRUM, Volume 26, 2019, pp. 119 - 128
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.19.007.11210From numismatic findings and recent excavations in the Old City of Jerusalem it emerges that the preparatory work on Aelia Capitolina started at the very beginning of Hadrian’ reign, most probably in the 120s, more than a decade before the Bar Kokhba war. The question then arises as how it happened that Eusebius mentions the founding of this colony as a consequence of the war. The answer lies both in the source he depends upon, possibly Ariston of Pella, and also in Eusebius’ own conception of Jewish history.
Werner Eck
ELECTRUM, Volume 26, 2019, pp. 129 - 139
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.19.008.11211The colonia Aelia Capitolina, founded by Hadrian instead of Jerusalem, was certainly established only after summer 130, as a letter of the emperor to Hierapolis shows, which was written at this time in Jerusalem. One can conjecture who was settled in the colonia at that time, but concrete evidence is hardly to be found in the epigraphic tradition. The territory of the colonia might have been quite large, but cannot be determined in detail. The Roman character of the new city is most evident in the inscriptions, the vast majority of which are written in Latin. The name Aelia is still used for the city well into the Christian era.
Eran Almagor
ELECTRUM, Volume 26, 2019, pp. 141 - 157
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.19.009.11212This note examines again the overall significance of Jerusalem within the Bar Kokhba revolt. It does so firstly by suggesting a better way to read our texts: Cassius Dio (69.12.1–4) wrote in a partially thematic way, and Eusebius (HE 4.6.1–4) merged several sources together, so that there is no real difference between the two texts in terms of the sequence of the revolt and the establishment of the colony Aelia Capitolina. Secondly, the examination of other sources, different types of evidence and several traditions, may suggest that the Roman reconstruction works in the city did not finish before the revolt, but in fact were halted by it, even without assuming that the rebels actually controlled Jerusalem.
Michaël Girardin
ELECTRUM, Volume 26, 2019, pp. 159 - 176
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.19.010.11213In the third year of his fight against Rome (134/135 CE), Bar Kokhba minted coins with the slogan “leḥerut Yerushalayim: For the freedom of Jerusalem”. In this paper, I argue that what was meant by this expression was not the geographic place but a powerful idea: the worship center of the Jewish identity. Jerusalem as a slogan seems to be a metonymy for the temple, and the temple was the link between God and the Jews. By proclaiming the necessity to liberate Jerusalem, Bar Kokhba actually tried to regroup all the Jews under his banner, exploiting the theocratic ideals and the eschatological hopes of the time. However, the documents found in the desert reveal that this propagandist expectancy was not universally shared by his own troops. For the political needs of the leader, “Jerusalem” was probably the best slogan possible, but it appears to have meant little in real life, even perhaps in the eyes of Bar Kokhba himself.
Yana Tchekhanovets
ELECTRUM, Volume 26, 2019, pp. 177 - 185
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.19.011.11214The article is dedicated to a Byzantine—Early Islamic ring decorated with a representation of the Resurrection scene, recently discovered in salvage excavations in Jerusalem, at the Givati Parking Lot site. Well-dated stratified context of the find, first of its kind discovered in archaeological excavationns, enables to confirm the traditional dating of similar rings kept in the museums’ collections and to discuss their possible function in early Christian pilgrimage practice.
Jakub Kuciak
ELECTRUM, Volume 26, 2019, pp. 189 - 190
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.19.012.11215Jakub Kuciak
ELECTRUM, Volume 26, 2019, pp. 191 - 193
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.19.013.11216David Engels
ELECTRUM, Volume 26, 2019, pp. 195 - 196
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.19.014.11217Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 26, 2019, pp. 197 - 200
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.19.015.11218Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 26, 2019, pp. 201 - 203
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.19.016.11219Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 26, 2019, pp. 205 - 207
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.19.017.11220Bartosz Jan Kołoczek
ELECTRUM, Volume 26, 2019, pp. 209 - 210
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.19.018.11221Bartosz Jan Kołoczek
ELECTRUM, Volume 26, 2019, pp. 211 - 213
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.19.019.11222Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 26, 2019, pp. 215 - 218
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.19.020.11223Maciej Piegdoń
ELECTRUM, Volume 26, 2019, pp. 219 - 221
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.19.021.11224Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 26, 2019, pp. 223 - 225
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.19.022.11225Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 26, 2019, pp. 227 - 229
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.19.023.11226David Engels
ELECTRUM, Volume 26, 2019, pp. 231 - 233
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.19.024.11227Publication date: 06.12.2018
Editor-in-Chief: Edward Dąbrowa
Digitalizacja czasopisma naukowego (rocznika) „Electrum” w celu zapewnienia otwartego dostępu do nich przez sieć Internet - zadanie finansowane w ramach umowy nr 606/P-DUN/2018 ze środków Ministerstwa Nauki i Szkolnictwa Wyższego przeznaczonych na działalność upowszechniającą naukę.
Omar Coloru
ELECTRUM, Volume 25, 2018, pp. 9 - 12
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.18.001.8921Tomasz Grabowski
ELECTRUM, Volume 25, 2018, pp. 13 - 26
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.18.002.8922Maciej Piegdoń
ELECTRUM, Volume 25, 2018, pp. 27 - 46
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.18.003.8923Panagiotis P. Iossif
ELECTRUM, Volume 25, 2018, pp. 47 - 72
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.18.004.8924Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 25, 2018, pp. 73 - 83
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.18.005.8925Altay Coşkun
ELECTRUM, Volume 25, 2018, pp. 85 - 125
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.18.006.8926Julia Wilker
ELECTRUM, Volume 25, 2018, pp. 127 - 145
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.18.007.8927Andreas Zack
ELECTRUM, Volume 25, 2018, pp. 147 - 185
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.18.008.8928Victor Parker
ELECTRUM, Volume 25, 2018, pp. 187 - 208
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.18.009.8929David Engels
ELECTRUM, Volume 25, 2018, pp. 209 - 241
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.18.010.8930Jakub Kuciak
ELECTRUM, Volume 25, 2018, pp. 245 - 247
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.18.011.8931Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 25, 2018, pp. 249 - 250
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.18.012.8932Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 25, 2018, pp. 251 - 252
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.18.013.8933Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 25, 2018, pp. 253 - 256
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.18.014.8934Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 25, 2018, pp. 257 - 260
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.18.015.8935Omar Coloru
ELECTRUM, Volume 25, 2018, pp. 9 - 12
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.18.001.8921Tomasz Grabowski
ELECTRUM, Volume 25, 2018, pp. 13 - 26
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.18.002.8922Maciej Piegdoń
ELECTRUM, Volume 25, 2018, pp. 27 - 46
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.18.003.8923Panagiotis P. Iossif
ELECTRUM, Volume 25, 2018, pp. 47 - 72
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.18.004.8924Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 25, 2018, pp. 73 - 83
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.18.005.8925Altay Coşkun
ELECTRUM, Volume 25, 2018, pp. 85 - 125
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.18.006.8926Julia Wilker
ELECTRUM, Volume 25, 2018, pp. 127 - 145
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.18.007.8927Andreas Zack
ELECTRUM, Volume 25, 2018, pp. 147 - 185
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.18.008.8928Victor Parker
ELECTRUM, Volume 25, 2018, pp. 187 - 208
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.18.009.8929David Engels
ELECTRUM, Volume 25, 2018, pp. 209 - 241
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.18.010.8930Jakub Kuciak
ELECTRUM, Volume 25, 2018, pp. 245 - 247
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.18.011.8931Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 25, 2018, pp. 249 - 250
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.18.012.8932Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 25, 2018, pp. 251 - 252
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.18.013.8933Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 25, 2018, pp. 253 - 256
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.18.014.8934Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 25, 2018, pp. 257 - 260
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.18.015.8935Publication date: 15.01.2018
Editor-in-Chief: Edward Dąbrowa
Paolo Ognibene
ELECTRUM, Volume 24, 2017, pp. 11 - 29
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.17.019.7501Christopher Tuplin
ELECTRUM, Volume 24, 2017, pp. 31 - 54
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.17.020.7502Military activity played a determinative role in the history of the Achaemenid empire. This chapter considers some ideological dimensions of this fact. It does so through a separate examination of Persian and Greek representations of the role of war and warriors in the imperial setting. The place of war in the elite Persian psyche does remain rather elusive, but the Persian and Greek data-sets, radically different in content and character, are not far apart in their depiction of an ideological environment in which military values played a larger role than is sometimes acknowledged but were less fundamental than one might have expected. What is sometimes called the pax Achaemenica is certainly an artificial construct, but nothing compels us to replace it with the vision of a truly militarist society.
Francesca Gazzano
ELECTRUM, Volume 24, 2017, pp. 55 - 73
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.17.021.7503Federicomaria Muccioli
ELECTRUM, Volume 24, 2017, pp. 75 - 91
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.17.022.7504Omar Coloru
ELECTRUM, Volume 24, 2017, pp. 93 - 105
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.17.023.7505Leonardo Gregoratti
ELECTRUM, Volume 24, 2017, pp. 107 - 121
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.17.024.7506Eran Almagor
ELECTRUM, Volume 24, 2017, pp. 123 - 170
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.17.025.7507Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 24, 2017, pp. 171 - 189
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.17.026.7508Tommaso Gnoli
ELECTRUM, Volume 24, 2017, pp. 191 - 212
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.17.027.7509Giusto Traina
ELECTRUM, Volume 24, 2017, pp. 213 - 221
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.17.028.7510Andrea Piras
ELECTRUM, Volume 24, 2017, pp. 223 - 235
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.17.029.7511Antonio Panaino
ELECTRUM, Volume 24, 2017, pp. 237 - 252
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.17.030.7512Andrea Gariboldi
ELECTRUM, Volume 24, 2017, pp. 253 - 262
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.17.031.7513Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 24, 2017, pp. 265 - 268
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.17.032.7514Wojciech Duszyński
ELECTRUM, Volume 24, 2017, pp. 269 - 272
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.17.033.7515Jakub Kuciak
ELECTRUM, Volume 24, 2017, pp. 273 - 275
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.17.034.7516Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 24, 2017, pp. 277 - 278
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.17.035.7517Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 24, 2017, pp. 279 - 280
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.17.036.7518Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 24, 2017, pp. 281 - 283
https://doi.org/ 10.4467/20800909EL.17.037.7519Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 24, 2017, pp. 285 - 287
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.17.038.7520Paolo Ognibene
ELECTRUM, Volume 24, 2017, pp. 11 - 29
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.17.019.7501Christopher Tuplin
ELECTRUM, Volume 24, 2017, pp. 31 - 54
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.17.020.7502Military activity played a determinative role in the history of the Achaemenid empire. This chapter considers some ideological dimensions of this fact. It does so through a separate examination of Persian and Greek representations of the role of war and warriors in the imperial setting. The place of war in the elite Persian psyche does remain rather elusive, but the Persian and Greek data-sets, radically different in content and character, are not far apart in their depiction of an ideological environment in which military values played a larger role than is sometimes acknowledged but were less fundamental than one might have expected. What is sometimes called the pax Achaemenica is certainly an artificial construct, but nothing compels us to replace it with the vision of a truly militarist society.
Francesca Gazzano
ELECTRUM, Volume 24, 2017, pp. 55 - 73
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.17.021.7503Federicomaria Muccioli
ELECTRUM, Volume 24, 2017, pp. 75 - 91
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.17.022.7504Omar Coloru
ELECTRUM, Volume 24, 2017, pp. 93 - 105
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.17.023.7505Leonardo Gregoratti
ELECTRUM, Volume 24, 2017, pp. 107 - 121
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.17.024.7506Eran Almagor
ELECTRUM, Volume 24, 2017, pp. 123 - 170
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.17.025.7507Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 24, 2017, pp. 171 - 189
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.17.026.7508Tommaso Gnoli
ELECTRUM, Volume 24, 2017, pp. 191 - 212
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.17.027.7509Giusto Traina
ELECTRUM, Volume 24, 2017, pp. 213 - 221
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.17.028.7510Andrea Piras
ELECTRUM, Volume 24, 2017, pp. 223 - 235
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.17.029.7511Antonio Panaino
ELECTRUM, Volume 24, 2017, pp. 237 - 252
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.17.030.7512Andrea Gariboldi
ELECTRUM, Volume 24, 2017, pp. 253 - 262
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.17.031.7513Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 24, 2017, pp. 265 - 268
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.17.032.7514Wojciech Duszyński
ELECTRUM, Volume 24, 2017, pp. 269 - 272
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.17.033.7515Jakub Kuciak
ELECTRUM, Volume 24, 2017, pp. 273 - 275
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.17.034.7516Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 24, 2017, pp. 277 - 278
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.17.035.7517Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 24, 2017, pp. 279 - 280
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.17.036.7518Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 24, 2017, pp. 281 - 283
https://doi.org/ 10.4467/20800909EL.17.037.7519Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 24, 2017, pp. 285 - 287
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.17.038.7520Publication date: 23.11.2016
Editor-in-Chief: Edward Dąbrowa
Wenn Macht und Dichtung sich begegnen – Polykrates und Anakreon im Lichte der griechischen Literatur
Jakub Kuciak
ELECTRUM, Volume 23, 2016, pp. 9 - 23
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.16.001.5820The main aim of the article is to present the preserved literary tradition about connections between the Samian tyrant Polycrates and the poet Anakreon. The literary tradition is analyzed chronologically: from Herodotus to Himerius. The author makes an attempt to present various traditions (which are partially independent form Herodotus) concerning the tyrant and the poet.
Christian Körner
ELECTRUM, Volume 23, 2016, pp. 25 - 49
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.16.002.5821At the end of the eighth century, Cyprus came under Assyrian control. For the following four centuries, the Cypriot monarchs were confronted with the power of the Near Eastern empires. This essay focuses on the relations between the Cypriot kings and the Near Eastern Great Kings from the eighth to the fourth century BC. To understand these relations, two theoretical concepts are applied: the centre-periphery model and the concept of suzerainty. From the central perspective of the Assyrian and Persian empires, Cyprus was situated on the western periphery. Therefore, the local governing traditions were respected by the Assyrian and Persian masters, as long as the petty kings fulfilled their duties by paying tributes and providing military support when requested to do so. The personal relationship between the Cypriot kings and their masters can best be described as one of suzerainty, where the rulers submitted to a superior ruler, but still retained some autonomy. This relationship was far from being stable, which could lead to manifold misunderstandings between centre and periphery. In this essay, the ways in which suzerainty worked are discussed using several examples of the relations between Cypriot kings and their masters.
Andreas Mehl
ELECTRUM, Volume 23, 2016, pp. 51 - 64
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.16.003.5822In the first part of the contribution current interpretations of Cypriot kingship are critically discussed. In the second part, as far as epigraphical and literary evidence allows, some features of Cypriot royal rule, especially those regarding the kings’ power, are expounded with more or less certainty, and without trying to give a complete picture of Cypriot kingship.
Wojciech Duszyński
ELECTRUM, Volume 23, 2016, pp. 65 - 76
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.16.004.5823The naval politics of Sparta in the period between the Corinthian and Boeotian Wars is a problem that barely features in modern studies on classical Greek history. The article tries to partially fill this gap, through analysis of the scant sources. The author argues that Sparta did not withdraw completely from maintaining its own presence in the Aegean Sea after conclusion of the King’s Peace. From the few testimonies, especially of Xenophon and Polyaenus, we can conclude that Sparta even kept a fleet (albeit small) in this period. This means that some kind of influence on insular poleis could have been exerted. Possible examples of Spartan actions, like on Thasos, are also disputed. However, all bridgeheads in the Aegean that Sparta probably had were lost in the first phase of the Boeotian War. This puts into question the quality of Lacedaemonian leadership, in terms of both political and military command. The article was prepared as a part of grant: The Aegean Islands 8th-4th c. BC – 4th c. AD. Centre or Periphery of the Greek World. Project ID: 2012/07/B/HS3/03455.
Tomasz Grabowski
ELECTRUM, Volume 23, 2016, pp. 77 - 99
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.16.005.5824The article discusses the contacts between the kings of Pergamon and the Greek states of the Aegean Islands. The problem should be considered both in the context of the Attalids’ situation in Asia Minor and their policy in the Aegean as well as in the broader context of their policy concerning Greek poleis. Philhellenism, euergetism, and cultural patronage became an important part of the dynasty’s propaganda, and in the case of the Aegean Islands Delos became the centre of such activities. An important aspect of the Attalids’ political activity was war, and their participation in conflicts in the Aegean world and continental Greece was very active. This activity had to awaken the Attalids’ interest in the Aegean Islands both for strategic reasons and as a place for recruiting mercenaries for their army and navy. Therefore, we cannot explain all the activities undertaken by the kings of Pergamon in the Aegean Sea only in terms of propaganda and building their image. Attalos I entered the stage of great politics, exceeding the local problems of Asia Minor. He managed to mark his presence in the Aegean and win bases on the islands which could work as footholds for further political activity in the Greek and Macedonian world
Adam Pałuchowski
ELECTRUM, Volume 23, 2016, pp. 101 - 126
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.16.006.5825The paper seeks to analyse some peculiar features in the manner in which the both rounds of Cretan grants of asylia to Teos (late 3rd and ca middle 2nd century BC) are formulated, by replacing them in their socio-economic as well as geographical context. In fact, the use or the absence of expression τὰ σώματα καὶ χρήματα in the safeguard clause may reflect a structural evolution of the slavery occurring on the island in the middle Hellenistic period, it means the transition from traditional and dominant serfdom to chattel slavery
Martha W. Baldwin Bowsky
ELECTRUM, Volume 23, 2016, pp. 127 - 153
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.16.007.5826This study assembles an island-wide context for the dossier of inscriptions revealed by excavations at the temple of Asklepios at Lissos in southwestern Crete, by examining the nature of the dossiers attested at and for sites sacred to Asklepios across the island. Such groups of inscriptions should be called “dossiers” rather than “archives,” given their subjective and selective nature; they were chosen to project the way a city and region represented itself rather than to preserve a complete epigraphic record (Cooley 2012b, 222). The ultimate goal is to determine just how characteristic or distinctive the dossier of Lissos is – geographically, chronologically, and by epigraphic genre – within Crete, where Lebena has long dominated the record
Paulina Komar
ELECTRUM, Volume 23, 2016, pp. 155 - 185
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.16.008.5827This paper explores the subject of wines from Cyprus and Cilicia during Antiquity, on the basis of literary and archaeological (amphoras) evidence. It focuses upon organoleptic characteristics of these wines as well as their exportation in the Mediterranean. The author attempts to estimate the scale of their consumption in three important centres in the Mediterranean (Alexandria, Ephesus and Rome) during the late Hellenistic and Roman Age
Marcin N. Pawlak
ELECTRUM, Volume 23, 2016, pp. 187 - 214
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.16.009.5828The article is an attempt to find answers to the fundamental questions of which Roman province the individual islands belonged to and from when. The literature on the subject frequently presents the opinion that some of the Aegean Islands were incorporated into the province of Asia at the moment of its creation. The status of the other islands was, in turn, regulated by Augustus. After a meticulous analysis of sources, the author shows that such an image is oversimplified. The administrative affiliation of the individual islands changed depending on the political circumstances and the good or bad will of the Roman generals operating in the East. The efforts of the islanders themselves were also not without significance. The locations of the individual Aegean Islands were very different, and some of them formally became part of the Roman Empire only during the Flavian rule
Jakub Kuciak
ELECTRUM, Volume 23, 2016, pp. 217 - 221
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.16.010.5829Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 23, 2016, pp. 223 - 226
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.16.011.5830Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 23, 2016, pp. 227 - 229
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.16.012.5831Maciej Piegdoń
ELECTRUM, Volume 23, 2016, pp. 231 - 236
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.16.013.5832Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 23, 2016, pp. 237 - 240
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.16.014.5833Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 23, 2016, pp. 241 - 242
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.16.015.5834Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 23, 2016, pp. 243 - 246
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.16.016.5835Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 23, 2016, pp. 247 - 249
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.16.017.5836Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 23, 2016, pp. 251 - 254
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.16.018.5837Jakub Kuciak
ELECTRUM, Volume 23, 2016, pp. 217 - 221
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.16.010.5829Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 23, 2016, pp. 223 - 226
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.16.011.5830Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 23, 2016, pp. 227 - 229
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.16.012.5831Maciej Piegdoń
ELECTRUM, Volume 23, 2016, pp. 231 - 236
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.16.013.5832Wenn Macht und Dichtung sich begegnen – Polykrates und Anakreon im Lichte der griechischen Literatur
Jakub Kuciak
ELECTRUM, Volume 23, 2016, pp. 9 - 23
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.16.001.5820The main aim of the article is to present the preserved literary tradition about connections between the Samian tyrant Polycrates and the poet Anakreon. The literary tradition is analyzed chronologically: from Herodotus to Himerius. The author makes an attempt to present various traditions (which are partially independent form Herodotus) concerning the tyrant and the poet.
Christian Körner
ELECTRUM, Volume 23, 2016, pp. 25 - 49
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.16.002.5821At the end of the eighth century, Cyprus came under Assyrian control. For the following four centuries, the Cypriot monarchs were confronted with the power of the Near Eastern empires. This essay focuses on the relations between the Cypriot kings and the Near Eastern Great Kings from the eighth to the fourth century BC. To understand these relations, two theoretical concepts are applied: the centre-periphery model and the concept of suzerainty. From the central perspective of the Assyrian and Persian empires, Cyprus was situated on the western periphery. Therefore, the local governing traditions were respected by the Assyrian and Persian masters, as long as the petty kings fulfilled their duties by paying tributes and providing military support when requested to do so. The personal relationship between the Cypriot kings and their masters can best be described as one of suzerainty, where the rulers submitted to a superior ruler, but still retained some autonomy. This relationship was far from being stable, which could lead to manifold misunderstandings between centre and periphery. In this essay, the ways in which suzerainty worked are discussed using several examples of the relations between Cypriot kings and their masters.
Andreas Mehl
ELECTRUM, Volume 23, 2016, pp. 51 - 64
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.16.003.5822In the first part of the contribution current interpretations of Cypriot kingship are critically discussed. In the second part, as far as epigraphical and literary evidence allows, some features of Cypriot royal rule, especially those regarding the kings’ power, are expounded with more or less certainty, and without trying to give a complete picture of Cypriot kingship.
Wojciech Duszyński
ELECTRUM, Volume 23, 2016, pp. 65 - 76
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.16.004.5823The naval politics of Sparta in the period between the Corinthian and Boeotian Wars is a problem that barely features in modern studies on classical Greek history. The article tries to partially fill this gap, through analysis of the scant sources. The author argues that Sparta did not withdraw completely from maintaining its own presence in the Aegean Sea after conclusion of the King’s Peace. From the few testimonies, especially of Xenophon and Polyaenus, we can conclude that Sparta even kept a fleet (albeit small) in this period. This means that some kind of influence on insular poleis could have been exerted. Possible examples of Spartan actions, like on Thasos, are also disputed. However, all bridgeheads in the Aegean that Sparta probably had were lost in the first phase of the Boeotian War. This puts into question the quality of Lacedaemonian leadership, in terms of both political and military command. The article was prepared as a part of grant: The Aegean Islands 8th-4th c. BC – 4th c. AD. Centre or Periphery of the Greek World. Project ID: 2012/07/B/HS3/03455.
Tomasz Grabowski
ELECTRUM, Volume 23, 2016, pp. 77 - 99
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.16.005.5824The article discusses the contacts between the kings of Pergamon and the Greek states of the Aegean Islands. The problem should be considered both in the context of the Attalids’ situation in Asia Minor and their policy in the Aegean as well as in the broader context of their policy concerning Greek poleis. Philhellenism, euergetism, and cultural patronage became an important part of the dynasty’s propaganda, and in the case of the Aegean Islands Delos became the centre of such activities. An important aspect of the Attalids’ political activity was war, and their participation in conflicts in the Aegean world and continental Greece was very active. This activity had to awaken the Attalids’ interest in the Aegean Islands both for strategic reasons and as a place for recruiting mercenaries for their army and navy. Therefore, we cannot explain all the activities undertaken by the kings of Pergamon in the Aegean Sea only in terms of propaganda and building their image. Attalos I entered the stage of great politics, exceeding the local problems of Asia Minor. He managed to mark his presence in the Aegean and win bases on the islands which could work as footholds for further political activity in the Greek and Macedonian world
Adam Pałuchowski
ELECTRUM, Volume 23, 2016, pp. 101 - 126
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.16.006.5825The paper seeks to analyse some peculiar features in the manner in which the both rounds of Cretan grants of asylia to Teos (late 3rd and ca middle 2nd century BC) are formulated, by replacing them in their socio-economic as well as geographical context. In fact, the use or the absence of expression τὰ σώματα καὶ χρήματα in the safeguard clause may reflect a structural evolution of the slavery occurring on the island in the middle Hellenistic period, it means the transition from traditional and dominant serfdom to chattel slavery
Martha W. Baldwin Bowsky
ELECTRUM, Volume 23, 2016, pp. 127 - 153
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.16.007.5826This study assembles an island-wide context for the dossier of inscriptions revealed by excavations at the temple of Asklepios at Lissos in southwestern Crete, by examining the nature of the dossiers attested at and for sites sacred to Asklepios across the island. Such groups of inscriptions should be called “dossiers” rather than “archives,” given their subjective and selective nature; they were chosen to project the way a city and region represented itself rather than to preserve a complete epigraphic record (Cooley 2012b, 222). The ultimate goal is to determine just how characteristic or distinctive the dossier of Lissos is – geographically, chronologically, and by epigraphic genre – within Crete, where Lebena has long dominated the record
Paulina Komar
ELECTRUM, Volume 23, 2016, pp. 155 - 185
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.16.008.5827This paper explores the subject of wines from Cyprus and Cilicia during Antiquity, on the basis of literary and archaeological (amphoras) evidence. It focuses upon organoleptic characteristics of these wines as well as their exportation in the Mediterranean. The author attempts to estimate the scale of their consumption in three important centres in the Mediterranean (Alexandria, Ephesus and Rome) during the late Hellenistic and Roman Age
Marcin N. Pawlak
ELECTRUM, Volume 23, 2016, pp. 187 - 214
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.16.009.5828The article is an attempt to find answers to the fundamental questions of which Roman province the individual islands belonged to and from when. The literature on the subject frequently presents the opinion that some of the Aegean Islands were incorporated into the province of Asia at the moment of its creation. The status of the other islands was, in turn, regulated by Augustus. After a meticulous analysis of sources, the author shows that such an image is oversimplified. The administrative affiliation of the individual islands changed depending on the political circumstances and the good or bad will of the Roman generals operating in the East. The efforts of the islanders themselves were also not without significance. The locations of the individual Aegean Islands were very different, and some of them formally became part of the Roman Empire only during the Flavian rule
Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 23, 2016, pp. 237 - 240
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.16.014.5833Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 23, 2016, pp. 241 - 242
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.16.015.5834Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 23, 2016, pp. 243 - 246
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.16.016.5835Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 23, 2016, pp. 247 - 249
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.16.017.5836Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 23, 2016, pp. 251 - 254
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.16.018.5837Publication date: 22.12.2015
Editor-in-Chief: Edward Dąbrowa
Frank L. Holt
ELECTRUM, Volume 22, 2015, pp. 9 - 15
https://doi.org/ 10.4467/20800909EL.15.001.3491Scholars have generally claimed that Alexander the Great’s extraordinary order that his army burn all of its non-essential personal possessions occurred in Hyrcania, on the eve of the Bactrian invasion. The evidence, however, shows that the event more likely happened at Bactra several years later, at the end of the Bactrian campaign.
Laurianne Martinez-Sève
ELECTRUM, Volume 22, 2015, pp. 17 - 46
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.15.002.3218Ai Khanoum is probably the most important and the best-known of the Greek settlements founded in Bactria by the Seleucid kings. The site was excavated between 1964 and 1978, but its chronology remains unclear. The purpose of this article is to give a more accurate view of its history, taking into account the results of recent research. As yet, we are still unable to date with precision the time of its foundation, which was not a single event but a process, going on for several decades between the time Alexander the Great entered eastern Bactria in spring 328 and the time a true city was planned there under Antiochos I. Nevertheless, the development of Ai Khanoum occurred only from the beginning of the second century BC, when the city had become, along with Bactra, the major city of the Graeco-Bactrian kingdom. Under the Seleucids as well as the Graeco-Bactrian kings, Ai Khanoum was thus a royal city and its history was subordinate to those of the Greek kings.
Pierre Leriche
ELECTRUM, Volume 22, 2015, pp. 47 - 85
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.15.003.3941The main aim of the paper is a presentation of results of the Franco-Uzbek Archaeological Expedition in Northern Bactria in ancient Termez and its region. Archeological excavations that have been conducted from 1993 up to the present day shed new light on the past both of the city and the area of the Northern Bactria. Chronologically, discoveries cover periods from Hellenistic to Islamic.
Antonio Panaino
ELECTRUM, Volume 22, 2015, pp. 87 - 106
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.15.004.3942This article analyses the historical and linguistic implications that emerge from a very famous passage preserved by Strabo (XV, 2, 8 [C 724]), but probably belonging to Eratosthenes’ Geographika, which states that Persians, Medes, Bactrians and Sogdians would “speak approximately the same language, with but slight variations” (εἰσὶ γάρ πως καὶ ὁμόγλωττοι παρὰ μικρόν). This assumption is untenable, because even before Eratosthenes’ time the Iranian languages were well distinguished. The suggested homoglossia should be explained in political terms, as the result of a practical diffusion of a variety of Old Persian in the army and in the satrapal administration. In the framework of a socio-linguistic and ethno-linguistic analysis of the historical situation attested in the Persian Empire, this study also tackles the problem of the meaning to be attributed to the word arya- in a linguistic context, as that of § 70 of Bisutun inscription. This terminology is discussed not only in connection with the one attested in the recently discovered Rabatak Inscription, but also with the documentation preserved in the Khotanese Book of Zambasta 23, 4–5, and – outside of the strictly Iranian milieu – in the Aitareya Āraṇyaka III, 2, 5.
With regard to the frequently claimed homoglossia, this study concludes that any description of the linguistic semi-unity of the Iranian ethne, or only of the North-Eastern Iranian ones, is a dream, and, as far as we know about the linguistic history of these peoples, not only a conclusion insufficiently grounded, but a highly improbable linguistic mirage. A “permafrosted” Irano-Aryan still spoken by all the Iranians as a sort of “Esperanto” ante litteram has no historical basis, nor does the idea that arya- was the name of a still preserved “common language,” if this expression should be interpreted as a surviving unifying archaic jargon of all the Iranians (and not a practical Western Iranian koiné, imposed by the Old Persian authorities as a comfortable medium). The “Aryan” linguistic identity thus assumed other, fully historical, implications, although it was based on a tradition, partly original and derived by an ancestral cultural heritage, partly invented, especially in its socio-linguistic and sociopolitical implications, as normally happens when power and its legitimacy are strongly involved.
Touraj Daryaee, Soodabeh Malekzadeh
ELECTRUM, Volume 22, 2015, pp. 107 - 114
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.15.005.3943This essay discuses the significance of the unique gold coin of the Kushan king, Huviška. The legend on the coin reads Imšao which recalls the ancient Indo-Iranian mythic figure, Yima/Yama. It is contended that the reason for which Yima/Yama is portrayed on the coin with a bird on his hand is not the idea of Glory and his reign, but rather the paradaisical state according to the Wīdēwdād, where Yima/Yama ruled over the world. It is contended that Huviška aimed at presenting himself in this manner to his subjects who were familiar with the Avestan and mythic Indo-Iranian lore.
Carlo Lippolis , Niccolo Manassero
ELECTRUM, Volume 22, 2015, pp. 115 - 142
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.15.006.3944The article analyses the body of evidence related to the storage and administration of food in Parthian Nisa, according to the results of the recent excavations of the Italian Archaeological Expedition in Turkmenistan. A new corpus of clay sealings, khums (big jars) and ostraka came to light in the so-called SW Building, which, together with the previously known findings from the other buildings of Nisa, gave way to some speculations about the storage and administration practice within the Arsacid citadel. The spatial distribution of the khums gives information on the function of each building and their single rooms; the texts on the ostraka inform us on the nature and quantities of the food stored in the khums; the various ways the sealings were impressed on clay suggest some ideas on the number and roles of the officers involved in the administration of the storehouses, and perhaps on the nature of the goods stored as well. In general, the findings from the latest excavations provide fundamental information on the economic life of the citadel and of the Parthian society as well. Despite the lack of scholarly debate on such issues as related to the Parthian and Central Asian world, the authors try to interpret the evidence from the Nisa excavations, and give a preliminary reading of the data from the new and old excavations in the Arsacid citadel.
Vito Messina, Jafar Mehr Kian
ELECTRUM, Volume 22, 2015, pp. 143 - 154
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.15.007.3945Between 2008 and 2010, the Iranian-Italian Joint Expedition in Kūzestān conducted research in the area of the modern city of Īda under the co-direction of the authors of this paper. The aim of the expedition was to acquire new data on the Parthian rock reliefs recognised up to now at Kong-e Azdar, Kong-e Yār ‘Alīvand and Kong-e Kamālvand by applying the most up-to-date technologies, namely the GPS survey and laser scanning. Indeed, despite the several studies conducted on these works, several aspects, such as the chronology of the represented scenes, their evolution and carving techniques, still need to be clarified.
A preliminary elaboration of the data acquired at Kong-e Yār ‘Alīvand allowed us to create a digital 3D model of the sculpted surface consisting of 2,467,745 points. The surface analysis conducted on this digital support revealed traces of an inscription on the upper part of the sculpted scene, which has been deeply eroded and was never reported in previous surveys, and still undetected iconographic details, which shed new light on the sculpted scene, usually interpreted as an investiture.
Alain Chenevier
ELECTRUM, Volume 22, 2015, pp. 155 - 158
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.15.008.3946The silver drachms issued for the two competing Arsacid brothers Vologases VI and Artabanus V may be conveniently divided into two distinct groups. However, the ensuing political instability from the rivalry between the two sons of Vologases V was not without numismatic consequence. It has, in fact, left its marks on some very rare and important outputs from the turbulent period c. AD 208–224 of Parthian history. We have several « mule » or « hybrid » drachms that are struck from different obverse and reverse dies, each belonging to one of the two brother kings. These testify to the political confusion that persisted up until the fall of the Arsacid dynasty.
Nathanael Andrade
ELECTRUM, Volume 22, 2015, pp. 159 - 171
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.15.009.3947In a key passage of the Syriac Book of the Laws of the Countries, Christians are described as residing among the Medes, Persians, Parthians, and Kushans. This statement has sometimes encouraged scholars to accept that Christianity had penetrated the Iranian plateau and central Asia by the early third century CE. But this testimony does not necessarily reflect the actual state of contemporary Christianity in such regions. Instead, it is based on a text that had been circulating in the eastern Mediterranean and upper Mesopotamia during the late second and early third centuries CE. This text, now lost, had ascribed the evangelization of such regions to the apostle Thomas.
Omar Coloru
ELECTRUM, Volume 22, 2015, pp. 173 - 199
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.15.010.3948The present paper intends to explore the way in which the new kingdoms born from the dissolution of the Greco-Macedonian powers east of the Tigris employed coinage in order to promote kingship ideology based on kinship and family relationships. At the same time, it will try to show the interplay as well as the differences between Greco-Macedonian and local cultures in using family as a tool of propaganda.
Fabrizio Sinisi
ELECTRUM, Volume 22, 2015, pp. 201 - 225
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.15.011.3949This article deals with Kushano-Sasanian coins, aiming to interpret the images of deities used on their reverses. The topic has occasionally been discussed in numismatic studies on the Kushano-Sasanian series, and some images have also been examined in archaeological literature on Central Asia. Yet Kushano-Sasanian religious imagery has never really been the subject of specific treatment. In fact, such series provide extremely interesting evidence of the religious imagery of the Sasanian period, due to the conventions which governed typological selection, since these allowed a more varied iconographic repertoire in comparison with what we can see on the imperial issues. Contrary to previous hypotheses of the phenomenon of syncretism produced by the supposed Bactrian religious specificity, the analysis results in a picture showing a fully Zoroastrian imagery, which absorbed iconographic features of Sasanian and Kushan derivation against the background of the presence of the new Sasanian power.
Nikolaus Schindel
ELECTRUM, Volume 22, 2015, pp. 227 - 248
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.15.012.3950This article discusses the Sasanian coinage from the region of Sakastan during the latter part of the 4th and the 5th century AD. Only through a comprehensive collection of material and a detailed re-evaluation of already examined coins was it possible to reconstruct a continuous series of Sakastan coins stretching from Ardashir II (379–383) to Wahram V (420–438). The implications of this numismatic evidence for our understanding of the history of Sakastan in this period are discussed in some detail, also taking into account further numismatic data from Eastern Iran.
Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 22, 2015, pp. 251 - 254
Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 22, 2015, pp. 251 - 254
Frank L. Holt
ELECTRUM, Volume 22, 2015, pp. 9 - 15
https://doi.org/ 10.4467/20800909EL.15.001.3491Scholars have generally claimed that Alexander the Great’s extraordinary order that his army burn all of its non-essential personal possessions occurred in Hyrcania, on the eve of the Bactrian invasion. The evidence, however, shows that the event more likely happened at Bactra several years later, at the end of the Bactrian campaign.
Laurianne Martinez-Sève
ELECTRUM, Volume 22, 2015, pp. 17 - 46
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.15.002.3218Ai Khanoum is probably the most important and the best-known of the Greek settlements founded in Bactria by the Seleucid kings. The site was excavated between 1964 and 1978, but its chronology remains unclear. The purpose of this article is to give a more accurate view of its history, taking into account the results of recent research. As yet, we are still unable to date with precision the time of its foundation, which was not a single event but a process, going on for several decades between the time Alexander the Great entered eastern Bactria in spring 328 and the time a true city was planned there under Antiochos I. Nevertheless, the development of Ai Khanoum occurred only from the beginning of the second century BC, when the city had become, along with Bactra, the major city of the Graeco-Bactrian kingdom. Under the Seleucids as well as the Graeco-Bactrian kings, Ai Khanoum was thus a royal city and its history was subordinate to those of the Greek kings.
Pierre Leriche
ELECTRUM, Volume 22, 2015, pp. 47 - 85
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.15.003.3941The main aim of the paper is a presentation of results of the Franco-Uzbek Archaeological Expedition in Northern Bactria in ancient Termez and its region. Archeological excavations that have been conducted from 1993 up to the present day shed new light on the past both of the city and the area of the Northern Bactria. Chronologically, discoveries cover periods from Hellenistic to Islamic.
Antonio Panaino
ELECTRUM, Volume 22, 2015, pp. 87 - 106
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.15.004.3942This article analyses the historical and linguistic implications that emerge from a very famous passage preserved by Strabo (XV, 2, 8 [C 724]), but probably belonging to Eratosthenes’ Geographika, which states that Persians, Medes, Bactrians and Sogdians would “speak approximately the same language, with but slight variations” (εἰσὶ γάρ πως καὶ ὁμόγλωττοι παρὰ μικρόν). This assumption is untenable, because even before Eratosthenes’ time the Iranian languages were well distinguished. The suggested homoglossia should be explained in political terms, as the result of a practical diffusion of a variety of Old Persian in the army and in the satrapal administration. In the framework of a socio-linguistic and ethno-linguistic analysis of the historical situation attested in the Persian Empire, this study also tackles the problem of the meaning to be attributed to the word arya- in a linguistic context, as that of § 70 of Bisutun inscription. This terminology is discussed not only in connection with the one attested in the recently discovered Rabatak Inscription, but also with the documentation preserved in the Khotanese Book of Zambasta 23, 4–5, and – outside of the strictly Iranian milieu – in the Aitareya Āraṇyaka III, 2, 5.
With regard to the frequently claimed homoglossia, this study concludes that any description of the linguistic semi-unity of the Iranian ethne, or only of the North-Eastern Iranian ones, is a dream, and, as far as we know about the linguistic history of these peoples, not only a conclusion insufficiently grounded, but a highly improbable linguistic mirage. A “permafrosted” Irano-Aryan still spoken by all the Iranians as a sort of “Esperanto” ante litteram has no historical basis, nor does the idea that arya- was the name of a still preserved “common language,” if this expression should be interpreted as a surviving unifying archaic jargon of all the Iranians (and not a practical Western Iranian koiné, imposed by the Old Persian authorities as a comfortable medium). The “Aryan” linguistic identity thus assumed other, fully historical, implications, although it was based on a tradition, partly original and derived by an ancestral cultural heritage, partly invented, especially in its socio-linguistic and sociopolitical implications, as normally happens when power and its legitimacy are strongly involved.
Touraj Daryaee, Soodabeh Malekzadeh
ELECTRUM, Volume 22, 2015, pp. 107 - 114
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.15.005.3943This essay discuses the significance of the unique gold coin of the Kushan king, Huviška. The legend on the coin reads Imšao which recalls the ancient Indo-Iranian mythic figure, Yima/Yama. It is contended that the reason for which Yima/Yama is portrayed on the coin with a bird on his hand is not the idea of Glory and his reign, but rather the paradaisical state according to the Wīdēwdād, where Yima/Yama ruled over the world. It is contended that Huviška aimed at presenting himself in this manner to his subjects who were familiar with the Avestan and mythic Indo-Iranian lore.
Carlo Lippolis , Niccolo Manassero
ELECTRUM, Volume 22, 2015, pp. 115 - 142
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.15.006.3944The article analyses the body of evidence related to the storage and administration of food in Parthian Nisa, according to the results of the recent excavations of the Italian Archaeological Expedition in Turkmenistan. A new corpus of clay sealings, khums (big jars) and ostraka came to light in the so-called SW Building, which, together with the previously known findings from the other buildings of Nisa, gave way to some speculations about the storage and administration practice within the Arsacid citadel. The spatial distribution of the khums gives information on the function of each building and their single rooms; the texts on the ostraka inform us on the nature and quantities of the food stored in the khums; the various ways the sealings were impressed on clay suggest some ideas on the number and roles of the officers involved in the administration of the storehouses, and perhaps on the nature of the goods stored as well. In general, the findings from the latest excavations provide fundamental information on the economic life of the citadel and of the Parthian society as well. Despite the lack of scholarly debate on such issues as related to the Parthian and Central Asian world, the authors try to interpret the evidence from the Nisa excavations, and give a preliminary reading of the data from the new and old excavations in the Arsacid citadel.
Vito Messina, Jafar Mehr Kian
ELECTRUM, Volume 22, 2015, pp. 143 - 154
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.15.007.3945Between 2008 and 2010, the Iranian-Italian Joint Expedition in Kūzestān conducted research in the area of the modern city of Īda under the co-direction of the authors of this paper. The aim of the expedition was to acquire new data on the Parthian rock reliefs recognised up to now at Kong-e Azdar, Kong-e Yār ‘Alīvand and Kong-e Kamālvand by applying the most up-to-date technologies, namely the GPS survey and laser scanning. Indeed, despite the several studies conducted on these works, several aspects, such as the chronology of the represented scenes, their evolution and carving techniques, still need to be clarified.
A preliminary elaboration of the data acquired at Kong-e Yār ‘Alīvand allowed us to create a digital 3D model of the sculpted surface consisting of 2,467,745 points. The surface analysis conducted on this digital support revealed traces of an inscription on the upper part of the sculpted scene, which has been deeply eroded and was never reported in previous surveys, and still undetected iconographic details, which shed new light on the sculpted scene, usually interpreted as an investiture.
Alain Chenevier
ELECTRUM, Volume 22, 2015, pp. 155 - 158
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.15.008.3946The silver drachms issued for the two competing Arsacid brothers Vologases VI and Artabanus V may be conveniently divided into two distinct groups. However, the ensuing political instability from the rivalry between the two sons of Vologases V was not without numismatic consequence. It has, in fact, left its marks on some very rare and important outputs from the turbulent period c. AD 208–224 of Parthian history. We have several « mule » or « hybrid » drachms that are struck from different obverse and reverse dies, each belonging to one of the two brother kings. These testify to the political confusion that persisted up until the fall of the Arsacid dynasty.
Nathanael Andrade
ELECTRUM, Volume 22, 2015, pp. 159 - 171
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.15.009.3947In a key passage of the Syriac Book of the Laws of the Countries, Christians are described as residing among the Medes, Persians, Parthians, and Kushans. This statement has sometimes encouraged scholars to accept that Christianity had penetrated the Iranian plateau and central Asia by the early third century CE. But this testimony does not necessarily reflect the actual state of contemporary Christianity in such regions. Instead, it is based on a text that had been circulating in the eastern Mediterranean and upper Mesopotamia during the late second and early third centuries CE. This text, now lost, had ascribed the evangelization of such regions to the apostle Thomas.
Omar Coloru
ELECTRUM, Volume 22, 2015, pp. 173 - 199
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.15.010.3948The present paper intends to explore the way in which the new kingdoms born from the dissolution of the Greco-Macedonian powers east of the Tigris employed coinage in order to promote kingship ideology based on kinship and family relationships. At the same time, it will try to show the interplay as well as the differences between Greco-Macedonian and local cultures in using family as a tool of propaganda.
Fabrizio Sinisi
ELECTRUM, Volume 22, 2015, pp. 201 - 225
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.15.011.3949This article deals with Kushano-Sasanian coins, aiming to interpret the images of deities used on their reverses. The topic has occasionally been discussed in numismatic studies on the Kushano-Sasanian series, and some images have also been examined in archaeological literature on Central Asia. Yet Kushano-Sasanian religious imagery has never really been the subject of specific treatment. In fact, such series provide extremely interesting evidence of the religious imagery of the Sasanian period, due to the conventions which governed typological selection, since these allowed a more varied iconographic repertoire in comparison with what we can see on the imperial issues. Contrary to previous hypotheses of the phenomenon of syncretism produced by the supposed Bactrian religious specificity, the analysis results in a picture showing a fully Zoroastrian imagery, which absorbed iconographic features of Sasanian and Kushan derivation against the background of the presence of the new Sasanian power.
Nikolaus Schindel
ELECTRUM, Volume 22, 2015, pp. 227 - 248
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.15.012.3950This article discusses the Sasanian coinage from the region of Sakastan during the latter part of the 4th and the 5th century AD. Only through a comprehensive collection of material and a detailed re-evaluation of already examined coins was it possible to reconstruct a continuous series of Sakastan coins stretching from Ardashir II (379–383) to Wahram V (420–438). The implications of this numismatic evidence for our understanding of the history of Sakastan in this period are discussed in some detail, also taking into account further numismatic data from Eastern Iran.
Publication date: 03.03.2015
Editor-in-Chief: Edward Dąbrowa
Federicomaria Muccioli
ELECTRUM, Volume 21, 2014, pp. 9 - 19
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.14.001.2777Ancient authors offer different traditions over the last days and wishes of the philosopher Heracleides Ponticus. The tales combined of Philodemus and Hermippus (in Diogenes Laertius) probably go back to Demochares of Leoconoe and his work against the philosophers, which thus could constitue the oldest and reliable source about it. After an exam of the political and religious context of Heracleia Pontica and Greek world in the times of Heracleides, we can accept that the philosopher managed to receive heroic honours post mortem, as described in the version of the nephew of Demosthenes.
Tomasz Grabowski
ELECTRUM, Volume 21, 2014, pp. 21 - 41
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.14.001.2778The cult of the Ptolemies spread in various ways. Apart from the Lagids, the initiative came from poleis themselves; private cult was also very important. The ruler cult, both that organised directly by the Ptolemaic authorities and that established by poleis, was tangibly beneficial for the Ptolemaic foreign policy. The dynastic cult became one of the basic instruments of political activity in the region, alongside acts of euergetism. It seems that Ptolemy II played the biggest role in introducing the ruler cult as a foreign policy measure. He was probably responsible for bringing his father’s nickname Soter to prominence. He also played the decisive role in popularising the cult of Arsinoe II, emphasising her role as protector of sailors and guarantor of the monarchy’s prosperity and linking her to cults accentuating the warrior nature of female deities. Ptolemy II also used dynastic festivals as vehicles of dynastic propaganda and ideology and a means to popularise the cult. The ruler cult became one of the means of communication between the subordinate cities and the Ptolemies. It also turned out to be an important platform in contacts with the poleis which were loosely or not at all subjugated by the Lagids. The establishment of divine honours for the Ptolemies by a polis facilitated closer relations and created a friendly atmosphere and a certain emotional bond. The ruler cult also offered many possibilities for Greek cities. Granting kings divine honours was not only an expression of the city’s gratefulness for the experienced kindness, but also a way of securing the king’s continued favour.
David Engels
ELECTRUM, Volume 21, 2014, pp. 43 - 71
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.14.001.2779The following paper presents an extensive overview over the motivations, circumstances and consequences of the foundation of an Hellenistic gymnasium and the constitution of a civic group of “Antiochenes” within early Seleucid Jerusalem by the philhellenic Jewish elite gathered around the high priest Jason.
Katell Berthelot
ELECTRUM, Volume 21, 2014, pp. 73 - 85
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.14.001.2780The fifth chapter of the First Book of Maccabees recounts a whole range of wars waged by Judas Maccabeus against Judaea’s neighbours, who are depicted as threatening the lives of the Jews living in their midst. The account of these punitive expeditions contains the only explicit reference found in the book to an anathema (ḥerem) against a foreign people, a reference which has led some scholars to see Judas as re-enacting the biblical prescription of the ḥerem against the Canaanites. In contrast with this interpretation, the present article argues that the description in 1 Maccabees 5 is highly literary and rhetorical, and that it is part of a strategy which aims at presenting Judas as the heir of the first kings of Israel. In particular, a careful literary analysis shows that nearly all the differences between the accounts in 1 and 2 Maccabees can be explained by taking into consideration the project of the author to present Judas’s military expeditions in the light of Saul’s campaigns, following 1 Samuel 10–15 (especially 14:47–48). Given the indebtedness of 1 Maccabees 5 toward such biblical traditions, the historicity of Judas’s wars against Judaea’s neighbours should be re-assessed.
Maciej Piegdoń
ELECTRUM, Volume 21, 2014, pp. 87 - 97
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.14.001.2781The success of Roman expansion in the Republican period and the durability of the empire, which survived the fall of the Republic and continued to function for the next few hundred years under the rule of emperors, drew the attention of both scholars and rulers in subsequent eras. The Imperium Romanum became a model for other states that attempted to build their own empires in later times. What captures our attention in discussions on Roman imperialism is mainly one, so far unresolved, dilemma: was Roman expansion a result of the material and psychological benefits that individual social groups enjoyed as a result of the aggressive policy, or a product of the Roman society’s atavistic tendencies for using violence? This seems to be a very difficult question to answer. If we also consider other elements that cause aggression, such as fright, fear (metus Gallicus, Punicus, Etruscus, etc.) of something or someone and a desire to win fame or glory over an enemy, then solving the problem seems impossible indeed. Finding the right answer is not made any easier by the historical sources. On the one hand, they are very biased, as they hide the actual reasons under a thick layer of propaganda and apologetic slogans; so thick, in fact, that in many cases the Romans’ true motives seem incomprehensible. The majority of available accounts present the Romans as the defenders of the weak and their allies. This is the result of a strong propaganda rhetoric used by the Romans in order to justify themselves in contemporary eyes and in posterity too.
We should also note one more element that could have had an influence on the development of an imperial mentality in Rome, i.e. the broadly defined civilisation and cultural milieu in which Rome came to be – Italy. A cursory comparison of various Roman war rites with the rituals of other inhabitants of Italy indicates that war was very much a part of the mentality of Italic communities. The presence of war rites in Italic tribes suggests that in Italy, war was an important element of existence. Rome was an integral part of this world, which meant that the presence of a strong military component and aggressiveness in the life of the Roman community was natural.
Danuta Musiał
ELECTRUM, Volume 21, 2014, pp. 99 - 106
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.14.001.2782The Roman emperor accumulated political and religious power, which in republican tradition was divided between magistrates and priests. This does not mean, however, that the boundary between these authorities has been erased, which also confirms the manner in which the individual ruler held the pontifex maximus function. This article concerns two cases of Tiberius’ interventions as the pontifex maximus recorded by Tacitus. The first event is connected with the choosing of a new Vestal, and the next is related to the flamen Dialis’ (S. Cornelius Maluginensis) requests for governorship of the province. In both situations, the emperor appeared before the Senate in a dual role; he presented the pontiffs’ opinion as pontifex maximus, and as the princeps he made a decisions on its basis.
Werner Eck
ELECTRUM, Volume 21, 2014, pp. 107 - 115
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.14.001.2783Publicly displayed statues constituted an important element of Rome’s presence in the life of a province. Until quite recently this form of communication has hardly been attested in the province of Iudaea/Syria Palaestina giving the impression that it was not practiced. However, large scale excavations in various regions in Israel and the intensive “hunt” for inscriptions and their systematic collection carried out by the CIIP yielded a corrective: there is no doubt left that this form of public communication was widely practiced here as well.
Anna Tatarkiewicz
ELECTRUM, Volume 21, 2014, pp. 117 - 131
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.14.001.2784Vespasian and his sons were forced to create their own style of politics, and, in search of auctoritas and maiestas, they could not neglect the realm of religion. We should bear in mind that in the Roman world, religion was an integral and indispensable component of social and political life. For these reasons, these representatives of the Roman Imperial Dynasty, just like their predecessors and successors, successfully used different forms of activity surpassing the narrow interpretation of the domain of religio, including massive building programmes, monetary policy or even poetry, to express devotion and respect for mores maiorum as well as to confirm the legality of their power by presenting the divine approval of their political strength.
It seems legitimate to acknowledge that the Flavian era did not bring revolutionary changes in traditional religion. This clearly shows that the new dynasty was perfectly aware that one of the aspects of a well-functioning Rome was preservation of the ancestors’ customs and a belief in divine protection which could ensure safety, strength and belief in the unity of the Empire.
Peter Franz Mittag
ELECTRUM, Volume 21, 2014, pp. 133 - 152
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.14.001.2785Literary sources, inscriptions and coins present Antoninus Pius as an emperor perfectly representing the traditional ideal of a pious emperor who promotes traditional Roman and Italian cults. On the other side his medallions which were meant to some extent as gifts for his close friends show a series of unusual gods and mythical scenes. Some of these medallions seem to reflect the emperor’s personal religious belief. Gods connected to mysteries like Ceres and Cybele as well as healing gods like Aesculapius seem to belong to the emperor’s religious strategies to handle difficult situations as illness and death within his family – and thus reflect a more or less ‘powerless’ side within the topic of ‘power and religion’.
Przemysław Wojciechowski
ELECTRUM, Volume 21, 2014, pp. 153 - 162
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.14.001.2786The imperial cult was a local phenomenon. Religious colleges, like other social groups, included various forms of the emperor cult in the rituals they practised at their own discretion. Most frequently, the collegial imperial cult took the form of ceremonies organised to celebrate anniversaries connected with the emperor. They could be accompanied by foundations of statues or even temples dedicated to the emperor or members of his family. The imperial cult played a special role in the case of corporations, which embraced it as their axis of activity and the main element of their identity. Associations of cultores Larum et imaginum Augusti, regardless of their genesis, were an important element of the very complex phenomenon of imperial cult in the western part of the Roman Empire. Testimonies left behind by their members enable us, to a large extent, to verify the 19th-century vision of the imperial cult, which mainly interpreted it in the context of “religion of loyalty.”
Jakub Kuciak
ELECTRUM, Volume 21, 2014, pp. 165 - 168
Ryszard Tokarczuk
ELECTRUM, Volume 21, 2014, pp. 169 - 171
Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 21, 2014, pp. 173 - 175
Jakub Kuciak
ELECTRUM, Volume 21, 2014, pp. 165 - 168
Federicomaria Muccioli
ELECTRUM, Volume 21, 2014, pp. 9 - 19
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.14.001.2777Ancient authors offer different traditions over the last days and wishes of the philosopher Heracleides Ponticus. The tales combined of Philodemus and Hermippus (in Diogenes Laertius) probably go back to Demochares of Leoconoe and his work against the philosophers, which thus could constitue the oldest and reliable source about it. After an exam of the political and religious context of Heracleia Pontica and Greek world in the times of Heracleides, we can accept that the philosopher managed to receive heroic honours post mortem, as described in the version of the nephew of Demosthenes.
Tomasz Grabowski
ELECTRUM, Volume 21, 2014, pp. 21 - 41
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.14.001.2778The cult of the Ptolemies spread in various ways. Apart from the Lagids, the initiative came from poleis themselves; private cult was also very important. The ruler cult, both that organised directly by the Ptolemaic authorities and that established by poleis, was tangibly beneficial for the Ptolemaic foreign policy. The dynastic cult became one of the basic instruments of political activity in the region, alongside acts of euergetism. It seems that Ptolemy II played the biggest role in introducing the ruler cult as a foreign policy measure. He was probably responsible for bringing his father’s nickname Soter to prominence. He also played the decisive role in popularising the cult of Arsinoe II, emphasising her role as protector of sailors and guarantor of the monarchy’s prosperity and linking her to cults accentuating the warrior nature of female deities. Ptolemy II also used dynastic festivals as vehicles of dynastic propaganda and ideology and a means to popularise the cult. The ruler cult became one of the means of communication between the subordinate cities and the Ptolemies. It also turned out to be an important platform in contacts with the poleis which were loosely or not at all subjugated by the Lagids. The establishment of divine honours for the Ptolemies by a polis facilitated closer relations and created a friendly atmosphere and a certain emotional bond. The ruler cult also offered many possibilities for Greek cities. Granting kings divine honours was not only an expression of the city’s gratefulness for the experienced kindness, but also a way of securing the king’s continued favour.
David Engels
ELECTRUM, Volume 21, 2014, pp. 43 - 71
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.14.001.2779The following paper presents an extensive overview over the motivations, circumstances and consequences of the foundation of an Hellenistic gymnasium and the constitution of a civic group of “Antiochenes” within early Seleucid Jerusalem by the philhellenic Jewish elite gathered around the high priest Jason.
Katell Berthelot
ELECTRUM, Volume 21, 2014, pp. 73 - 85
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.14.001.2780The fifth chapter of the First Book of Maccabees recounts a whole range of wars waged by Judas Maccabeus against Judaea’s neighbours, who are depicted as threatening the lives of the Jews living in their midst. The account of these punitive expeditions contains the only explicit reference found in the book to an anathema (ḥerem) against a foreign people, a reference which has led some scholars to see Judas as re-enacting the biblical prescription of the ḥerem against the Canaanites. In contrast with this interpretation, the present article argues that the description in 1 Maccabees 5 is highly literary and rhetorical, and that it is part of a strategy which aims at presenting Judas as the heir of the first kings of Israel. In particular, a careful literary analysis shows that nearly all the differences between the accounts in 1 and 2 Maccabees can be explained by taking into consideration the project of the author to present Judas’s military expeditions in the light of Saul’s campaigns, following 1 Samuel 10–15 (especially 14:47–48). Given the indebtedness of 1 Maccabees 5 toward such biblical traditions, the historicity of Judas’s wars against Judaea’s neighbours should be re-assessed.
Maciej Piegdoń
ELECTRUM, Volume 21, 2014, pp. 87 - 97
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.14.001.2781The success of Roman expansion in the Republican period and the durability of the empire, which survived the fall of the Republic and continued to function for the next few hundred years under the rule of emperors, drew the attention of both scholars and rulers in subsequent eras. The Imperium Romanum became a model for other states that attempted to build their own empires in later times. What captures our attention in discussions on Roman imperialism is mainly one, so far unresolved, dilemma: was Roman expansion a result of the material and psychological benefits that individual social groups enjoyed as a result of the aggressive policy, or a product of the Roman society’s atavistic tendencies for using violence? This seems to be a very difficult question to answer. If we also consider other elements that cause aggression, such as fright, fear (metus Gallicus, Punicus, Etruscus, etc.) of something or someone and a desire to win fame or glory over an enemy, then solving the problem seems impossible indeed. Finding the right answer is not made any easier by the historical sources. On the one hand, they are very biased, as they hide the actual reasons under a thick layer of propaganda and apologetic slogans; so thick, in fact, that in many cases the Romans’ true motives seem incomprehensible. The majority of available accounts present the Romans as the defenders of the weak and their allies. This is the result of a strong propaganda rhetoric used by the Romans in order to justify themselves in contemporary eyes and in posterity too.
We should also note one more element that could have had an influence on the development of an imperial mentality in Rome, i.e. the broadly defined civilisation and cultural milieu in which Rome came to be – Italy. A cursory comparison of various Roman war rites with the rituals of other inhabitants of Italy indicates that war was very much a part of the mentality of Italic communities. The presence of war rites in Italic tribes suggests that in Italy, war was an important element of existence. Rome was an integral part of this world, which meant that the presence of a strong military component and aggressiveness in the life of the Roman community was natural.
Danuta Musiał
ELECTRUM, Volume 21, 2014, pp. 99 - 106
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.14.001.2782The Roman emperor accumulated political and religious power, which in republican tradition was divided between magistrates and priests. This does not mean, however, that the boundary between these authorities has been erased, which also confirms the manner in which the individual ruler held the pontifex maximus function. This article concerns two cases of Tiberius’ interventions as the pontifex maximus recorded by Tacitus. The first event is connected with the choosing of a new Vestal, and the next is related to the flamen Dialis’ (S. Cornelius Maluginensis) requests for governorship of the province. In both situations, the emperor appeared before the Senate in a dual role; he presented the pontiffs’ opinion as pontifex maximus, and as the princeps he made a decisions on its basis.
Werner Eck
ELECTRUM, Volume 21, 2014, pp. 107 - 115
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.14.001.2783Publicly displayed statues constituted an important element of Rome’s presence in the life of a province. Until quite recently this form of communication has hardly been attested in the province of Iudaea/Syria Palaestina giving the impression that it was not practiced. However, large scale excavations in various regions in Israel and the intensive “hunt” for inscriptions and their systematic collection carried out by the CIIP yielded a corrective: there is no doubt left that this form of public communication was widely practiced here as well.
Anna Tatarkiewicz
ELECTRUM, Volume 21, 2014, pp. 117 - 131
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.14.001.2784Vespasian and his sons were forced to create their own style of politics, and, in search of auctoritas and maiestas, they could not neglect the realm of religion. We should bear in mind that in the Roman world, religion was an integral and indispensable component of social and political life. For these reasons, these representatives of the Roman Imperial Dynasty, just like their predecessors and successors, successfully used different forms of activity surpassing the narrow interpretation of the domain of religio, including massive building programmes, monetary policy or even poetry, to express devotion and respect for mores maiorum as well as to confirm the legality of their power by presenting the divine approval of their political strength.
It seems legitimate to acknowledge that the Flavian era did not bring revolutionary changes in traditional religion. This clearly shows that the new dynasty was perfectly aware that one of the aspects of a well-functioning Rome was preservation of the ancestors’ customs and a belief in divine protection which could ensure safety, strength and belief in the unity of the Empire.
Peter Franz Mittag
ELECTRUM, Volume 21, 2014, pp. 133 - 152
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.14.001.2785Literary sources, inscriptions and coins present Antoninus Pius as an emperor perfectly representing the traditional ideal of a pious emperor who promotes traditional Roman and Italian cults. On the other side his medallions which were meant to some extent as gifts for his close friends show a series of unusual gods and mythical scenes. Some of these medallions seem to reflect the emperor’s personal religious belief. Gods connected to mysteries like Ceres and Cybele as well as healing gods like Aesculapius seem to belong to the emperor’s religious strategies to handle difficult situations as illness and death within his family – and thus reflect a more or less ‘powerless’ side within the topic of ‘power and religion’.
Przemysław Wojciechowski
ELECTRUM, Volume 21, 2014, pp. 153 - 162
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.14.001.2786The imperial cult was a local phenomenon. Religious colleges, like other social groups, included various forms of the emperor cult in the rituals they practised at their own discretion. Most frequently, the collegial imperial cult took the form of ceremonies organised to celebrate anniversaries connected with the emperor. They could be accompanied by foundations of statues or even temples dedicated to the emperor or members of his family. The imperial cult played a special role in the case of corporations, which embraced it as their axis of activity and the main element of their identity. Associations of cultores Larum et imaginum Augusti, regardless of their genesis, were an important element of the very complex phenomenon of imperial cult in the western part of the Roman Empire. Testimonies left behind by their members enable us, to a large extent, to verify the 19th-century vision of the imperial cult, which mainly interpreted it in the context of “religion of loyalty.”
Ryszard Tokarczuk
ELECTRUM, Volume 21, 2014, pp. 169 - 171
Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 21, 2014, pp. 173 - 175
Publication date: 11.03.2014
Editor-in-Chief: Edward Dąbrowa
Jakub Kuciak
ELECTRUM, Volume 20, 2013, pp. 9 - 22
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.13.001.1430This article discusses the tradition of the Ionian colonisation preserved in ancient literary sources. The author focuses on the time and circumstances in which the view that the Athenians were responsible for the Ionian colonisation emerged. He also examines whether there is any support in the sources for the opinion expressed by some historians that such a belief was already strong in the Archaic period.
Adolfo J. Dominguez
ELECTRUM, Volume 20, 2013, pp. 23 - 36
The Greek city of Emporion is one of the few Greek emporia which ultimately became a polis. Consequently, the city had to adapt the previously held structures of an emporion to cope with the new circumstances which being a polis required; thus its urban space, territory, population, laws, government had to be modifi ed in the conversion from one situation to another. Furthermore, this change had to be fulfi lled in the midst of a non-Greek environment, which obviously had consequences in the development of Greek identity within the city. Fortunately, in the case of Emporion we have both archaeological and literary evidence (although not very abundant) to observe these processes. The aim of this paper is, consequently, to consider this evidence in order to see how interactions worked in Emporion itself as well as in the surrounding region in different historical moments and how those interactions contributed to shaping several interrelated identities within the Greek city, which also became a strong point for building the identity of the non-Greek peoples in that region of north-eastern Iberia.
Omar Coloru
ELECTRUM, Volume 20, 2013, pp. 37 - 56
The present paper deals with the population of the Seleukid settlements in order to address issues about the settlers’ mobility and ethnic identity. By surveying the available evidence, this study aims in particular to understand the role played by non-Greek populations in the Seleukid Empire, trying to go beyond the thesis of an apartheid-like regime in which those ethnic groups would be socially as well as politically isolated from the Greco-Macedonian settlers.
Tomasz Grabowski
ELECTRUM, Volume 20, 2013, pp. 57 - 76
The Ptolemaic colonisation in Asia Minor and the Aegean region was a signifi cant tool which served the politics of the dynasty that actively participated in the fi ght for hegemony over the eastern part of the Mediterranean Sea basin. In order to specify the role which the settlements founded by the Lagids played in their politics, it is of considerable importance to establish as precise dating of the foundations as possible. It seems legitimate to acknowledge that Ptolemy II possessed a well-thought-out plan, which, apart from the purely strategic aspects of founding new settlements, was also heavily charged with the propaganda issues which were connected with the cult of Arsinoe II.
David Engels
ELECTRUM, Volume 20, 2013, pp. 77 - 115
Maciej Piegdoń
ELECTRUM, Volume 20, 2013, pp. 117 - 141
This article is an attempt to present the role of colonisation in the Roman policy of expansion towards its Italian neighbours in the 3rd–2nd BCE and showing the effects of this phenomenon, as illustrated by settlements in the Ager Gallicus and Picenum. Information on the founded colonies in sources, appearing somewhat on the margins of accounts of military activities and diplomatic missions in Italy (foedera), but also connected with the internal policy conducted by Rome (grants of land), may indicate that colonisation complemented such activities. This complementary character of the process of colonisation in relation to other political, military, diplomatic, and internal activities seems to be an important feature of the Republic’s activities.
Marcin N. Pawlak
ELECTRUM, Volume 20, 2013, pp. 143 - 162
A few months before his death, Caesar decided to establish a Roman colony on the spot where Corinth, destroyed in 146 BC, used to lie. The population of Roman Corinth was ethnically and socially diverse from the very beginning. This, however, does not change the fact that the city was a Roman colony, whose offi cial name was Colonia Laus Iulia Corinthiensis. With time, natural demographic processes started to take place, which on the one hand increased the original diversity, and on the other hand reinforced the strongest element of this diversity, i.e. Greekness. In this article, the author tries to answer the often-asked question about the circumstances in which Corinth – a Roman colony – started to be perceived as a hellenised city. What exactly does the “hellenisation” of Corinth mean and how does it show?
Stanisław Turlej
ELECTRUM, Volume 20, 2013, pp. 163 - 176
The aim of this article is to draw attention to the need to intensify historical research on Herulian settlements in Byzantium under Emperors Anastasius and Justinian based on the analysis of written sources. The starting point for studying the history of the Heruli in Late Antiquity should be a historical analysis of the excursus devoted to them by Procopius of Caesarea in the book VI Wars. As a result of a historical analysis based on literal interpretation and critical examination, taking into account legal circumstances and the historical context, it can greatly contribute to our knowledge of Herulian history. To sum up the results of the conducted research, it is possible to give quite a precise description of the relations between the empire and the Heruli based on an analysis of the accounts of Procopius of Caesarea and Marcellinus Comes. In 512, Emperor Anastasius settled the tribe on the empire’s lands. Taking advantage of their diffi cult situation, he probably forced them into full subordination. It seems that the Heruli, deprived of their tribal organisation and striving to keep their independence, rebelled and attacked the Romans at the fi rst opportunity, i.e. ca. 514. The imperial army managed to defeat them as early as 515 or 516, and Anastasius refused to give them the status of allies, i.e. improve their position. In this situation it seems most likely that the empire completely broke its ties with the Heruli and the tribe left the empire’s lands. At this stage of the analysis it is diffi cult to determine to what extent Procopius was aware of the nuances of Anastasius’ policy, as his account of the Herulian migration in search of new lands is very brief and schematic. All the details he provides, apart from the information about the Heruli crossing the Danube River on their own initiative, are in complete agreement with the reconstruction of events based on Marcellinus Comes’ mention. Only after completing the analysis of Procopius’ whole account on the Heruli will it be possible to formulate conclusions about its reliability and the sources he used.
Jakub Kuciak
ELECTRUM, Volume 20, 2013, pp. 9 - 22
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.13.001.1430This article discusses the tradition of the Ionian colonisation preserved in ancient literary sources. The author focuses on the time and circumstances in which the view that the Athenians were responsible for the Ionian colonisation emerged. He also examines whether there is any support in the sources for the opinion expressed by some historians that such a belief was already strong in the Archaic period.
Adolfo J. Dominguez
ELECTRUM, Volume 20, 2013, pp. 23 - 36
The Greek city of Emporion is one of the few Greek emporia which ultimately became a polis. Consequently, the city had to adapt the previously held structures of an emporion to cope with the new circumstances which being a polis required; thus its urban space, territory, population, laws, government had to be modifi ed in the conversion from one situation to another. Furthermore, this change had to be fulfi lled in the midst of a non-Greek environment, which obviously had consequences in the development of Greek identity within the city. Fortunately, in the case of Emporion we have both archaeological and literary evidence (although not very abundant) to observe these processes. The aim of this paper is, consequently, to consider this evidence in order to see how interactions worked in Emporion itself as well as in the surrounding region in different historical moments and how those interactions contributed to shaping several interrelated identities within the Greek city, which also became a strong point for building the identity of the non-Greek peoples in that region of north-eastern Iberia.
Omar Coloru
ELECTRUM, Volume 20, 2013, pp. 37 - 56
The present paper deals with the population of the Seleukid settlements in order to address issues about the settlers’ mobility and ethnic identity. By surveying the available evidence, this study aims in particular to understand the role played by non-Greek populations in the Seleukid Empire, trying to go beyond the thesis of an apartheid-like regime in which those ethnic groups would be socially as well as politically isolated from the Greco-Macedonian settlers.
Tomasz Grabowski
ELECTRUM, Volume 20, 2013, pp. 57 - 76
The Ptolemaic colonisation in Asia Minor and the Aegean region was a signifi cant tool which served the politics of the dynasty that actively participated in the fi ght for hegemony over the eastern part of the Mediterranean Sea basin. In order to specify the role which the settlements founded by the Lagids played in their politics, it is of considerable importance to establish as precise dating of the foundations as possible. It seems legitimate to acknowledge that Ptolemy II possessed a well-thought-out plan, which, apart from the purely strategic aspects of founding new settlements, was also heavily charged with the propaganda issues which were connected with the cult of Arsinoe II.
David Engels
ELECTRUM, Volume 20, 2013, pp. 77 - 115
Maciej Piegdoń
ELECTRUM, Volume 20, 2013, pp. 117 - 141
This article is an attempt to present the role of colonisation in the Roman policy of expansion towards its Italian neighbours in the 3rd–2nd BCE and showing the effects of this phenomenon, as illustrated by settlements in the Ager Gallicus and Picenum. Information on the founded colonies in sources, appearing somewhat on the margins of accounts of military activities and diplomatic missions in Italy (foedera), but also connected with the internal policy conducted by Rome (grants of land), may indicate that colonisation complemented such activities. This complementary character of the process of colonisation in relation to other political, military, diplomatic, and internal activities seems to be an important feature of the Republic’s activities.
Marcin N. Pawlak
ELECTRUM, Volume 20, 2013, pp. 143 - 162
A few months before his death, Caesar decided to establish a Roman colony on the spot where Corinth, destroyed in 146 BC, used to lie. The population of Roman Corinth was ethnically and socially diverse from the very beginning. This, however, does not change the fact that the city was a Roman colony, whose offi cial name was Colonia Laus Iulia Corinthiensis. With time, natural demographic processes started to take place, which on the one hand increased the original diversity, and on the other hand reinforced the strongest element of this diversity, i.e. Greekness. In this article, the author tries to answer the often-asked question about the circumstances in which Corinth – a Roman colony – started to be perceived as a hellenised city. What exactly does the “hellenisation” of Corinth mean and how does it show?
Stanisław Turlej
ELECTRUM, Volume 20, 2013, pp. 163 - 176
The aim of this article is to draw attention to the need to intensify historical research on Herulian settlements in Byzantium under Emperors Anastasius and Justinian based on the analysis of written sources. The starting point for studying the history of the Heruli in Late Antiquity should be a historical analysis of the excursus devoted to them by Procopius of Caesarea in the book VI Wars. As a result of a historical analysis based on literal interpretation and critical examination, taking into account legal circumstances and the historical context, it can greatly contribute to our knowledge of Herulian history. To sum up the results of the conducted research, it is possible to give quite a precise description of the relations between the empire and the Heruli based on an analysis of the accounts of Procopius of Caesarea and Marcellinus Comes. In 512, Emperor Anastasius settled the tribe on the empire’s lands. Taking advantage of their diffi cult situation, he probably forced them into full subordination. It seems that the Heruli, deprived of their tribal organisation and striving to keep their independence, rebelled and attacked the Romans at the fi rst opportunity, i.e. ca. 514. The imperial army managed to defeat them as early as 515 or 516, and Anastasius refused to give them the status of allies, i.e. improve their position. In this situation it seems most likely that the empire completely broke its ties with the Heruli and the tribe left the empire’s lands. At this stage of the analysis it is diffi cult to determine to what extent Procopius was aware of the nuances of Anastasius’ policy, as his account of the Herulian migration in search of new lands is very brief and schematic. All the details he provides, apart from the information about the Heruli crossing the Danube River on their own initiative, are in complete agreement with the reconstruction of events based on Marcellinus Comes’ mention. Only after completing the analysis of Procopius’ whole account on the Heruli will it be possible to formulate conclusions about its reliability and the sources he used.
Publication date: 21.01.2013
ELECTRUM - Journal of Ancient History has been published since 1997 by the Department of Ancient History at the Jagiellonian University in Cracow as a collection of papers and monographs. In 2010 it starts as journal with one monographic issue per year. Journal publishes scholarly papers embodying studies in history and culture of Greece, Rome and Near East from the beginning of the First Millennium BC to about AD 400. Contributions are written in English, German, French and Italian. The journal publishes books reviews
Eran Almagor
ELECTRUM, Volume 19, 2012, pp. 9 - 40
https://doi.org/10.4467/20843909EL.12.001.0742Following the recent attempts to rehabilitate the reputation of Ctesias and the information given in his works, this paper proposes to understand certain of the seemingly fanciful details that were associated with the physician and his writings. It tries to shed some light on several uncertainties connected with Ctesias (i.e., his sojourn in Persia) and the Persica (i.e., date, original style and sources of imagery). It argues that the pedestrian lists included in the work might have been later interpolations and that the minor works circulating under Ctesias’ name might have been either sections of the Persica that were taken out to be presented as stand-alone volumes or else falsely attributed to him. The paper addresses the Indica and puts forward several possibilities concerning its relation with the Persica. The influence of Ctesias on the author Deinon is examined, and in the appendix the impact of the Persica on Xenophon’s Anabasis is analyzed.
Emma M. Aston
ELECTRUM, Volume 19, 2012, pp. 41 - 60
https://doi.org/10.4467/20843909EL.12.002.0743The Daochos Monument at Delphi has received some scholarly attention from an art-historical and archaeological perspective; this article, however, examines it rather as a reflection of contemporary Thessalian history and discourse, an aspect which has been almost entirely neglected. Through its visual imagery and its inscriptions, the monument adopts and adapts long-standing Thessalian themes of governance and identity, and achieves a delicate balance with Macedonian concerns to forge a symbolic rapprochement between powers and cultures in the Greek north. Its dedicator, Daochos, emerges as far more than just the puppet of Philip II of Macedon. This hostile and largely Demosthenic characterisation, which remains influential even in modern historiography, is far from adequate in allowing for an understanding of the relationship between Thessalian and Macedonian motivations at this time, or of the importance of Delphi as the pan-Hellenic setting of their interaction. Looking closely at the Daochos Monument instead allows for a rare glimpse into the Thessalian perspective in all its complexity.
Bogdan Burliga
ELECTRUM, Volume 19, 2012, pp. 61 - 81
https://doi.org/10.4467/20843909EL.12.003.0744The identification of Aeneas Tacticus has always been a matter of dispute. Most often he is supposed to have been a mercenary officer, probably from Stymphalus, to whom Xenophon makes reference in Hellenica, 7.3.1. Accordingly, one may find the views that in Aeneas’ treatise a mercenary perspective is adopted, a claim also supported by the observation that the author records the phenomenon of the ubiquitous popularity of paid soldiers in the Greek warfare system of the fourth century BC. In this paper it is argued that Aeneas’ outlook in fact had little in common with mercenary ethics; instead, it is the writer’s deep commitment to civic values (explicitly stated in the Preface) that is stressed. Especially worth pointing out remains Aeneas’ belief that during siege civic patriotism still matters. It is a value on which success in overwhelming the invaders depends: all the steps and preventive actions of the city’s dwellers leading to a successful defense of a native polis must be rooted – according to him – in the conviction that polis in its material (territory, estates, shrines, temples, walls) and spiritual dimension (religion, gods, respect for the parents) constitutes the best framework for life. By the same token, a relatively high importance is given by Aeneas to hoplite troops, usually consisting of yeomen and farmers who were the owners of land. In the author’s conviction they could provide the best possible protection to a polis. Looking from a purely military point of view, hoplite forces – together with auxiliary troops (the light-armed and cavalry, if possible) – were also useful at the time when the enemy entered the city’s territory and ravaged it before attempting a direct assault on the walls.
Tomasz Grabowski
ELECTRUM, Volume 19, 2012, pp. 83 - 97
https://doi.org/10.4467/20843909EL.12.004.0745In the 250s and 240s continental Greece found itself in a particularly complicated situation. The growth of the Aetolian and Achaean Leagues, as well as Sparta’s awoken ambitions, presented the Ptolemies with favorable conditions to actively pursue efforts to weaken the Macedonian influence there. Initially, the partner of the Ptolemies became the Achaean League. In this way, the Ptolemaic fleet gained important footholds, including both Corinthian ports, Kenchreai in the Saronic Gulf and Lechaion in the Corinthian Gulf. This strengthened the position of the Lagids at sea, and it was the islands on the Aegean Sea and the coasts of Asia Minor that were in the centre of the Ptolemies’ interest. However, the Aetolian League could continue to be seen as one of their possible partners in Greek politics. We should not exaggerate the Achaean-Aetolian conflict. After the death of Antigonus Gonatas in 239, the two conflicted federations were joined by an alliance. It cannot be excluded that Sparta also cooperated with the coalition, and the king of Egypt could have been a convenient link in this cooperation. There is no information whatsoever to suggest an Egyptian initiative to form the coalition. After the defeat of the Egyptian fleet at Andros in ca. 245, the position of the Lagids in the Aegean Sea was not as strong as it had once been. This was all the more reason for Ptolemies to closely observe the Aetolians’ intense activity on the Aegean Sea. The Ptolemies and Aetolians concluded symmachia. Ultimately, however, alliances were reversed: Aratus pushed the Achaean League towards a coalition with Macedonia, but earlier, having learned about the Achaean-Macedonian negotiations, Ptolemy decided to cancel his financial support for the Achaeans and hand it over to Sparta. It is very likely that the situation in the whole Aegean region (especially the expedition of Antigonus Doson to Caria in 227) played a role in changing the Ptolemies’ policy. The contacts which the Aetolian League established in the region were all the more reason for Ptolemy III to choose Cleomenes and the Aetolians at the expense of the Achaean League. At that time, the beginning of closer relations between the Aetolians and the Attalids could also be observed. It cannot be ruled out that the Ptolemaic diplomacy was a mediator, since up until then the Aetolians had no common interests with Pergamum. For the Lagids, on the other hand, the Attalids were a force worth supporting against the Seleucids, just as the Aetolians were a valuable partner in the rivalry against Macedonia.
Denver Graininger
ELECTRUM, Volume 19, 2012, pp. 99 - 110
https://doi.org/10.4467/20843909EL.12.005.0746This preliminary study of the so-called ‘Pistiros Inscription’ challenges the dominant interpretation of the document that has crystallized in the years since its preliminary publication, namely, that the inscription somehow guarantees the rights of traders operating within Pistiros. A reexamination of the rhetorical structure of the inscription and a reconstruction of the inscription’s relationship with preexisting documents on this subject, which are not extant, raises the possibility that the function of the inscription was somewhat different than the communis opinio: the Pistiros Inscription appears to have supplemented earlier regulation concerning Pistiros and to have attempted to limit the authority of an official, possibly a Thracian royal, who exercised dramatic power within Pistiros.
Peter J. Rhodes
ELECTRUM, Volume 19, 2012, pp. 111 - 129
https://doi.org/10.4467/20843909EL.12.006.0747The view that the successes of Macedon in the fourth century marked the failure, or the end, of the Greek polis is increasingly being abandoned, and some scholars are abandoning also the view that Athens was great and glorious in the fifth century but degenerate in the fourth. However, the successes of Macedon meant for Athens the loss of that ultimate freedom which it had aspired to and had often enjoyed between the early fifth century and the late fourth, freedom not merely from receiving orders from others but to give orders to others, and in this paper I explore the reasons for that change. Some scholars believe that fourth-century Athens was led astray by “the ghost of empire;” others believe that the Athenians were unwilling to pay for a response which could have defeated Philip; I argue that except in the years after Leuctra the ghost of empire did not have malign effects, and even with more expenditure Athens could not have defeated Philip. There was nothing fundamentally wrong with Athens in the fourth century, but Sparta’s success in the Hellespont in 387 and the resulting King’s Peace, the rule in Macedon of Philip II, who was too clever diplomatically and became too strong militarily for the Athenians, and Alexander’s succession in 336 and his success and survival in his campaigns, placed Athens in situations which it could not overcome.
Jacek Rzepka
ELECTRUM, Volume 19, 2012, pp. 131 - 135
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800009EL.12.007.0748This paper deals with a famous passage by Theopompus concerning the hetairoi of Philip II. Athenaeus, one of the three authors who transmitted this fragment to us, states that Philip had 800 hetairoi in 339, which seems to be too low a number for the last years of the reign. In search of a solution which would match Athenaeus’ quotation from Theopompus with other data about Macedonian cavalry under Philip and Alexander, I consider a textual corruption in Athenaeus.
Sławomir Sprawski
ELECTRUM, Volume 19, 2012, pp. 137 - 147
https://doi.org/10.4467/20843909EL.12.008.0749This article attempts to make a critical assessment of the preserved fragments of Thettalon politeia as a source on the history of early Thessaly. The traces of the existence of this text come from the second half of the 2nd century CE at the earliest, but even then it was seen as one of the Politeiai recorded by Aristotle. As a result of this attribution, information from this text is treated as a reliable source of knowledge on the koinon organization of the Thessalians and their joint army. There are, however, important reasons to treat this source with the greatest caution: we have only six short quotations from the work available, and the part which refers to Aleuas’ supposed reforms is very much damaged and has been subjected to a number of emendations by its various publishers. The description of the system of mobilization of the Thessalian army from Thettalon politeia seems anachronistic, and probably arose under the influence of information about the reorganization of the army conducted in the 370s BCE by Jason of Pherae and the propaganda that accompanied these changes.
Ryszard Tokarczuk
ELECTRUM, Volume 19, 2012, pp. 149 - 156
https://doi.org/10.4467/20843909EL.12.009.0750There is a certain difficulty in attempts to describe the period in Syracuse between the death of Timoleon and the coming to power of Agathocles. It was a time of great turmoil and political instability – Syracuse would reappear after 317 BC as a tyranny. This article is a review of the events and causes that shaped the final outcome. The main points of interests are: an attempt to describe a type of government present in the given period, especially the function of the group of the so-called “Six Hundred Noblest,” and the career of Agathocles, an exemplary one considering the political realities of the time.
Everett L. Wheeler
ELECTRUM, Volume 19, 2012, pp. 157 - 163
https://doi.org/10.4467/20843909EL.12.010.0751Proper understanding of Iphicrates’ stratagem at Polyaenus 3.9.38, marred by a lacuna, can be derived from Leo Tact. 20.196, where anchoring a fleet off a harborless coastline is described. Emending Polyaenus’ text from the reading of a later MS also clarifies the anecdote’s meaning. Leo knew the full text of Polyaenus, since Polyaenus 3.9.38 does not occur in the abbreviated Excepta Polyaeni, which some recently suggest replaced the Strategica in Byzantine use of Polyaenus.
Federicomaria Muccioli
ELECTRUM, Volume 19, 2012, pp. 167 - 178
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.12.011.0752Eran Almagor
ELECTRUM, Volume 19, 2012, pp. 9 - 40
https://doi.org/10.4467/20843909EL.12.001.0742Following the recent attempts to rehabilitate the reputation of Ctesias and the information given in his works, this paper proposes to understand certain of the seemingly fanciful details that were associated with the physician and his writings. It tries to shed some light on several uncertainties connected with Ctesias (i.e., his sojourn in Persia) and the Persica (i.e., date, original style and sources of imagery). It argues that the pedestrian lists included in the work might have been later interpolations and that the minor works circulating under Ctesias’ name might have been either sections of the Persica that were taken out to be presented as stand-alone volumes or else falsely attributed to him. The paper addresses the Indica and puts forward several possibilities concerning its relation with the Persica. The influence of Ctesias on the author Deinon is examined, and in the appendix the impact of the Persica on Xenophon’s Anabasis is analyzed.
Emma M. Aston
ELECTRUM, Volume 19, 2012, pp. 41 - 60
https://doi.org/10.4467/20843909EL.12.002.0743The Daochos Monument at Delphi has received some scholarly attention from an art-historical and archaeological perspective; this article, however, examines it rather as a reflection of contemporary Thessalian history and discourse, an aspect which has been almost entirely neglected. Through its visual imagery and its inscriptions, the monument adopts and adapts long-standing Thessalian themes of governance and identity, and achieves a delicate balance with Macedonian concerns to forge a symbolic rapprochement between powers and cultures in the Greek north. Its dedicator, Daochos, emerges as far more than just the puppet of Philip II of Macedon. This hostile and largely Demosthenic characterisation, which remains influential even in modern historiography, is far from adequate in allowing for an understanding of the relationship between Thessalian and Macedonian motivations at this time, or of the importance of Delphi as the pan-Hellenic setting of their interaction. Looking closely at the Daochos Monument instead allows for a rare glimpse into the Thessalian perspective in all its complexity.
Bogdan Burliga
ELECTRUM, Volume 19, 2012, pp. 61 - 81
https://doi.org/10.4467/20843909EL.12.003.0744The identification of Aeneas Tacticus has always been a matter of dispute. Most often he is supposed to have been a mercenary officer, probably from Stymphalus, to whom Xenophon makes reference in Hellenica, 7.3.1. Accordingly, one may find the views that in Aeneas’ treatise a mercenary perspective is adopted, a claim also supported by the observation that the author records the phenomenon of the ubiquitous popularity of paid soldiers in the Greek warfare system of the fourth century BC. In this paper it is argued that Aeneas’ outlook in fact had little in common with mercenary ethics; instead, it is the writer’s deep commitment to civic values (explicitly stated in the Preface) that is stressed. Especially worth pointing out remains Aeneas’ belief that during siege civic patriotism still matters. It is a value on which success in overwhelming the invaders depends: all the steps and preventive actions of the city’s dwellers leading to a successful defense of a native polis must be rooted – according to him – in the conviction that polis in its material (territory, estates, shrines, temples, walls) and spiritual dimension (religion, gods, respect for the parents) constitutes the best framework for life. By the same token, a relatively high importance is given by Aeneas to hoplite troops, usually consisting of yeomen and farmers who were the owners of land. In the author’s conviction they could provide the best possible protection to a polis. Looking from a purely military point of view, hoplite forces – together with auxiliary troops (the light-armed and cavalry, if possible) – were also useful at the time when the enemy entered the city’s territory and ravaged it before attempting a direct assault on the walls.
Tomasz Grabowski
ELECTRUM, Volume 19, 2012, pp. 83 - 97
https://doi.org/10.4467/20843909EL.12.004.0745In the 250s and 240s continental Greece found itself in a particularly complicated situation. The growth of the Aetolian and Achaean Leagues, as well as Sparta’s awoken ambitions, presented the Ptolemies with favorable conditions to actively pursue efforts to weaken the Macedonian influence there. Initially, the partner of the Ptolemies became the Achaean League. In this way, the Ptolemaic fleet gained important footholds, including both Corinthian ports, Kenchreai in the Saronic Gulf and Lechaion in the Corinthian Gulf. This strengthened the position of the Lagids at sea, and it was the islands on the Aegean Sea and the coasts of Asia Minor that were in the centre of the Ptolemies’ interest. However, the Aetolian League could continue to be seen as one of their possible partners in Greek politics. We should not exaggerate the Achaean-Aetolian conflict. After the death of Antigonus Gonatas in 239, the two conflicted federations were joined by an alliance. It cannot be excluded that Sparta also cooperated with the coalition, and the king of Egypt could have been a convenient link in this cooperation. There is no information whatsoever to suggest an Egyptian initiative to form the coalition. After the defeat of the Egyptian fleet at Andros in ca. 245, the position of the Lagids in the Aegean Sea was not as strong as it had once been. This was all the more reason for Ptolemies to closely observe the Aetolians’ intense activity on the Aegean Sea. The Ptolemies and Aetolians concluded symmachia. Ultimately, however, alliances were reversed: Aratus pushed the Achaean League towards a coalition with Macedonia, but earlier, having learned about the Achaean-Macedonian negotiations, Ptolemy decided to cancel his financial support for the Achaeans and hand it over to Sparta. It is very likely that the situation in the whole Aegean region (especially the expedition of Antigonus Doson to Caria in 227) played a role in changing the Ptolemies’ policy. The contacts which the Aetolian League established in the region were all the more reason for Ptolemy III to choose Cleomenes and the Aetolians at the expense of the Achaean League. At that time, the beginning of closer relations between the Aetolians and the Attalids could also be observed. It cannot be ruled out that the Ptolemaic diplomacy was a mediator, since up until then the Aetolians had no common interests with Pergamum. For the Lagids, on the other hand, the Attalids were a force worth supporting against the Seleucids, just as the Aetolians were a valuable partner in the rivalry against Macedonia.
Denver Graininger
ELECTRUM, Volume 19, 2012, pp. 99 - 110
https://doi.org/10.4467/20843909EL.12.005.0746This preliminary study of the so-called ‘Pistiros Inscription’ challenges the dominant interpretation of the document that has crystallized in the years since its preliminary publication, namely, that the inscription somehow guarantees the rights of traders operating within Pistiros. A reexamination of the rhetorical structure of the inscription and a reconstruction of the inscription’s relationship with preexisting documents on this subject, which are not extant, raises the possibility that the function of the inscription was somewhat different than the communis opinio: the Pistiros Inscription appears to have supplemented earlier regulation concerning Pistiros and to have attempted to limit the authority of an official, possibly a Thracian royal, who exercised dramatic power within Pistiros.
Peter J. Rhodes
ELECTRUM, Volume 19, 2012, pp. 111 - 129
https://doi.org/10.4467/20843909EL.12.006.0747The view that the successes of Macedon in the fourth century marked the failure, or the end, of the Greek polis is increasingly being abandoned, and some scholars are abandoning also the view that Athens was great and glorious in the fifth century but degenerate in the fourth. However, the successes of Macedon meant for Athens the loss of that ultimate freedom which it had aspired to and had often enjoyed between the early fifth century and the late fourth, freedom not merely from receiving orders from others but to give orders to others, and in this paper I explore the reasons for that change. Some scholars believe that fourth-century Athens was led astray by “the ghost of empire;” others believe that the Athenians were unwilling to pay for a response which could have defeated Philip; I argue that except in the years after Leuctra the ghost of empire did not have malign effects, and even with more expenditure Athens could not have defeated Philip. There was nothing fundamentally wrong with Athens in the fourth century, but Sparta’s success in the Hellespont in 387 and the resulting King’s Peace, the rule in Macedon of Philip II, who was too clever diplomatically and became too strong militarily for the Athenians, and Alexander’s succession in 336 and his success and survival in his campaigns, placed Athens in situations which it could not overcome.
Jacek Rzepka
ELECTRUM, Volume 19, 2012, pp. 131 - 135
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800009EL.12.007.0748This paper deals with a famous passage by Theopompus concerning the hetairoi of Philip II. Athenaeus, one of the three authors who transmitted this fragment to us, states that Philip had 800 hetairoi in 339, which seems to be too low a number for the last years of the reign. In search of a solution which would match Athenaeus’ quotation from Theopompus with other data about Macedonian cavalry under Philip and Alexander, I consider a textual corruption in Athenaeus.
Sławomir Sprawski
ELECTRUM, Volume 19, 2012, pp. 137 - 147
https://doi.org/10.4467/20843909EL.12.008.0749This article attempts to make a critical assessment of the preserved fragments of Thettalon politeia as a source on the history of early Thessaly. The traces of the existence of this text come from the second half of the 2nd century CE at the earliest, but even then it was seen as one of the Politeiai recorded by Aristotle. As a result of this attribution, information from this text is treated as a reliable source of knowledge on the koinon organization of the Thessalians and their joint army. There are, however, important reasons to treat this source with the greatest caution: we have only six short quotations from the work available, and the part which refers to Aleuas’ supposed reforms is very much damaged and has been subjected to a number of emendations by its various publishers. The description of the system of mobilization of the Thessalian army from Thettalon politeia seems anachronistic, and probably arose under the influence of information about the reorganization of the army conducted in the 370s BCE by Jason of Pherae and the propaganda that accompanied these changes.
Ryszard Tokarczuk
ELECTRUM, Volume 19, 2012, pp. 149 - 156
https://doi.org/10.4467/20843909EL.12.009.0750There is a certain difficulty in attempts to describe the period in Syracuse between the death of Timoleon and the coming to power of Agathocles. It was a time of great turmoil and political instability – Syracuse would reappear after 317 BC as a tyranny. This article is a review of the events and causes that shaped the final outcome. The main points of interests are: an attempt to describe a type of government present in the given period, especially the function of the group of the so-called “Six Hundred Noblest,” and the career of Agathocles, an exemplary one considering the political realities of the time.
Everett L. Wheeler
ELECTRUM, Volume 19, 2012, pp. 157 - 163
https://doi.org/10.4467/20843909EL.12.010.0751Proper understanding of Iphicrates’ stratagem at Polyaenus 3.9.38, marred by a lacuna, can be derived from Leo Tact. 20.196, where anchoring a fleet off a harborless coastline is described. Emending Polyaenus’ text from the reading of a later MS also clarifies the anecdote’s meaning. Leo knew the full text of Polyaenus, since Polyaenus 3.9.38 does not occur in the abbreviated Excepta Polyaeni, which some recently suggest replaced the Strategica in Byzantine use of Polyaenus.
Federicomaria Muccioli
ELECTRUM, Volume 19, 2012, pp. 167 - 178
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.12.011.0752Publication date: 15.05.2011
ELECTRUM - Journal of Ancient History has been published since 1997 by the Department of Ancient History at the Jagiellonian University in Cracow as a collection of papers and monographs. In 2010 it starts as journal with one monographic issue per year. Journal publishes scholarly papers embodying studies in history and culture of Greece, Rome and Near East from the beginning of the First Millennium BC to about AD 400. Contributions are written in English, German, French and Italian. The journal publishes books reviews.
Tom Boiy
ELECTRUM, Volume 18, 2011, pp. 9 - 22
Dating and time-reckoning has always meant a lot more than simply keeping track of time. It is of course true that from very early times onwards all people, either pastoralists or agriculturalist, had to take the seasons – which means the solar cycle – into account for the simple reason of bare survival. Since a year is far too long for many practical arrangements the omnipresence of the moon provided a perfect solution; the moon’s phases turned out to be an ideal length to divide one year into smaller units. The integration of a lunar cycle into the solar system is not self-evident though and the astronomical knowledge of people can often be judged by the way they tried to solve this dilemma. Still, a lot more factors come into play when time-reckoning and dating systems come into being. Both in the calendar – the division of every individual year – and in year-counting – some kind of superstructure for several years – religious, cultic, ideological and political elements played an important role. Since the sun, the stars and the moon were regularly worshipped in most religions in Antiquity, their cycles often determined religious festivals and other cultic events and therefore the calendar was closely linked with religion. Ideology, especially royal ideology, is found mainly in the system of year-counting.
Laurianne Martinez-Sève
ELECTRUM, Volume 18, 2011, pp. 41 - 66
Andrea Primo
ELECTRUM, Volume 18, 2011, pp. 67 - 80
Federicomaria Muccioli
ELECTRUM, Volume 18, 2011, pp. 81 - 96
Boris Dreyer
ELECTRUM, Volume 18, 2011, pp. 97 - 114
Tomasz Grabowski
ELECTRUM, Volume 18, 2011, pp. 115 - 124
The second half of the 3rd century saw the Seleucid monarchy weaken considerably. The reign of Seleucus II brought diffi cult battles against Ptolemy III Euergetes (the Third Syrian War) and attempts to overcome massive internal problems. During the war against Egypt, he ultimately managed to recapture northern Syria but Ptolemy III held on to the port of Seleucia Pieria, which was key for the Seleucids, and captured a number of places in Asia Minor. It was there that the Seleucids suffered their greatest territorial losses – they lost almost all their footholds on the coasts of Cilicia, Lycia, Caria and Ionia. The Egyptian king even seized Ainos and Maronea on the Thracian coast. What also had an impact on Seleucus II losing his infl uences in Asia Minor was his fratricidal war against Antiochus Hierax, backed by the kings of Pergamon, Capadocia and Bithynia. The defeated Seleucus had to reconcile himself with his brother’s independence in Asia Minor; the latter, however, subsequently suffered a defeat in his war against Pergamon, which ultimately led to the Seleucids losing their Asian Minor territories. The dynasty also faced enormous challenges in the East, where Bactria and Sogdiana seceded, and Parthia was seized by the Parni.
Panagiotis P. Iossif
ELECTRUM, Volume 18, 2011, pp. 125 - 157
Antonio Panaino
ELECTRUM, Volume 18, 2011, pp. 159 - 173
Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 18, 2011, pp. 175 - 181
Text Fragment
Absence of sources is why we know little about the last kings of the Seleucid dynasty and their reigns. One exception is Demetrius III (97/96–88/87 BC), a son of Antiochus VIII Grypus. What knowledge we have of him we owe to his role in the history of Judea at the end of Alexander Jannaeus’ reign (103–86 BC). Josephus’ historical works suggest that the king of Syria became involved in a confl ict which broke out in Judea between Alexander Jannaeus and a group of his opponents led by the Pharisees. In doing so, he lent the latter his powerful military assistance. It proved so substantial that in a battle near Shechem Alexander Jannaeus’ army was defeated. Only a lucky coincidence enabled him still to stay in power and soon to suppress his opposition (cf. Jos. BJ 1, 92–95; AJ 13, 376–379). This historical episode is exceptional in that Demetrius III was the fi rst king of Syria since Antiochus VII Sidetes to stand on Judean soil and, at that, as an ally of one of local religious groups. It is this fact that makes the event worth looking at through the lens of not only the confl ict between Alexander Jannaeus and the Pharisees, but also of Demetrius III’s objectives in interfering in Judea’s internal affairs
Kay Ehling
ELECTRUM, Volume 18, 2011, pp. 185 - 189
Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 18, 2011, pp. 190 - 190
Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 18, 2011, pp. 191 - 192
Kay Ehling
ELECTRUM, Volume 18, 2011, pp. 185 - 189
Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 18, 2011, pp. 190 - 190
Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 18, 2011, pp. 191 - 192
Tom Boiy
ELECTRUM, Volume 18, 2011, pp. 9 - 22
Dating and time-reckoning has always meant a lot more than simply keeping track of time. It is of course true that from very early times onwards all people, either pastoralists or agriculturalist, had to take the seasons – which means the solar cycle – into account for the simple reason of bare survival. Since a year is far too long for many practical arrangements the omnipresence of the moon provided a perfect solution; the moon’s phases turned out to be an ideal length to divide one year into smaller units. The integration of a lunar cycle into the solar system is not self-evident though and the astronomical knowledge of people can often be judged by the way they tried to solve this dilemma. Still, a lot more factors come into play when time-reckoning and dating systems come into being. Both in the calendar – the division of every individual year – and in year-counting – some kind of superstructure for several years – religious, cultic, ideological and political elements played an important role. Since the sun, the stars and the moon were regularly worshipped in most religions in Antiquity, their cycles often determined religious festivals and other cultic events and therefore the calendar was closely linked with religion. Ideology, especially royal ideology, is found mainly in the system of year-counting.
Laurianne Martinez-Sève
ELECTRUM, Volume 18, 2011, pp. 41 - 66
Andrea Primo
ELECTRUM, Volume 18, 2011, pp. 67 - 80
Federicomaria Muccioli
ELECTRUM, Volume 18, 2011, pp. 81 - 96
Boris Dreyer
ELECTRUM, Volume 18, 2011, pp. 97 - 114
Tomasz Grabowski
ELECTRUM, Volume 18, 2011, pp. 115 - 124
The second half of the 3rd century saw the Seleucid monarchy weaken considerably. The reign of Seleucus II brought diffi cult battles against Ptolemy III Euergetes (the Third Syrian War) and attempts to overcome massive internal problems. During the war against Egypt, he ultimately managed to recapture northern Syria but Ptolemy III held on to the port of Seleucia Pieria, which was key for the Seleucids, and captured a number of places in Asia Minor. It was there that the Seleucids suffered their greatest territorial losses – they lost almost all their footholds on the coasts of Cilicia, Lycia, Caria and Ionia. The Egyptian king even seized Ainos and Maronea on the Thracian coast. What also had an impact on Seleucus II losing his infl uences in Asia Minor was his fratricidal war against Antiochus Hierax, backed by the kings of Pergamon, Capadocia and Bithynia. The defeated Seleucus had to reconcile himself with his brother’s independence in Asia Minor; the latter, however, subsequently suffered a defeat in his war against Pergamon, which ultimately led to the Seleucids losing their Asian Minor territories. The dynasty also faced enormous challenges in the East, where Bactria and Sogdiana seceded, and Parthia was seized by the Parni.
Panagiotis P. Iossif
ELECTRUM, Volume 18, 2011, pp. 125 - 157
Antonio Panaino
ELECTRUM, Volume 18, 2011, pp. 159 - 173
Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 18, 2011, pp. 175 - 181
Text Fragment
Absence of sources is why we know little about the last kings of the Seleucid dynasty and their reigns. One exception is Demetrius III (97/96–88/87 BC), a son of Antiochus VIII Grypus. What knowledge we have of him we owe to his role in the history of Judea at the end of Alexander Jannaeus’ reign (103–86 BC). Josephus’ historical works suggest that the king of Syria became involved in a confl ict which broke out in Judea between Alexander Jannaeus and a group of his opponents led by the Pharisees. In doing so, he lent the latter his powerful military assistance. It proved so substantial that in a battle near Shechem Alexander Jannaeus’ army was defeated. Only a lucky coincidence enabled him still to stay in power and soon to suppress his opposition (cf. Jos. BJ 1, 92–95; AJ 13, 376–379). This historical episode is exceptional in that Demetrius III was the fi rst king of Syria since Antiochus VII Sidetes to stand on Judean soil and, at that, as an ally of one of local religious groups. It is this fact that makes the event worth looking at through the lens of not only the confl ict between Alexander Jannaeus and the Pharisees, but also of Demetrius III’s objectives in interfering in Judea’s internal affairs
Publication date: 15.05.2011
Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 16, 2010, pp. 7 - 212
Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 16, 2010, pp. 7 - 212
Publication date: 05.01.2009
Editor-in-Chief: Edward Dąbrowa
Josef Wiesehöfer
ELECTRUM, Volume 15, 2009, pp. 11 - 25
Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 15, 2009, pp. 41 - 51
Carlo Lippolis
ELECTRUM, Volume 15, 2009, pp. 53 - 67
Roberta Menegazzi
ELECTRUM, Volume 15, 2009, pp. 68 - 81
Federicomaria Muccioli
ELECTRUM, Volume 15, 2009, pp. 83 - 104
Gholamreza F. Assar
ELECTRUM, Volume 15, 2009, pp. 105 - 117
Alberto M. Simonetta
ELECTRUM, Volume 15, 2009, pp. 119 - 140
Alberto M. Simonetta
ELECTRUM, Volume 15, 2009, pp. 141 - 194
Giusto Traina
ELECTRUM, Volume 15, 2009, pp. 195 - 234
Udo Hartmann
ELECTRUM, Volume 15, 2009, pp. 249 - 266
Josef Wiesehöfer
ELECTRUM, Volume 15, 2009, pp. 11 - 25
Edward Dąbrowa
ELECTRUM, Volume 15, 2009, pp. 41 - 51
Carlo Lippolis
ELECTRUM, Volume 15, 2009, pp. 53 - 67
Roberta Menegazzi
ELECTRUM, Volume 15, 2009, pp. 68 - 81
Federicomaria Muccioli
ELECTRUM, Volume 15, 2009, pp. 83 - 104
Gholamreza F. Assar
ELECTRUM, Volume 15, 2009, pp. 105 - 117
Alberto M. Simonetta
ELECTRUM, Volume 15, 2009, pp. 119 - 140
Alberto M. Simonetta
ELECTRUM, Volume 15, 2009, pp. 141 - 194
Giusto Traina
ELECTRUM, Volume 15, 2009, pp. 195 - 234
Udo Hartmann
ELECTRUM, Volume 15, 2009, pp. 249 - 266