Buch, Englisch, 300 Seiten, Format (B × H): 156 mm x 232 mm, Gewicht: 534 g
Buch, Englisch, 300 Seiten, Format (B × H): 156 mm x 232 mm, Gewicht: 534 g
ISBN: 978-1-009-30664-5
Verlag: Cambridge University Press
Human belief systems and practices can be traced to ca. 10,000 BCE in the Ancient Near East, where the earliest evidence of ritual structures and objects can be found. Religious architecture, the relics of human skeletons, animal symbolism, statues, and icons all contributed to a complex network into which the spiritual essence of the divine was materially present. In this book, Nicola Laneri traces the transformation of the belief systems that shaped life in ancient Near Eastern communities, from prehistoric times until the advent of religious monotheism in the Levant during the first millennium BCE. Considering a range of evidence, from stone ceremonial enclosures, such as as Göbleki Tepe, to the construction of the first temples and icons of Mesopotamian polytheistic beliefs, to the Temple of Jerusalem, the iconic center of Israelite monotheism, Laneri offers new insights into the symbolic value embodied in the religious materiality produced in the ancient Near East.
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Weitere Infos & Material
I. In the Name of the Spirits: Humans and Natural Environments: 1. Materializing the human body: the cult of ancestors among Ancient Near Eastern societies; 2. Sacred nature: deer, water, and the supernatural in Anatolia during Bronze Age; II. For the Glory of the Gods: Architecture, Icons, and Material Symbols for Encountering the Divine: 3. Constructing cosmotheism: temples, writing, and the creation of divine Pantheons in Ancient Mesopotamia; 4. Imagining the divine: consecrating and venerating cultic images in the Ancient Near East; III. A New Era: Toward the Emergence of Monotheism: 5. One God in one temple: religious aniconism and the rise of monotheism in the Southern Levant during the First Millenium BCE.




