Preface |
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xiii | |
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xv | |
Introduction |
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1 | (8) |
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PART I FESTIVALS IN THE GREEK EAST BEFORE CONSTANTINE |
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9 | (94) |
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1 Greek city festivals in the Imperial age |
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11 | (50) |
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11 | (2) |
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13 | (5) |
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Tradition and innovation in Greek festivals |
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18 | (14) |
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32 | (19) |
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51 | (7) |
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58 | (3) |
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2 Roman festivals in eastern cities |
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61 | (42) |
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61 | (5) |
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Roman festivals in Syria Palaestina |
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66 | (20) |
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86 | (12) |
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98 | (5) |
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PART II ROMAN FESTIVALS IN THE GREEK EAST AFTER CONSTANTINE |
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103 | (136) |
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103 | (2) |
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3 Theodosius' reform of the legal calendar |
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105 | (23) |
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105 | (2) |
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Theodosius as law-giver in summer 389 |
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107 | (7) |
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Theodosius' reform of the legal calendar of the City of Rome |
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114 | (9) |
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The reception of Theodosius' text |
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123 | (5) |
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4 Contested festivals in the fourth century |
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128 | (35) |
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The Christian contestation of the Kalendae Ianuariae |
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128 | (18) |
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146 | (17) |
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5 The Lupercalia from Augustus to Constantine Porphyrogennetos |
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163 | (21) |
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Augustus and the Lupercalia in the Imperial age |
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163 | (5) |
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Pope Gelasius and the Lupercalia in late-fifth-century Rome |
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168 | (7) |
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Constantine Porphyrogennetos and the Lupercalia in tenth-century Constantinople |
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175 | (6) |
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Transformations of a festival |
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181 | (3) |
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6 John Malalas and ritual aetiology |
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184 | (17) |
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184 | (1) |
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Rhomos and double kingship |
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185 | (4) |
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189 | (3) |
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192 | (7) |
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199 | (2) |
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201 | (18) |
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The Bruma in the Latin West |
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201 | (7) |
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The Brumalia in Constantinople |
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208 | (4) |
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212 | (2) |
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The Christian contestation |
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214 | (3) |
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The disappearance of the Brumalia |
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217 | (2) |
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8 Kalendae Ianuariae again, and again |
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219 | (7) |
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Kalandai in twelfth-century Constantinople |
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219 | (2) |
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221 | (3) |
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Postscript from Muslim North Africa |
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224 | (2) |
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9 Christian liturgy and the imperial festival tradition |
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226 | (13) |
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226 | (1) |
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Christian liturgy in Jerusalem |
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227 | (2) |
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The Jerusalem liturgy and ancient festivals |
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229 | (10) |
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PART III CHRISTIANITY AND PRIVATE RITUAL |
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239 | (66) |
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239 | (2) |
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10 Incubation in a Christian world |
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241 | (27) |
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Introduction: a spa in the Holy Land |
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241 | (4) |
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245 | (1) |
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246 | (2) |
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Dreaming among Christians |
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248 | (5) |
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Incubation among the Christians |
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253 | (10) |
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Narratives of dream healing |
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263 | (5) |
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11 Magic in a Christian Empire |
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268 | (37) |
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268 | (5) |
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Magic in imperial legislation |
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273 | (15) |
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Amulets and the Christians |
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288 | (6) |
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294 | (11) |
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Epilogue: The persistence of festivals and the end of sacrifices |
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305 | (18) |
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The tenacity of festivals |
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306 | (8) |
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314 | (4) |
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The end of sacrifice, and the continuity of festivals |
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318 | (5) |
References |
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323 | (32) |
Index |
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355 | |