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Social and Cultural History of the Hellenistic World [Pehme köide]

(University of Regina, Canada)
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Uncovers historical significance and meaning in stories of real people living in the Hellenistic world

A Social and Cultural History of the Hellenistic World offers a rich and vivid account of the real people who lived in the Hellenistic period, their communities, and their experiences of life. Bringing together diverse sources of ancient evidence, this unique textbook considers everyday Hellenistic people in their own context, rather than focusing on the elites, royals, and other significant figures of the period.

Gillian Ramsey Neugebauer covers both well-studied areas of ancient Greek culture and rarely discussed aspects of daily life in the Hellenistic world. Reader-friendly chapters explore topics such as food, clothing, daily technology, housing, travel, working life, slavery, education, temple economies, and more. Detailed and personal stories offer fresh insights into the fascinating circumstances faced by the diverse populations living in the Mediterranean region, the Balkans, around the Black Sea, across North Africa, and into the Near East throughout classical antiquity.

Assuming only minimal background knowledge of the subject, A Social and Cultural History of the Hellenistic World:

  • Brings places, overlooked people, and aspects of ancient life into the foreground
  • Revisits traditional topics from an original perspective
  • Draws from a wide range of ancient sources, including untranslated textual evidence
  • Explores the history of Hellenistic women in each chapter
  • Describes the different interpretive methods historians use to analyze various types of evidence
  • Contains numerous figures and photographs, full references, definitions of key terms, and further readings

A Social and Cultural History of the Hellenistic World is an excellent textbook for undergraduate and graduate courses in Ancient History or Classical Studies programs, particularly those dedicated to Hellenistic history.

List of Figures x

Preface xi

Abbreviations xiii

Money and Weights xv

Maps xvi

1 Introduction 1

What Is Hellenistic? 2

Why Social History? 3

Mapping Out the Hellenistic World 5

A Polyglot World 7

Further Reading 8

2 Sources of Evidence 10

Written Sources 10

Numismatics 17

Archaeological Sources 20

Literary Sources 22

Further Reading 28

3 Chronological Patterns 30

Prevalence of Warfare 31

Alexander the Greats Legacy 32

Successor States 35

Foreign Incursions 39

Civil Unrest 42

Growing Roman Involvement 43

Further Reading 46

4 People and Status 47

Slaves 48

People on the Land 55

Citizens 59

Further Reading 64

5 Making a Living 65

Wages 66

Agriculture 69

Crafts 74

Temple Economies 78

Further Reading 81

6 Government and Administration 82

A Citizens Duties 82

Paying Taxes 88

Law and Order 94

Further Reading 101

7 Sex and Gender 103

Sex 104

Gender 113

Further Reading 120

8 Daily Life 122

Eating and Drinking 122

Housing 133

Neighbourhoods 138

Further Reading 143

9 Art and Adornment 144

Adorning the Body 145

Art 154

Further Reading 161

10 Education 163

Primary Education 163

Training Young Citizens 168

Occupational Training 169

Higher Education 171

Exchange of Knowledge 174

Further Reading 178

11 Leisure and Entertainment 179

Opportunities for Leisure 180

Childrens Play 181

Contents ix

Games 182

Gambling 184

Sports 184

Feasts 186

Music and Dance 187

Dramatic Performances 190

Competitive Festivals 192

Being in the Audience at a Special Event 193

Further Reading 195

12 Religious Life 197

Traditional Religion 198

Religious Change 205

Divine Interventions and Interactions 212

Funerary Practices 214

Further Reading 215

13 Health 217

Disease in the Hellenistic World 217

Medical Knowledge and Craft 219

Public Physicians and Public Health 224

Treatments 226

Healing Sanctuaries 229

Further Reading 232

14 Technology 234

Devices and Machines 235

Chemical Processes 245

Further Reading 250

15 Travel 251

Journeys 252

Logistics 261

Further Reading 267

Afterword 269

Selected Bibliography 272

Index 317
GILLIAN RAMSEY NEUGEBAUER is Assistant Professor of Classics at Campion College at the University of Regina, Canada. Her research covers Seleukid and Ptolemaic history, Hellenistic women and queens, and Hellenistic administration and geography. Her recent publications include chapters in Women and Monarchy in the Ancient Mediterranean and The Hellenistic and Roman Near East.