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E-raamat: Sol: Image and Meaning of the Sun in Roman Art and Religion, Volume II

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With this analysis of Sol images, Steven E. Hijmans paints a new picture of the solar cult in ancient Rome. The paucity of literary evidence led Hijmans to prioritize visual sources, and he opens this study with a thorough discussion of the theoretical and methodological issues involved. Emphasizing the danger of facile equivalencies between visual and verbal meanings, his primary focus is Roman praxis, manifest in, for instance, the strict patterning of Sol imagery. These patterns encode core concepts that Sol imagery evoked when deployed, and in those concepts we recognize the bedrock of Romes understandings of the sun and his cult. Case studies illustrate these concepts in action and the final chapter analyzes the historical context in which previous, now discredited views on Sol could arise.





This is volume II of a two-volume set.
List of Figures


Abbreviations





Volume I





Introduction





1 Art and Sol: Some Parameters for an Analysis of Images of the Roman Sun


1Two Sun Gods?


2Reading Roman Art The Problem of the Greek Norm


3Greek Art and Etruscan Art


4Greek Art and Good Taste


5The Iconographic Toolbox


6The Semantics of Roman Art


7Matters of Methodology


8The Interpretative Process Understanding Manners of Meaning





2 Recognizing Sol: The Three Main Image Types


1Introduction


2Criteria


3Divine Radiance





3 Understanding the Image Types for Sol: Main Definitions


1Introduction


2Chronological Evolution and Meaningful Patterns


3Sol as a Deity


4Sol in Mythological Scenes


5Sol as a Minor Figure


6Sol-and-Luna 1 Architecture and Liminality


7Sol-and-Luna 2 Attributes of Aeternitas


8Sol-and-Luna 3 Cultic Reliefs


9Sol-and-Luna 4 Sarcophagi


10Sol-and-Luna 5 Alone, without Context


11Sol-and-Luna 6 Early Middle Ages


12Sol Alone, as Minor Figure or in Complex Scenes


13Intaglios





4 Understanding the Image Types for Sol: Specific Cases


1Sol and Alexander


2Sol in the Synagogue


3A Divine Kiss on the Lips


4Funerary Altar of Julia Victorina


5Mithras


6Preliminary Results


7Sol: The Planet


The Images: Catalogue and Discussion


1Table of Contents


2Introduction


3Catalogue


4Discussion





Volume II





5 Temples and Priests of Sol in Rome


1The Origins of the Cult of Sol in Rome


2Early Temples of Sol in Rome: Circus Maximus and Quirinal


3The Porticus Solis a Misidentified Temple of Sol


4Priests and Others Involved in the Cult


5Sol and the Roman Notions of Divinity


Appendix: Inscriptions Cited by Palmer and Chausson





6 Solar, Divine, or Imperial? Understanding the Radiance of Gods and Emperors
in Roman Art


1Introduction


2A Hint of Sol


3A Statue in Raleigh


4The Sternenstreit


5Circe


6The Imperial Radiate Crown





7 The Emperor as Sol?


1Nero as Sol?


2Other Depictions of the Emperor as Sol?


3Constantine as Sol?


4Conclusions





8 Sol-Luna Symbolism and the Carmen Saeculare of Horace


1Introduction


2The Sign Sol-and-Luna


3Horaces Carmen Saeculare Another terminus ante quem


4Mommsens Criticism and Its Aftermath


5Horaces Hymn Rehabilitated


6In Conclusion





9 Image and Word: Christ or Sol in Mausoleum M of the Vatican Necropolis?


1Introduction


2Mausoleum M


3Interpretation and the Diachronic Aspect


4Parallels


5With Roman Eyes


6Visual Impact, Meaning, and Atmosphere


7Visual Meanings versus Verbal Ones


8In Conclusion





10 From Aurelian to Julian: Sol in Late Antiquity


1Sol Invictus and Christmas


2Pagans, Christians, and Cosmic Divinity


3Pagans, Christians, and Solar Theology


4Sol as Supreme Deity?


5Beliefs, Ambiguities, and Imagery


6Constantine and Purposeful Traditionalism


7In Conclusion





11 The Invention of Sol Invictus: An Analysis of Previous Research on Sol


1The Republican Sun God


2The Orient and the Imperial Sol


3Classical Studies and the Western Elite


4The Tenacity of Paradigms and Ideology





Conclusions





Bibliography


Concordances





Plates


ISol: A Viewers Typology


IICatalogue





Index
Dr. Steven E. Hijmans, Professor of Roman Archaeology at the University of Alberta in Canada, studied Classics and Archaeology at Groningen University. He has published numerous articles on Sol, other aspects of Roman religion, and visual meanings.