Trophies of Victory

Trophies of Victory
Author: T. Leslie Shear Jr.
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Total Pages: 500
Release: 2016-08-16
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 0691170576

The Greek military victories at Marathon, Salamis, and Plataia during the Persian Wars profoundly shaped fifth-century politics and culture. By long tradition, the victors commemorated their deliverance by dedicating thank-offerings in the sanctuaries of their gods, and the Athenians erected no fewer than ten new temples and other buildings. Because these buildings were all at some stage of construction during the political ascendency of Perikles, in the third quarter of the fifth century, modern writers refer to them collectively as the Periklean building program. In Trophies of Victory, T. Leslie Shear, Jr., who directed archaeological excavations at the Athenian Agora for more than twenty-five years, provides the first comprehensive account of the Periklean buildings as a group. This richly illustrated book examines each building in detail, including its archaeological reconstruction, architectural design, sculptural decoration, chronology, and construction history. Shear emphasizes the Parthenon's revolutionary features and how they influenced smaller contemporary temples. He examines inscriptions that show how every aspect of public works was strictly controlled by the Athenian Assembly. In the case of the buildings on the Acropolis and the Telesterion at Eleusis, he looks at accounts of their overseers, which illuminate the administration, financing, and organization of public works. Throughout, the book provides new details about how the Periklean buildings proclaimed Athenian military prowess, aggrandized the city's cults and festivals, and laid claim to its religious and cultural primacy in the Greek world.

Trophies of Victory

Trophies of Victory
Author: T. Leslie Shear Jr.
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Total Pages: 496
Release: 2016-08-16
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 1400881137

The Greek military victories at Marathon, Salamis, and Plataia during the Persian Wars profoundly shaped fifth-century politics and culture. By long tradition, the victors commemorated their deliverance by dedicating thank-offerings in the sanctuaries of their gods, and the Athenians erected no fewer than ten new temples and other buildings. Because these buildings were all at some stage of construction during the political ascendency of Perikles, in the third quarter of the fifth century, modern writers refer to them collectively as the Periklean building program. In Trophies of Victory, T. Leslie Shear, Jr., who directed archaeological excavations at the Athenian Agora for more than twenty-five years, provides the first comprehensive account of the Periklean buildings as a group. This richly illustrated book examines each building in detail, including its archaeological reconstruction, architectural design, sculptural decoration, chronology, and construction history. Shear emphasizes the Parthenon's revolutionary features and how they influenced smaller contemporary temples. He examines inscriptions that show how every aspect of public works was strictly controlled by the Athenian Assembly. In the case of the buildings on the Acropolis and the Telesterion at Eleusis, he looks at accounts of their overseers, which illuminate the administration, financing, and organization of public works. Throughout, the book provides new details about how the Periklean buildings proclaimed Athenian military prowess, aggrandized the city's cults and festivals, and laid claim to its religious and cultural primacy in the Greek world.

We Are Trophies of Christ's Victory

We Are Trophies of Christ's Victory
Author: Ineke Vandewetering
Publisher:
Total Pages: 182
Release: 2020-07-30
Genre:
ISBN: 9781631293788

Do you want to be a Trophy of Christ? Do you like to experience miracles for yourself? Do you desire to be victorious and live in joy? Ineke Vandewetering feels and understands your desire. She too was hungry for the reality of the Scripture. Once she was fearful, insecure and shy but she overcame to be a Trophy of Christ through a series of outstanding miracles. She will take you to several circumstances in her life and shows you through fully trusting the Lord to receive miracles and become that Trophy. - FEEL with her, the love of God when He came to her in a most humiliating and painful situation, when she was only four years old. - LEARN with her, to stand on the Word and not to be afraid of the giant, called cancer, Melanoma stage four. - JOIN her, when there were three angels at her bed-side, speaking "SHALOM" over her. - GLORIFY the Lord for the incredible miracle He performed, when her husband spoke Psalm 118:17 over her when she was dying in his arms. - DISCOVER with her, the highest calling we have as the Bride of Christ. Ineke Vandewetering was born in Holland and immigrated with her husband and their three children to Canada in 1987. At the age of twenty nine she and her husband had an encounter with the Lord and became born-again and hungry for the Word of God. They served with missionaries in different Islands of Indonesia, also in Siberia and throughout the country of Namibia. Her passion is to see people saved and know for themselves the security there is in the Word of God. To see people free and experience miracles and be filled with the joy of the Lord.

The Greek and Roman Trophy

The Greek and Roman Trophy
Author: Lauren Kinnee
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 295
Release: 2018-03-12
Genre: History
ISBN: 1351846574

In The Greek and Roman Trophy: From Battlefield Marker to Icon of Power, Kinnee presents the first monographic treatment of ancient trophies in sixty years. The study spans Archaic Greece through the Augustan Principate. Kinnee aims to create a holistic view of this complex monument-type by breaking down boundaries between the study of art history, philology, the history of warfare, and the anthropology of religion and magic. Ultimately, the kaleidoscopic picture that emerges is of an ad hoc anthropomorphic Greek talisman that gradually developed into a sophisticated, Augustan sculptural or architectural statement of power. The former, a product of the hoplite phalanx, disappeared from battlefields as the Macedonian cavalry grew in importance, shifting instead onto coins and into rhetoric, where it became a statement of military might. For their part, the Romans seem to have encountered the trophy as an icon on Syracusan coinage. Recognizing its value as a statement of territorial ownership, the Romans spent two centuries honing the trophy-concept into an empire-building tool, planted at key locations around the Mediterranean to assert Roman presence and dominance. This volume covers a ubiquitous but poorly understood phenomenon and will therefore be instructive to upper-level undergraduates, graduate students, and scholars in all fields of Classical Studies.

Battlefield Trophies of Ancient Greece: Symbols of Victory

Battlefield Trophies of Ancient Greece: Symbols of Victory
Author: Joe Gai
Publisher:
Total Pages: 90
Release: 2006
Genre: Greece
ISBN: 9781109822250

This thesis investigates a somewhat obscure element of ancient Greek warfare---the battlefield trophy---in an attempt to understand the Greek notion of decisive victory during the Classical Period. This thesis closely examines the trophies and the type of warfare that produced them.

The Taking and Displaying of Human Body Parts as Trophies by Amerindians

The Taking and Displaying of Human Body Parts as Trophies by Amerindians
Author: Richard J. Chacon
Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media
Total Pages: 694
Release: 2007-08-21
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 0387483039

This edited volume mainly focuses on the practice of taking and displaying various body parts as trophies in both North and South America. The editors and contributors (which include Native Peoples from both continents) examine the evidence and causes of Amerindian trophy taking. Additionally, they present objectively and discuss dispassionately the topic of human proclivity toward ritual violence. This book fills the gap in literature on this subject.

Reset in Stone

Reset in Stone
Author: Sarah A. Rous
Publisher: University of Wisconsin Press
Total Pages: 392
Release: 2019-11-12
Genre: Art
ISBN: 0299322807

This book examines the various ways ancient Athenians purposefully reused stone artifacts, objects, and buildings in order to shape their own and their descendants' collective ideas about their community's past and its bearing on the present and future. The book introduces the concept of "upcycling" to refer to this intentionally meaningful reuse, where evidence is preserved of an intentionality behind the decision to re-employ a particular object in a particular new context, often with implications for the shared memory of a group. Utilizing archaeological, literary, and epigraphic evidence, this investigation connects seemingly disparate cases of upcycling over eight centuries of Athenian history, treating the city as a continuously evolving cultural community. In establishin g upcycling as a distinct phenomenon of intentionally meaningful reuse, this study offers a process- and agency-focused alternative to the traditional discourses on spolia and reuse, while also making a substantial contribution to the growing field of memory studies by identifying a crucial component within the overall "work of memory" within a community. Through an original interdisciplinary approach, the book illuminates a vital practice through which Athenians shaped social memory in the physical realm, literally building their history into their city.