Ed ria berg (2 resultados)

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Librería: Joseph Burridge Books, Dagenham, Reino UnidoJoseph Burridge Books
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EUR 108,80
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Soft cover. Condición: New. 323 pp. The Pompeii Project of the University of Helsinki (Expeditio Pompeiana Universitatis Helsingiensis, EPUH), first directed by Paavo Castrén (2002-2009) and then by Antero Tammisto (2009-), has as its goal the documentation, analysis, and publishing of all the structural and material remains, wa…ll paintings, and finds of a single Pompeian city block, Insula IX 3. This volume is dedicated to the exceptionally rich finds of its largest unit, the House of Marcus Lucretius (IX3,5.24).

Tangible Religion : Materiality Of Domestic Cult Practices from Antiquity to Early Modern Era [Acta Instituti Romani Finlandiae 49]
Ed. Ria Berg, Antonella Coralini, Anu Kaisa Koponen and Reima Välimäki
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Librería: Joseph Burridge Books, Dagenham, Reino UnidoJoseph Burridge Books
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EUR 132,98
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Soft cover. Condición: New. Papers presented at the conference held in Rome, Italy, November 27-28, 2014; includes also selected papers from another conference held in Maastricht, Netherlands, August 30-Spetember 3, 2017. Description: 281 pages : illustrations (some colour) ; 30 cm. In ancient and premodern societies from archai…c Greece and imperial Rome, through the Middle Ages up to Reformed Northern Europe - most homes contained at least some select objects with a religious or ritual significance. Such objects, with a variable degree of sacrality, would range from altars, household shrines, and statuettes of divinities to incense burners, relics, pendants, rosaries and religious imagery of gods and saints represented on wall paintings, decorative tiles, textiles, furniture or everyday utensils, and even substances contained in the 'consecrated' vases, such as incense, salt, honey, water and wine. Such objects differed from the most venerated sacred cult items safeguarded in temples and churches, and seen only during certain ceremonies: domestic cult objects may have been seen, touched and used on an every-day basis. Inhabitants, visitors, servants, and slaves of the households therefore had a close, physical - and arguably more direct, personal and emotive - relationship with these objects with which they shared the living space and with which they were in daily interaction, than with the objects of the official cult. In domestic space, holy and everyday activities and objects mingled and were closely interwoven, to such an extent that it is impossible to distinguish the borders between the 'sacred' and the 'profane'.