Journal of
Hellenic Studies 128 (2008)
TIMOTHY
E. DUFF Models of Education in Plutarch
Abstract: This paper examines Plutarch’s treatment of education in the Parallel Lives.
Beginning with a close reading of Them. 2, it identifies
two distinct ways in which Plutarch exploits the education of his subjects: in
the first, a subject’s attitude to education is used to illustrate a character
presented as basically static (a ‘static/illustrative’model);
in the second, a subject’s education is looked at in order to explain his adult
character, and education is assumed to affect character (a ‘developmental’model).
These two models are often associated with two different forms of discourse:
anecdotal for the static/illustrative model and analytical for the
developmental. The developmental model, furthermore, is closer to Plutarch’s thinking in theoretical discussions of character
in the Moralia; the static/illustrative model
to Plutarch’s treatment of character in the Lives more
generally, where anecdotal treatments predominate. The coexistence of these two
models is probably to be seen as the result of a tension between Plutarch’s philosophical thinking and his biographical
practice: those few passages in the Lives which assume a developmental
model occur in contexts where either Platonic texts or the activity of
philosophers are being discussed.
JONAS
GRETHLEIN Memory and Material
Objects in the ILIAD and the ODYSSEY
Abstract: Recently, archaeologists have
been focusing on material relics as evidence of a historical consciousness.
This article examines the Iliad and the Odyssey from the point of
view of this ‘archaeology of the past’. Various material objects, ranging from
tombs to everyday objects, evoke the past in the epic poems, thereby enriching
the narrative and providing reflections on the act of memory. In turn, Homeric
evidence sheds new light on the hermeneutics of relics in archaic oral society.
STEFAN
HAGEL Re-evaluating the Pompeii Auloi
Abstract: The four best-preserved aulos pipes unearthed at Pompeii are examined and their
original pitches are as far as possible determined by mathematical analysis. It
is argued that the scales of the instruments as well as specific details of
their mechanism fit well with our knowledge of music from the Roman Imperial
period.
JOHN
MA Chaironeia
338: Topographies of Commemoration
Abstract: This article examines two
funerary monuments associated with the battle of Chaironeia
in 338: first, the mound, covering a mass cremation, by the Kephissos;
second, near the town of Chaironeia, the mass burial
surrounded by a stone enclosure and topped by a colossal stone lion. The
accepted identifications are confirmed (the mound is that of the Macedonian
dead, the lion monument that of Theban dead, in all probability the Sacred
Band), and two propositions developed: the mound does not relate to the
tactical dispositions of the battle, and hence the generally accepted
reconstruction of the battle must be discarded; the lion monument must date to much
later than 338. In developing these propositions, I examine material which has
been long known, but never considered in depth; I notably present what I
believe are the first photographs of some of the osteological
material from the mass burial under the lion monument. More generally, the two
monuments, located at different points of the battlefield, set up by different
actors and at different moments, offer the opportunity for considerations on
the different functions of ‘memory’ surrounding an historical event: the
Macedonian mound reflected the needs and self-imagining of the victorious army,
imposing a trace in the landscape; the lion monument embeds itself in preexisting topographies, for a more reflective, and more
troubled, effect.
JOSEPH
L. RIFE The
Burial of Herodes Atticus: élite identity, urban
society, and public memory in Roman Greece
Abstract This paper discusses the burial
of Herodes Atticus as a well-attested case of elite
identification through mortuary practices. It gives a close reading of Philostratus’ account of Herodes’
end in c. 179 (VS 2.1.15) alongside the evidence of architecture,
inscriptions, sculpture, and topography at Marathon, Cephisia
and Athens. The intended burial of Herodes and the
actual burials of his family on theAttic estates
expressed wealth and territorial control, while his preference for Marathon
fused personal history with civic history. The Athenian intervention in Herodes’ private funeral, which led to his magnificent
interment at the Panathenaic Stadium, served as a
public reception for a leading citizen and benefactor. Herodes’
tomb should be identified with a long foundation on the stadium’s east hill
that might have formed an eccentric altar-tomb, while an elegant klinê sarcophagus found nearby might have been
his coffin. His epitaph was a traditional distich that stressed through
language and poetic allusion his deep ties toMarathon
and Rhamnous, his euergetism
and his celebrity. Also found here was an altar dedicated to Herodes ‘the Marathonian hero’with archaizing features (IG II2 6791). The
first and last lines of the text were erased in a deliberate effort to remove
his name and probably the name of a relative. A cemetery of ordinary graves
developed around Herodes’ burial site, but by the
250s these had been disturbed, along with the altar and the sarcophagus. This
new synthesis of textual and material sources for the burial of Herodes contributes to a richer understanding of status and
antiquarianism in Greek urban society under the Empire. It also examines how
the public memory of elites was composite and mutable, shifting through
separate phases of activity – funeral, hero-cult, defacement, biography – to
generate different images of the dead.
CHRISTIANE
SOURVINOU-INWOOD A reading of two
fragments of Sophilos
Abstract: Two fragments of a vase by Sophilos are remnants of the earliest extant representation
of the myth of the contest between Athena and Poseidon at Athens
JOHNWILKINS Athenaeus the
Navigator
Abstract: This study concerns navigation
in a geographical sense and in the sense of the reader finding a way through a
complex text with the help of points of reference. Recent studies in Athenaeus have suggested that he was a more sophisticated
writer than the second-hand compiler of Hellenistic comment on classical Greek
authors, which has been a dominant view. Building on these studies, this
article argues thatAthenaeus’ approach to his history
of ancient dining draws on traditional poetic links between the symposium and
the sea, and expands such metaphors with a major interest in place and
provenance, which also belongs to the literature of the symposium. Provenance
at the same time evokes a theme of imperial thought, that Rome can attract to
herself all the good things of the earth that are now under her sway. Good
things include foods and the literary heritage of Greece now housed in imperial
libraries. Athenaeus deploys themes of navigation
ambiguously, to celebrate diversity and to warn against the dangers of luxury.
Notorious examples of luxury are presented – the Sybarites and Capuans, for example – but there seem to be oblique
warnings to Rome as well. Much clearer censure is reserved for the gastronomic
poem of Archestratus of Gela, which surveys the best
cities in which to eat certain fish. The Deipnosophists
deplore the immorality of the poet and his radical rewriting of their key
authors Homer and Plato, while at the same time quoting him extensively for the
range of his reference to geography and fish. This commentary onArchestratus is a good example of the Deipnosophists’
guidance to the reader, Roman or otherwise, who wishes to ‘navigate’ the
complicated history of the Greek deipnon and
symposium.
ANDREASWILLI νόσος
and ὁσίη:
etymological and sociocultural observations on the
concept of disease and divine (dis)favour in ancient
Greece
Abstract: After a brief discussion of
earlier etymological theories, this article proposes a new analysis of the
Greek noun νόσος ‘disease’
as a possessive compound *n-osw-os ‘not having *(h1)osu’,
the second constituent of which is cognate with Hitt. āssu
‘well-being’; just like the latter, Greek νόσοι
are characteristically sent or removed by divinities. Moreover, the
reconstruction of an abstract noun *(h1)osu ‘well-being (resulting from divine favour)’
can serve as the etymological basis for the somewhat obscure Greek notion of ὁσίη, which refers to the state of
something that is endowed with such *(h1)osu;
in fact, phraseological parallelisms between texts from
various parts of the Greek world as well as ancient Anatolia point to a common
conceptual framework behind all these words.