Rural Sanctuaries in Roman Syria
The Creation of a Sacred Landscape
Written by Ann Irvine Steinsapir
ÂŁ31.00 – ÂŁ43.00
Description
This examination of the rural sanctuaries of Roman Syria has been arranged as a series of narratives, designed to elicit what the ruins of built environment reveal in the present about ancient populations’ engagements with their countryside. Each begins with the sacred site itself before the building was begun. We might imagine that significant building commenced when a local group sought to solidify their relationship with the sacred place. They also set in stone, so to speak, ritual and cult practice. The architectural environment did more than contain ritual, however; it also created a new set of relationships in the surroundings and affected a number of perceptions, such as the manner with which one group saw themselves in relation to the divine. The new attitudes were in turn reacted to, so that new buildings were built and new relationships were created, again and again.
You might also like...
-

Questioning Hadrian’s Wall
A case study of evidential reasoning in archaeologyWritten by Paul KitchingPrint Book ÂŁ53.00
PDF eBook ÂŁ41.00 -

Victory of Propaganda
The dynastic aspect of the Imperial propaganda of the Severi: the literary and archaeological evidence AD 193-235Written by Drora BaharalPrint Book ÂŁ44.00
PDF eBook ÂŁ31.00 -

Living with the Ancestors at Salango, Coastal Ecuador
The Regional Development Sanctuary (c. 300 BC – AD 600)Written by Richard LunnissPrint Book £66.00
PDF eBook ÂŁ51.00 -

Two Industries in Roman Lusitania
Mining and Garum ProductionWritten by J. C. EdmondsonPrint Book ÂŁ85.00
PDF eBook ÂŁ59.00 -

Animals and Humans Through Time
Case studies from the PZAF conferences 2018 and 2023Edited by Veronica Aniceti, Antonela Barbir, Matteo Bormetti, Mauro Rizzetto, Goran Tomac and Lia VidasPrint Book ÂŁ55.00
PDF eBook ÂŁ43.00

