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PERSONIFICATION IN THE GREEK WORLD: FROM ANTIQUITY TO BYZANTIUM Centre For Hellenic Studies IC IN G ’S j^JOo/Iege King’s College London LONDON Publications 7 University of London PERSONIFICATION IN THE GREEK WORLD • • From Antiquity to Byzantium edited by Emma Stafford and Judith Herrin First published 2005 by Ashgate Publishing Published 2017 by Routledge 2 Park Square, Milton Park, Abingdon, Oxon OX14 4RN 711 Third Avenue, New York, NY 10017, USA Routledge is an imprint of the Taylor & Francis Group, an infonna business Copyright © 2005 Emma Stafford and Judith Herrin The editors have asserted their moral right under the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act, 1988, to be identified as the editors of this work. All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reprinted or reproduced or utilised in any form or by any electronic, mechanical, or other means, now known or hereafter invented, including photocopying and recording, or in any information storage or retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publishers. Notice: Product or corporate names may be trademarks or registered trademarks, and are used only for identification and explanation without intent to infringe. British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data Personification in the Greek World: From Antiquity to Byzantium. - (Publications for the Centre for Hellenic Studies, King's College London; 7) I. Greek literature - Themes, motives. 2. Personification in literature. 3. Personification in art. 4. l\lythology, Greek in literature. 5. l\lythology, Greek in art. 6. Greece - Religious life and customs. I. Stafford, Emma. II. Herrin Judith. III. King's College, London. Centre for Hellenic Studies. 880.9'15 US Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data Personification in the Greek World: From Antiquity to Byzantium/ edited by Emma Stafford and Judith Herrin. p. cm. - (Publications for the Centre for flellenie Studies, King's College London; 7) Includes biographical references. I. Personification in art. 2. Arts, Greek. 3. Cults - Greece - History -To 1500. I. Stafford, Emma. II. I lcrrin, Judith. III. Series. IV. Publications (King's College (University of London). Centre for Hellenic Studies); 7. NX650.P48P47 2004 700'.415-dc22 2004016984 Typeset by W.l\1. Pank, King's College London. ISBN 13: 978-0-7546-5031-7 (hbk) THE CENTRE FOR HELLENIC STUDIES, KING'S COLLEGE LONDON, PUBLICATIONS 7 Contents Contributors vii List of Figures xi Editors’ Introduction xix Part I Origins and varying modes of personification 1. Hesiod in context: abstractions and divinities in an Aegean-Eastern koine Walter Burkert 3 2. Disaster revisited: Ate and the Litai in Homer’s Iliad Naoko Yamagata 21 3. Brightness personified: light and divine image in ancient Greece Eva Parisinou 29 4. The gender of Death Diana Burton 45 5. The Greek heroes as a ‘personification’ of the past in the present Kerasia Stratiki 69 6. Neo-Platonic personification Lucas Siomanes 77 Part II Personification in myth and cult 7. Side: the personification of the pomegranate Efthymios G. Lazongas 99 8. Personified abstractions in Laconia: suggestions on the origins of Phobos Nicolas Richer 111 9. Situational aesthetics: the deification of Kairos, son of Hermes Arlene Allan 123 10. Eros at the Panathenaea: personification of what? Irina Kovaleva 135 VI CONTENTS Part III The poet and his work 11. The Muses: creativity personified? Penelope Murray 147 12. A lover of his art: the art-form as wife and mistress in Greek Poetic Imagery Alan H. Sommerstein 161 13. Personifications of the Iliad and Odyssey in Hellenistic and Roman art Kristen Seaman 173 Part IV Looking at personifications 14. Eunomia or ‘make love not war?: Meidian personifications reconsidered Barbara E. Borg 193 15. From Drunkenness to a Hangover: maenads as personifications Amy C. Smith 211 16. Personifications and paideia in Late Antique mosaics from the Greek East Ruth Leader-Newby 231 17. Rivers of Roman Antioch Janet Huskinson 247 Part V Images of power, time and place 18. Poleos erastes: The Greek city as the beloved Yorgis Yatromanolakis 267 19. Personification in impersonal context: late Roman bureaucracy and the illustrated Notitia dignitatum Iskra Gencheva-Mikami 285 20. Good Luck and Good Fortune to the Queen of Cities: empresses and Tyches in Byzantium Liz James 293 21. The Labours of the Twelve Months in twelfth-century Byzantium Elizabeth Jeffreys 309 Consolidated Bibliography 325 Index 359 Index of Modern Authors 375 About the Contributors Arlene Allan is Lecturer in Classics at the University of Otagar, having previously been Visiting Lecturer at Northwestern University (2001-02) and Assistant Professor at Trent University (2002-04). She held the Leventis Graduate Research scholarship at the University of Exeter from 1998-2001, successfully completing her PhD, The Lyre, The Whip and the Staff of Gold: Readings in the Homeric Hymn to Hermes, in 2003. Barbara E. Borg is Lecturer in Classics at the University of Exeter, having previously been Hochschuldozentin at the Institute of Classical Archaeology at the University of Heidelberg, Germany. Among her major fields of interest are the iconography and the ‘rhetorics’ of images, both Greek and Roman. The same interest guided her study of personifications, which is the subject of her Der Logos des Mythos: Allegorien und Personifikationen in der griechischen Kunst (Munich 2002). Walter Burkert has been Professor of Classics at the University of Zurich (1969-96) and visiting professor at Harvard, Berkeley and other universities in the USA. His research concentrates on ancient Greek philosophy and religion, their interrelation, oriental contacts, and perspectives of anthro­ pology. His major publications include Lore and Science in Ancient Pythago- reanism (Harvard 1972), Structure and History in Greek Mythology and Ritual (Sather Lectures 1979), Greek Religion: Archaic and Classical (Harvard 1985), The Orientalizing Revolution (Harvard 1992), Creation of the Sacred: Tracks of Biology in Early Religions (Harvard 1996). Diana Burton is Lecturer in Classics at Victoria University of Wellington. Her research interests centre around death and immortalisation in ancient Greek myth, and particularly the iconography of death-related figures. She is working on a book on the immortalisation of heroes in archaic Greek art and myth. Iskra Gencheva-Mikami was Assistant and then Associate Professor in Roman History and Late Antiquity at the University of Sofia ‘St. Climent Ohridski’ and the New Bulgarian University, Sofia (1993-2001). She is cur­ rently a visiting professor at the Department of Religious Studies, University of Tokyo, Japan. Among her main research interests and publications are various aspects of Roman imperial bureaucracy: bureaucracy and art, bureaucracy and religion, bureaucracy and politics. Her research on the Notitia dignitatum is connected with these major fields of interest. viii ABOUT THE CONTRIBUTORS Judith Herrin is Professor of Late Antique and Byzantine Studies at King’s College London. From 1995 to 2002 she was Director of the Centre for Hellenic Studies, KCL, which sponsors conferences such as the one devoted to Personification and publishes the proceedings. Her most recent book is Women in Purple. Rulers of Medieval Byzantium (2001) and she is currently working on an introductory study, a Byzantium for beginners. Janet Huskinson is Senior Lecturer in the Department of Classical Studies at the Open University. Her research interests are in the art of Roman empire and its relationship with the society which produced and used it, and she has also written on sarcophagi and portrait sculpture. Liz James is a Reader in the Department of Art History, University of Sussex, where she teaches Byzantine art. Her book, Empresses and Power in Early Byzantium (London 2001) looks at the representations of female power in Byzantium and she is interested in the changing iconographies of empresses. Elizabeth Jeffreys is Bywater and Sotheby Professor of Byzantine and Modern Greek Literature in the University of Oxford, and Fellow of Exeter College. She works on texts that are at the interface between spoken and written medieval Greek. Her recent publications include editions of the fourteenth-century War of Troy and the twelfth-century epic-romance Digenis Akritis. Irina Kovaleva is Associate Professor of Classics at Moscow State Lomonosov University. She has been British Academy Visiting Scholar (1995) and Alexandras S. Onassis Public Benefit Foundation Scholar (1996). She has published over 70 essays on ancient Greek mythology, philosophy and literature, as well as on Modern Greek and Russian literature. Her PhD thesis was on The Peculiarities of the Genre of Maximus of Tyre's Orationes (1990), and her publications include: Joseph Brodsky, Centaurs: Antique Motifs (St Petersburg 2001); (in Russian) Miltos Sachtouris, The Head of a Poet (Moscow 2003); (translation into Russian and introductory article) Metamorfoseis poleon (Moscow, 2003). She is currently working on a mono­ graph on Greek mythology, Teiresias and Actaion: Narrative and Non-Narrative Structures of Myth. Efthymios G. Lazongas is a researcher in archaeology. His doctoral research, submitted during the year 2004 in the University of Paris 1, Pantheon-Sorbonne, is entitled NAOS. La symbolique du temple grec dans Tart et la religion. The place of symbols in Greek religion is his major area of research, though he is also interested in other aspects of Greek religion, in architecture, in decorative patterns and in iconography. ABOUT THE CONTRIBUTORS IX Ruth Leader-Newby recently held a British Academy postdoctoral fellowship in the Department of Classics, King’s College London. Her research interests include the relationship between education and visual culture in late antiquity, and the role of inscriptions and name-labels in late Roman art. She is also the author of Silver and Society in Late Antiquity: Aspects and Meanings of Silver Plate in the Fourth to Seventh Centuries AD (Aldershot 2004). Penelope Murray is Senior Lecturer in Classics at the University of Warwick. She has written on a wide variety of topics in ancient literature and is particularly interested in poetics. Her publications include Plato on Poetry (Cambridge 1996) and Music and the Muses in Classical Athenian Culture, ed. with Peter Wilson (Oxford 2004). Eva Parisinou is Associate Lecturer at the Open University. She is author of a book on light in Greek cult (The Light of the Gods: the Role of Light in Archaic and Classical Greek Cult, Duckworth 2000) and several articles on Greek social history, art and archaeology. Nicolas Richer is Professor of Greek History at the Ecole Normale Superieure, Lettres et Sciences Humaines, Lyon, having previously worked at the University of Strasbourg (Strasbourg-II). He has written especially about Archaic and Classical Sparta (Les tLphores. fctudes sur I'histoire et sur l'image de Sparte (VIIIe-IHe siecle avant Jesus-Christ, Paris 1998). Kristen Seaman is a PhD candidate at the University of California at Berkeley. She received her BA from Yale University and was a Regular Member and Fulbright Fellow at the American School of Classical Studies at Athens during 2002-03. She has excavated in Greece, Italy and Israel, and her main research interests are sculpture and the interrelationship of art and text. Amy C. Smith is Lecturer in Classics and Curator of the Ure Museum of Greek Archaeology at the University of Reading. She is interested in Greek and Roman art, particularly in the spheres of politics, myth, and religion. Her work on personifications comprises several articles and a forthcoming book, Personifications of Political Ideas in Classical Athenian Art. She is currently writing a volume of the Corpus Vasorum Antiquorum for the Ure Museum.

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Personification, the anthropomorphic representation of any non-human thing, is a ubiquitous feature of ancient Greek literature and art. Natural phenomena (earth, sky, rivers), places (cities, countries), divisions of time (seasons, months, a lifetime), states of the body (health, sleep, death), emo
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