Shopping Cart : is empty
Home   |    New Books  

Changing Names: Tradition and Innovation in Ancient Greek Onomastics

by: Parker, R.

SOLD
 
Category: New Books
Code: 27226
ISBN-13: 9780197266540 / 978-0-19-726654-0
ISBN-10: 0197266541 / 0-19-726654-1
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Publication Date: 2019
Publication Place: Oxford
Binding: Cloth
Book Condition: New
Comments: Proceedings of the British Academy

Changing Names
Tradition and Innovation in Ancient Greek Onomastics
Edited by Robert Parker
Proceedings of the British Academy
Explores changing patterns of name giving in Ancient Greece
Utilises the most up-to-date research from the Lexicon of Greek Personal Names project
Offers contributions from leading international researchers

Description
Changing Names investigates, in relation to the ancient Greek world, the ways in which preferences in personal name-giving change: through shifts in population, cultural contact and imperialism, the popularity of new gods, celebrity status of individuals, increased openness to external influence, and shifts in local fashion.

Several major kinds of change due to cultural contact occurred: Greek names spread in regions outside Greece that were subject to Greek cultural influence (and later conquest), while conversely the Roman conquest of the Greek world led to various degrees of adoption of the Roman naming system; late in antiquity, Christianisation led to a profound but rather gradual transformation of the name stock. Individuals in culturally mixed societies sometimes bore two names, one for public or official use, one more domestic; but women of non-Greek origin were more likely to stick with indigenous names. 'Structural' changes (such as the emergence of the English surname) did not occur, though in late antiquity an indication of profession tended to replace the father's name as a secondary identifier; in some regions 'second' names became popular, perhaps in imitation of the longer Roman naming formulae. The volume is arranged partly thematically, partly through regional case studies (from within and beyond old Greece). Individuals who change their names (typically slaves after manumission) are also considered, as is the possibility that a name might change its 'meaning'.

Table of Contents
1:Introduction, Robert Parker
2:Greek or Minoan? Names and Naming Habits in the Aegean Bronze Age, Torsten Mei&betaner
3:A Tale of Two Cities in Macedonia: Aigeai and Pella, Miltiades Hatzopoulos
4:The Four Seasons of Boeotian, and Particularly Thespian, Onomastics, Denis Knoepfler
5:An Essay on Satyr Names, Jaime Curbera
6:Name Changes of Individuals, Thomas Corsten
7:Democrates the Democrat?, Stephen Lambert
8:Onomastic Interactions: Greek and Thracian Names, Dan Dana
9:Lycian, Persian, Greek, Roman: Chronological Layers and Structural Developments in the Onomastics of Lycia, Christof Schuler
10:The Diffusion of Roman Names and Naming Practices in Greek Poleis (2nd c. BC - 3rd c. AD), Jean-Sebastien Balzat
11:New Identities in the Greco-Roman East: Cultural and Legal Implications of the Use of Roman Names, Athanasios Rizakis
12:Christianisation and Local Names: Fall and Rise in Late Antiquity, Sylvain Destephen
Index

 
  Already viewed

Changing Names: Tradition and Innovation in Ancient Greek Onomastics

by: Parker, R.

  • ISBN-13: 9780197266540 / 978-0-19-726654-0
  • ISBN-03: 0197266541 / 0-19-726654-1
  • Oxford University Press, Oxford, 2019

SOLD