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2. Teucer, the Bastard Archer

Chapter 2. Teucer, the Bastard Archer Teucer is well known as a nothos in classical Greek literature, and he appears in a number of narratives, including the Iliad, Sophocles’ Ajax, and Euripides’ Helen. As a result of his frequent appearance in the ancient sources, there are multiple metaphorical associations connected to Teucer as a nothos. His case is also particular in that he is defined above all… Read more

3. Images of Fertility and Sterility

Chapter 3. Images of Fertility and Sterility Teucer’s emerging role in Euripides’ Helen (examined in the last chapter) as the founder of New Salamis on Cyprus is an example of the way in which narratives can provide a legitimization process within themselves. Teucer, rejected by his father, leaves behind a place and a life in which he is illegitimate. As the founder of a city, however, he… Read more

Bibliography

Abbreviations BA – The Best of the Achaeans: Concepts of the Hero in Archaic Greek Poetry = N 1979 BA2 – 2nd ed. 1999 EH – “The Epic Hero” = N 2005a GM – Greek Mythology and Poetics = N 1990b HC – Homer the Classic = N 2008a/2009a HPC – Homer the Preclassic = N 2009b/2010a HQ – Homeric Questions… Read more

Acknowledgments

Acknowledgments There are several people without whom this volume would have been significantly delayed or might not have come to press at all. On behalf of the contributors, I would like to express our collective appreciation for their assistance. First and foremost among these is James George, a fellow traveler with this book who in the end was not able to be a part of its… Read more

Contributors

Contributors Adam H. Becker is Assistant Professor of Classics and Religious Studies at New York University. He is author of Fear of God and the Beginning of Wisdom: The School of Nisibis and Christian Scholastic Culture in Late Antique Mesopotamia (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2006). His other publications include articles on Syriac Christianity as well as Jewish-Christian relations in late antiquity. Averil Cameron was Professor of Late Antique… Read more

Abbreviations

Abbreviations BDAG F.W. Danker, ed. A Greek-English Lexicon of the New Testament and other Early Christian Literature, 3rd ed. (Chicago, 2000) BHG F. Halkin, ed. Bibliotheca hagiographica graeca, 3rd ed. (Brussels, 1969) BICS Bulletin of the Institute of Classical Studies of the University of London (London, 1954–) BMGS Byzantine and Modern Greek Studies (Oxford, 1975–) CQ Classical Quarterly (Oxford, 1907–) CSCO Corpus Scriptorum… Read more

Scott Fitzgerald Johnson, Introduction

Introduction Scott Fitzgerald Johnson, Harvard University I. Background The majority of the papers in this volume were originally prepared for a conference held at Keble College, Oxford on 5 June, 2004. The conference was organized by myself and a colleague at Keble, James George, to address the topic of ‘Greek Literature in Late Antiquity’ from a definitional point of view. Our basic questions were, What… Read more

Adam H. Becker, The Dynamic Reception of Theodore of Mopsuestia in the Sixth Century: Greek, Syriac, and Latin

The Dynamic Reception of Theodore of Mopsuestia in the Sixth Century: Greek, Syriac, and Latin Adam H. Becker, New York Univesity The dynamism of Greek literature in late antiquity is evident in its broad and at times rapid dissemination into Latin and the multiple new literary languages that came into being concomitant with, and often under the influence of, Christianization. [1]… Read more

Christopher P. Jones, Apollonius of Tyana in Late Antiquity

Apollonius of Tyana in Late Antiquity Christopher P. Jones, Harvard University Apollonius of Tyana, the itinerant Pythagorean of the first century, exercised a powerful hold on the imagination of later centuries. The fullest expression of this is to be found in the biography of him that Philostratus of Athens wrote approximately in the 220’s CE. Philostratus’ Life is in part a symptom and in part a… Read more