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Asylia Territorial Inviolability In The Hellenistic World Reprint 2019 Kent J Rigsby

  • SKU: BELL-51817120
Asylia Territorial Inviolability In The Hellenistic World Reprint 2019 Kent J Rigsby
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Asylia Territorial Inviolability In The Hellenistic World Reprint 2019 Kent J Rigsby instant download after payment.

Publisher: University of California Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 47.17 MB
Pages: 660
Author: Kent J. Rigsby
ISBN: 9780520916371, 0520916379
Language: English
Year: 2020
Edition: Reprint 2019

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Asylia Territorial Inviolability In The Hellenistic World Reprint 2019 Kent J Rigsby by Kent J. Rigsby 9780520916371, 0520916379 instant download after payment.

In the Hellenistic period certain Greek temples and cities came to be declared "sacred and inviolable." Asylia was the practice of declaring religious places precincts of asylum, meaning they were immune to violence and civil authority. The evidence for this phenomenon—mainly inscriptions and coins—is scattered in the published record. The material has never been collected and presented in one publication until now.
Kent J. Rigsby lays out these documents and discusses their historical implications in a substantial introduction. He argues that while a hopeful intention of military neutrality lay behind the institution of asylum, the declarations did not in fact change military behavior. Instead, "declared inviolability" became a civic and religious honor for which cities across the Greek world competed during the third to first centuries B.C.

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