The Religious Experience of the Roman People: From the Earliest Times to the Age of Augustus : the Gifford Lectures for 1909-10William Warde Fowler Macmillan, 1911 - 504 sider |
Fra bogen
Resultater 1-5 af 89
Side 12
... true course in seeking a remedy . Their knowledge of the Divine , always narrow and limited , becomes by degrees blurred and obscured , and their sight begins to fail them . I hope in due course to explain this , and to give you some ...
... true course in seeking a remedy . Their knowledge of the Divine , always narrow and limited , becomes by degrees blurred and obscured , and their sight begins to fail them . I hope in due course to explain this , and to give you some ...
Side 13
... true way of arriving at the ideas underlying that law and worship.10 Both books are still indispensable for the student ; but Marquardt's is the safer guide , as dealing with facts to the exclusion of fancies . The two taken together ...
... true way of arriving at the ideas underlying that law and worship.10 Both books are still indispensable for the student ; but Marquardt's is the safer guide , as dealing with facts to the exclusion of fancies . The two taken together ...
Side 14
... true evidence at all the statements of ancient authors influenced by Greek ideas and Greek fancy . He holds in the main to the principle laid down by Marquardt , that we may use , as evidence for their religious ideas , what we are told ...
... true evidence at all the statements of ancient authors influenced by Greek ideas and Greek fancy . He holds in the main to the principle laid down by Marquardt , that we may use , as evidence for their religious ideas , what we are told ...
Side 16
... true indeed that in the last age of the Republic a few Romans began to take something like a scientific interest in their own religious antiquities ; and to Varro , by far the most learned of these , and to Verrius Flaccus , who ...
... true indeed that in the last age of the Republic a few Romans began to take something like a scientific interest in their own religious antiquities ; and to Varro , by far the most learned of these , and to Verrius Flaccus , who ...
Side 17
... true sense an Etruscan one : these are questions on the answers to which it is not as yet safe to build further hypotheses . In regard to religion , too , we are still very much in the dark . For example , there are many Etruscan works ...
... true sense an Etruscan one : these are questions on the answers to which it is not as yet safe to build further hypotheses . In regard to religion , too , we are still very much in the dark . For example , there are many Etruscan works ...
Andre udgaver - Se alle
Almindelige termer og sætninger
Aeneas Aeneid ancient augurs Augustus believe calendar called carmen Cato century B.C. ceremony Christian Cicero City-state civilised cult deity deorum Dialis divine doubt duty early Etruscan evidence explain fact Fasti feeling festival Festus Flamen Flamen Dialis foll Fratr Frazer Gellius gods Greek Henzen human idea Italian Italy ius divinum Janus Jevons Juno Jupiter kind later Latin Latium lecture Livy Lucretius Lupercalia lustratio magic Marquardt Mars meaning mind Mommsen morality nature numina old Roman origin Ovid Panaetius passage Pauly-Wissowa Pliny pomoerium pontifex maximus pontifices Power manifesting practice prayer priest priesthood primitive quoted religious experience rex sacrorum right relation rites ritual Robigus Roman history Roman religion Rome sacra sacred sacrifice says seems sense Servius Sibylline Sibylline books spirit Stoicism Stoics survival taboo temple tion Varro Vesta victim Virgil whole Wissowa word worship