 
      Ancient Greek Oracular Texts
Form, Content, Context
Series: Routledge Monographs in Classical Studies;
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Product details:
- Edition number 1
- Publisher Routledge
- Date of Publication 18 November 2025
- ISBN 9781032892269
- Binding Hardback
- No. of pages302 pages
- Size 234x156 mm
- Language English
- Illustrations 4 Illustrations, black & white; 4 Halftones, black & white 700
Categories
Short description:
This book offers a comprehensive and systematic – rather than historical – approach to ancient Greek oracular texts, showing their conceptual and formal unity and patternisation, as well as their meaningful diversity.
MoreLong description:
This book offers a comprehensive and systematic—rather than historical—approach to ancient Greek oracular texts, showing their conceptual and formal unity and patternization, as well as their meaningful diversity.
It provides even coverage of both oracular texts ascribed to major institutions, including Delphi, Dodona, Didyma, Clarus, and Abonoteichus, and those attributed to mythical poets such as the Sibyl, Bacis, and Musaeus. Chapters analyse the metre and phraseology of the texts and how they were recorded, transmitted, archived, and collected, as well as their narrative functions and authors. It also takes into account the later reception of Greek oracular texts: ‘theological oracles’; epigraphically attested lot oracles (dice and alphabet oracles); three extant Greek oracular texts which survived from the Libri Sibyllini of the Roman Republic; adoptions into—or imitations in—Latin literature of Greek oracular texts. With a lengthy appendix offering relevant texts in ancient Greek and English, readers gain a fuller understanding of the linguistic nuances and conventions of such texts and their place in the wider corpus of Greek literature.
The volume provides a fascinating resource and reassessment of oracular texts, suitable for students and scholars working on Greek and Roman oracles, divination, and ancient religion more broadly, as well as classicists, archaeologists, theologians, and epigraphists.
"This is a really important book, which no-one with a serious interest in Greek oracles can afford to ignore. It is the first to focus on how the oracular responses we have reached us, and it offers the best explanation yet for the presence of riddling verse responses in the historical record." - Hugh Bowden, Professor of Ancient History, King's College London
MoreTable of Contents:
Introduction; A. Meter; B. Phraseology; C. Recording, Transmitting, Archiving, and Collecting; D. Oracular Authors; E. Some Narrative Functions; F. Theological Oracles; G. Lot Oracles from Asia Minor; H. The Roman Republican Libri Sibyllini; I. Greek Oracles in Latin Literature; Epilogue: A Brief History of Ancient Greek Oracular Texts; Appendix I: Texts 1-30 (Greek-English); Appendix II: An Archaic (Metrical) Colonial Oracle from Didyma?
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