Personal Names in Ancient Anatolia
Series: Proceedings of the British Academy; 191;
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Product details:
- Publisher The British Academy
- Date of Publication 28 November 2013
- ISBN 9780197265635
- Binding Hardback
- No. of pages256 pages
- Size 241x168x8 mm
- Weight 588 g
- Language English
- Illustrations 13 figures, including 2 maps 0
Categories
Short description:
Ancient Anatolia was a region where indigenous peoples mixed with conquerors and incomers: Persians, Greeks, Gauls, Romans, Jews. Names from all these sources intermingled, and it is by studying them that the cultural interactions and changes and resistances that occurred can be illuminated.
Long description:
Ancient Anatolia was a region where many indigenous or at least long-established peoples mingled with many conquerors or incomers: Persians, Greeks, Gauls, Romans, Jews. Its rich and complex history of cultural interaction is only spasmodically illuminated by literary sources. Inscriptions, by contrast, abound and attest well over 100,000 name-bearing inhabitants. Many of those names retain regional associations, and when analysed with tact allow lost histories and micro-histories to be recovered.
This volume exploits the huge possibilities for social and linguistic history being created by the expansion of The Lexicon of Greek Personal Names into Anatolia. One topic is that of continuities and discontinuities between the naming practices of the Hittites and Luvians in the second millennium BC and those of the Greco-Roman period. Several studies trace changing patterns of naming in particular regions; this may reflect real changes in population, but the need for sociological sensitivity is stressed, as the change may lie rather in changing self-perceptions or preferred self-identifications.
The Anatolian treasure house of names can also be used to illuminate the psychology of naming, the rise of nursery nicknames to the status of proper names (and their subsequent fall from favour), for instance, or the fascination with exotic luxury items expressed in names such as Amethyst or Emerald, or the fashion for 'second names' among the Greek-speaking elite. The volume shows how, as has been said, the study of names is a 'paradigm case of the convergence of disciplines, where the history of language meets social history'.
MoreTable of Contents:
- 1: Robert Parker: Introduction
- 2: Claudia Brixhe: Anatolian Onomastics after Louis Robert . . . and Some Others
- 3: Craig Melchert: Naming Practices in 2nd and 1st Millennium Western Anatolia
- 4: Alexandru Avram: Indigenous Names in Heraclea Pontica
- 5: Mustafa Adak: Names, Ethnicity and Acculturation in the Pamphylian/Lycian Borderland
- 6: Altay Coskun: Histoire par les noms in Ancient Galatia
- 7: Jaime Curbera: Simple Names of Ionians
- 8: Riet van Bremen: From Aphrodisias to Alexandria with Agroitas and Agreophon
- 9: Christian Marek: Imperial Asia Minor: Economic Prosperity and Names
- 10: Jaime Curbera: Resources for Naming - Problematic Names of Asia Minor
- 11: Angelos Chaniotis: Second Thoughts on Second Names at Aphrodisias