Routledge Companion to Women and Monarchy in the Ancient Mediterranean World

Routledge Companion to Women and Monarchy in the Ancient Mediterranean World

Mueller, Sabine; Carney, Elizabeth D.

Taylor & Francis Ltd

11/2020

538

Dura

Inglês

9781138358843

15 a 20 dias

1190

Descrição não disponível.
Part I: Women and Monarchy in the Ancient Mediterranean 1. Introduction to thinking about women and monarchy in the ancient world Part II: Egypt and the Nile Valley 2. The King's Mother in Old and Middle Kingdoms 3. Regnant Women in Egypt 4. The Image of Nefertiti 5. The God's Wife of Amun: Origins and Rise to Power 6. The Role and Status of Royal Women in Kush 7. Ptolemaic Royal Women 8. Berenike II 9. Royal Women and Ptolemaic Cults 10. Ptolemaic Women's Patronage of the Arts 11. The Kleopatra Problem: Roman sources and a female Ptolemaic ruler Part III: The Ancient Near East 12. Invisible Mesopotamian Royal Women? 13. Achaimenid Women 14. Karian Royal Women and the Creation of a Royal Identity 15. Seleukid Women 16. Apama and Stratonike: the first Seleukid basilissai 17. Seleukid Marriage Alliances 18. Royal Mothers and Dynastic Power in Attalid Pergamon 19. Hasmonean Women 20. Women at the Arsakid Court 21. Women of the Sasanid Dynasty (224-651 CE) 22. Zenobia of Palmyra Part IV: Greece and Macedonia 23. "Royal" Women in the Homeric Epics 24. Royal Women in Greek Tragedy 25. Argead Women 26. Women in Antigonid Monarchy Part V: Commonalities 27. Transitional Royal Women: Kleopatra, sister of Alexander the Great, Adea Eurydike, and Phila 28. Women and Dynasty and the Hellenistic Imperial Courts 29. Royal Brother-Sister marriage, Ptolemaic and otherwise 30. Jugate Images in Ptolemaic and Julio-Claudian Monarchy Part VI: Rome: Late Republic through Empire 31. Octavia Minor and Patronage 32. Livia and the Principate of Augustus and Tiberius 33. Julio-Claudian Imperial women 34. The Imperial Women from the Flavians to the Severi 35. Portraiture of Flavian imperial women 36. The Faustinas 37. Women in the Severan Dynasty 38. Women in the Family of Constantine Part VII: Reception from Antiquity to Present Times 39. Semiramis: Perception and Presentation of Female Power in an Oriental Garb 40. Tanaquil and Tullia in Livy as Roman Caricatures of Greek Mythic and Historic Hellenistic Queens 41. Roman Empresses on Screen: an Epic Failure?
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Royal Women;Berenike II;women and monarchy in antiquity;Ptolemy II;women and monarchy in the ancient mediterranean;Young Man;women and monarchy in ancient egypt;Kleopatra VII;women and monarchy in the near east;Antiochos II;women and monarchy in ancient greece;Theoi Adelphoi;women and monarchy in the hellenistic world;Demetrios II;women and monarchy in the roman world;Amenhotep III;women and monarchy in the roman empire;Cassius Dio;Mesopotamian royal women;BCE;Arsacid royal women;Hellenistic Dynasties;Achaemenid royal women;Ptolemaic Royal Women;Sasanian royal women;Imperial Women;sassanian royal women;King's Mother;Hasmonean royal women;Ptolemaic Queens;Regnant women in Egypt;God's Wife;Regnant women in antiquity;Ptolemy IV;Regnant women in the classical world;Seleukid King;Nefertiti;Alexander III;God's wife of Amun;Kings Of Kings;royal women in Kush;King's Wife;Pharaoh's mother in the old kingdom;Seleukid Empire;Pharaoh's mother in the middle kingdom;Ptolemy VI;King's Mother in the Old Kingdom;Seleukos II;King's Mother in the Middle Kingdom;Royal women in Homer;royal women in greek drama;Argead royal women;Royal Brother-Sister marriage;Berenice II;Royal Women and Ptolemaic Cults;Cleopatra VII;Antigonid royal women;Seleucid;Stratonice;apama;Attalid women;marriage alliances in antiquity;Royal Macedonian women;Women and Hellenistic Courts;ptolemaic Jugate images;julio claudian Jugate images;Julio Claudian imperial women;Livia;octavia;flavian women;severan women;flavian imperial women;severan imperial women;The Faustinas;Women in the Severan Dynasty;zenobia of palmyra;Women in the family of Constantine;constantianian royal women;constantinian imperial women;Royal Women and Warfare in antiquity;Royal Women and Warfare in the ancient world;Semiramis;tullia in livy;Tanaquil in livy;roman imperial wives;roman imperial mothers;hellenistic queens;hellenistic royal women;co-regnant Ptolemaic women;roman imerial sisters;king's mother in antiquity;king's mother in ancient world;Widowed royal women in antiquity;Widowed royal women in the ancient world;female regents in antiquity;female regents in the ancient world;Ancient Mediterranean World;Co-regnant women