The Barbarians of Ancient Europe : Realities and Interactions

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Larissa Bonfante
Cambridge University Press , 29 abr. 2011 - 395 paginas
The Barbarians of Ancient Europe deals with the reality of the indigenous peoples of Europe, in contrast to many publications that explore these peoples in the context of the Greek idea of "barbarians" as the "Other." These varied groups - Thracians, Scythians, Celts, Germans, Etruscans, and other peoples of Italy, the Alps, and beyond - had contact with one another and with Greek culture during its flowering. Images on the spectacular gold and silver objects buried in royal tombs show how the horse-riding nomads and the barbarian women warriors known in antiquity as Amazons saw themselves. Archaeological discoveries show how they dressed, what they ate and drank, where they lived, and how they honored their dead kings with barbaric splendor and human sacrifices, allowing us to change, correct, or confirm the picture given in Greek and Roman literature.
 

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Indice

Greek Geography of the Western Barbarians
37
The historical
71
Between mobility Tomb
107
Reading the Pictorial
132
In the fabulous Celtic Twilight
190
The Ancient Germans
211
mediators between Northern
233
The World of Situla Art
282
A Barbarian myth? The Case of the Talking head
313
Romans andas Barbarians
347
Some final Thoughts
370
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Sobre el autor  (2011)

Larissa Bonfante Is Professor of Classics Emerita at New York University. A member of the American Philosophical Society and the German Archaeological Institute and President of the U.S. Section of the Istituto di Studi Etrusch.

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