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Subject: BMCR 2008.05.03, M. Heinz/M.H. Feldman, Representations of Political Power - msg#00004

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Marlies Heinz, Marian H. Feldman, Representations of Political Power.
Case Histories of Change and Dissolving Order in the Ancient Near East.
Winona Lake, IN: Eisenbrauns, 2007. Pp. xii, 212. ISBN
978-1-57506-135-1. $39.50.

Reviewed by Gareth C. Sampson, University of Manchester
(TheLastTribune@xxxxxxx)
Word count: 1226 words
-------------------------------
To read a print-formatted version of this review, see
http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/bmcr/2008/2008-05-03.html
-------------------------------

Table of Contents
(http://catdir.loc.gov/catdir/toc/ecip0715/2007015133.html)

This book is a collection of eight articles structured around the core
theme of changing political systems in the Ancient Near East. The
period covered ranges from the third millennium B.C. to the
establishment of the Persian Empire. These eight articles cover a range
of disciplines, from archaeology to political history, and are grouped
in three sections, along with an introductory tract.

The first section of the introduction (pages 1-18) provides the reader
with a breakdown of the three different sections of the book: 'the
Reestablishment of Order after Major Disruption', 'Changing Order from
Within' and 'Perceptions of New Order', and presents a short breakdown
of the aspects that the editors believe fall into each category.
However, each section only receives a page to a page and a half and the
reader is left wanting a fuller discussion of some of the broader
themes. The other half of the introduction comes under the heading of
'Organisation and Summary of Contributions', which strikes the reader
as a forced attempt to justify which articles go within which sections.
The summary of the articles also seems forced, especially since the
reader has not had the chance to engage with the actual articles yet.
Overall the introduction leaves the reader with the impression that the
following chapters are a disparate group desperately looking for a
central theme.

Section One, the 'Reestablishment of Order after Major Disruption',
contains three articles, covering the Hittite, Akkadian and Levantine
Kingdoms. There are no further arguments given to the wider themes
contained within these articles, and the reader is left wondering
whether the 'Reestablishment of Order' is the best theme to start the
book with.

Chapter One, 'Emar and the Transition from Hurrian to Hittite Power',
by Regine Pruzsinszky, is a short article (pages 21-33, including
appendices and bibliography) which takes the form of a case study on
the city of Emar and the effects on it of its incorporation into the
Mittani and then Hittite kingdoms. The article is an interesting case
study of the effects of being incorporated into a larger empire on an
ancient city's institutions, and provides a good snapshot into possible
Mittanian and Hittite imperial practises. It is supported by a one-page
index and a three-page bibliography. It must be noted that each of the
chapters in this book features a similar-sized bibliography, which
proves to be an effective research tool.

Chapter Two, 'Frescoes, Exotica, and the Reinvention of the Northern
Levantine Kingdoms during the Second Millennium B.C.E.', by Marian H.
Feldman (one of the co-editors), keeps to the same chronological period
(2nd millennium B.C.) and contrasts nicely with the first chapter by
taking a broader perspective on the effects of change across a range of
sites, through the use of wall and floor paintings. This chapter is a
lengthier one (pages 39-65) and allows the reader to engage more
closely with the evidence, and is again supported by an excellent
five-page bibliography.

Chapter Three, 'Sargon of Akkad: Rebel and Usurper in Kish', by Marlies
Heinz, (the other co-editor) is again a contrast to the first two
chapters and focuses on an analysis of the reign of Sargon of Akkad and
the establishment of the Akkadian Kingdom in the late third millennium
B.C. This chapter is an excellent one and provides an insightful
analysis of the reign of Sargon and the methods he used to establish
his reign. It is again supported well by a detailed bibliography.

After the first three chapters, the book turns to section two on
'Changing Order from Within', which contains three varied chapters. The
section starts off with chapter Four on 'The Royal Cemetery of Ur:
Ritual, Tradition, and the Creation of Subjects', by Susan Pollock. As
the name suggests this chapter takes an archaeological view of the
issues surrounding political change and focuses on issues surrounding
the growth of hereditary kingship. The chapter has a good cohesive
argument and comes to some interesting conclusions and balances the
first section well.

Chapter Five is another excellent one: 'The Divine Image of the King:
Religious Representation of Political Power in the Hittite Empire', by
Dominik Bonatz. This chapter provides an analysis of the various
religious aspects surrounding Hittite kingship and their importance in
Hittite society and the wider Near East, and makes an important
contribution to the study of the Hittites. This section concludes with
chapter six; 'Nabonidus the Mad King; A Reconsideration of His Steles
from Harran and Babylon', by Paul-Alain Beaulieu. This article is
another excellent one which analyses the reign of Babylon's last king
and not only presents an insightful analysis of the king himself, but
also tackles key questions surrounding the fall of Babylon and the
wider issues concerning the historiographical treatment of rulers whose
empires fall, in the years afterwards.

Although both chapters five and six are excellent studies in their own
right, the reader is again left with the feeling that there is little
cohesion to the section as a whole. This feeling is only increased by
section three, which contains only two chapters. The third and final
section is entitled 'Perceptions of a New Order' and contains two
highly mismatched chapters. Chapter seven is again another excellent
one: 'Cyrus the Great of Persia; Image sand Realities' by Ame/lie
Kuhrt. This chapter tackles the crucial issues surrounding the
formation of the Persian Empire and how this process has been depicted
or manipulated in our sources. As such it is an important addition to
the field of Persian studies.

Oddly this chapter is followed by a short one on 'The Migration and
Sedentarization of the Amorites from the point of View of the Settled
Babylonian Population', by Brit Jahn. Following a lengthy and
perceptive discussion of Cyrus with this chapter is baffling to say the
least. Finishing the book with the Cyrus chapter would present a
logical end to the work, both in terms of topic and chronology; the
creation of the Persian Empire marks a clear turning point in political
ruling structures as well as the Ancient Near East in general.
Furthermore, in terms of scholarship, chapter seven is probably the
finest and the one that will make the greatest impact. Yet Chapter
Eight returns the reader to the late third millennium B.C. for a short
discussion (pages 196-209) of the Amorite migration and the source
problems related to it. After which the book comes to an abrupt halt.

Section Three appears to sum the book up nicely. It contains some
excellent historical analysis and makes an important contribution to
the study of the Ancient Near East, yet the reader is left wondering
about the overall structure of the work and the key wider issues.
Whilst it contains a number of interesting and important articles, the
whole work does not appear to hold together. The three sections strike
the reader as oddly conceived and the chapters within fit oddly. The
appearance is that the eight chapters were written first and then the
book's structure was fitted around them.

Thus, in summary, for anyone with an interest in the history of the
Ancient Near East, this work contains several important and
thought-provoking articles, which merits the reading of the whole. They
are ably supported by good bibliographies on each section for further
reading. However as an overall work on the theory of political change
it falls short.





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BMCR 2008.05.06, Marc Van de Mieroop , A History of the Near East

Marc Van de Mieroop, A History of the Ancient Near East ca. 3000-323 BC. 2nd edition. Malden, MA: Blackwell, 2007. Pp. xix, 341. ISBN 978-1-4051-4911-2. $37.95. Reviewed by Peter Magee, Bryn Mawr College (pmagee@xxxxxxxxxxxx) Word count: 546 words ------------------------------- To read a print-formatted version of this review, see http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/bmcr/2008/2008-05-06.html ------------------------------- As I noted in my review of the first edition of this book (BMCR 2006.09.24), Van de Mieroop has done the Academy a great service by bringing together in an accessible fashion divergent historical sources on the Ancient Near East. To my knowledge, most reviewers agreed with this conclusion. I was somewhat surprised, therefore, to receive the second edition so shortly after publication of the first. Van De Mieroop notes in his preface that it was primarily to increase its accessibility as a textbook that a second edition was produced. Indeed this seems to be the most obvious justification for the volume. Many maps, illustrations and translations have been added to increase its ease-of-use. These include: new illustrations of an Uruk tablet; a cylinder seal used by Ilum-bani; a statue of a Syrian deity; a Kassite stele of the goddess Lama; a neo-Hittite orthostat from Tell Halaf; an Assyrian relief showing refugees; a plan of Babylon in the sixth century and the glazed brick representations of soldiers from Susa. All are perfectly situated in the text so that their relevance is clear. Five new maps grace the volume. Most of these are general maps at the beginning of each section that indicate the location of the major settlements. The "Documents," essentially text-boxes that provide translations and commentary on specific periods, have also been considerably expanded. These now include lexical lists, an extract from a ration list, hymns to the Kings of the Ur III dynasty, an extract from the edict of King Ammisaduqa of Babylon, an account of early Hittite history, Babylonian literature, Hurrian writings, Middle Elamite inscriptions, later reflections on the Dark Age, an Assyrian description of the Zagros mountains, King Sargon and Dur Sharrukin, scholarly commentaries, Neo-Babylonian private contracts, and the Persian library at Sippar. These are very useful additions, especially since Van de Mieroop provides a full bibliography for the translations that he has quoted. The "Suggested Readings" at the back of the book are greatly increased in number, which is also very welcome. There are also textual changes that reflect new archaeological discoveries. For example the discussion on the Uruk Expansion (p. 37) now includes reference to the presence of beveled rim bowls from Miri Qalat in Pakistan and to the on-going excavations at Nurabad in southern Iran. This is not only important for issues of accuracy, but it also serves the purpose of reinforcing the point that archaeological research is still occurring outside of southern Mesopotamia that has a direct bearing on developments throughout the region. Some of the issues raised in my review of the first edition still stand: There is very little discussion of the Sabaean Empire/State, and the section on the Achaemenid Empire still seems somewhat short (although it has increased by two pages from 13 in the first edition to 15 in the second). Maybe the third edition will address these two points. In the end, the additions to this volume have only added to its immense worth as both a textbook and a scholarly volume. Those who have not purchased the book before will be rewarded by its acquisition. Fortunately the price for the second edition softcover ($37.95) is not so excessive as to dissuade those who bought the first edition from purchasing the second as well.

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BMCR 2008.05.05, C. Schultz/P. Harvey (edd.), Religion in Rep. Italy

Celia E. Schultz, Paul B. Harvey, Jr., Religion in Republican Italy. Yale Classical Studies 33. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2007. Pp. xiv, 299. ISBN 978-0-521-86366-7. $85.00. Reviewed by Roberta Stewart, Dartmouth College (Roberta.Stewart@xxxxxxxxxxxxx) Word count: 2469 words ------------------------------- To read a print-formatted version of this review, see http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/bmcr/2008/2008-05-05.html ------------------------------- Table of Contents (http://catdir.loc.gov/catdir/enhancements/fy0710/2007296031-t.html) The collection Religion in Republican Italy edited by Celia Schultz and Paul Harvey promises to open new ground in the study of Roman religion by focusing on the intersection of religion and ethnicity in Republican Italy. Both Roman religion and ethnicity have been the focus of much recent work. The book thus promises two sexy topics together (religion, identity), examined from diverse analytical perspectives by field archaeologists, museum curators, and Roman historians. The book has the common weakness of collections: contributions of uneven quality orbit about a general theme without creating a coherent argument. Nevertheless the book offers useful syntheses of recent work in the field and almost textbook examples of the deployment of particular methodologies. In "Reconsidering 'religious Romanization'" Fay Glinister explores the evidence for anatomical terracottas and argues that their occurrence "is not, as usually supposed, limited to central Tyrrhenian Italy, nor the result of Roman colonization of the peninsula" (p. 11). Glinister reviews the sites and dates of anatomical votives (bronze and terracotta) and argues that an indigenous cult practice of anatomical votive dedications preceded Roman contact and conquest. But she addresses the typology of the terracotta anatomical votives by citing Lesk, who connected their introduction with Gravisca. To argue for a continuity of cult she adduces bronze anatomical votives from the sixth century (sites and objects unspecified) and cites Turfa. The point is crucial and needed illustrations from individual sites to sustain the argument. L. Lundeen provides a critical examination of evidence for the Etruscan priestess, beginning with Tanaquil, Livy's Etruscan woman skilled in reading bird signs, and including engravings on bronze mirrors, bronze figurines, funerary reliefs and sculpture, and inscriptions identifying an hatrencu. In each instance Lundeen offers the accepted viewpoint(s) and a critical assessment. She rightly invokes the difficulty of distinguishing representations in art of the public and private status of elite Etruscan women and their activities as elite women and rejects tenuous evidence. Lundeen interprets carefully the architecture and inscriptions in the Tomb of the Inscriptions at Vulci, where burials of hatrencu respected spousal or familial relationships and indicate that social identity trumped religious role and that religious role was not restricted by marriage. Although Lundeen rejects gendered identifications of hatrencu as priests of Mater Matuta or Dionysos, her own interpretation is tenuous. Two inscriptions qualify hatrencu as sacniu or "consecrated" and locate the term/individual in the religious sphere, which "in light of our current Roman comparanda... probably encompassed traditionally masculine acts gods, and concerns outside of the private sphere" (p. 54). To support this she cites an urn from Perugia showing a woman togate and accompanied by musicians, indicating a "prophetess" or "a public magistracy" and parallels from Roman imperial Asia Minor (evidence not specified). The history of state formation and the conflation of personal and public status in the emergent aristocratic states (in Etruria and at Rome) might help Lundeen's argument for public roles of elite women. In "Etruscan religion at the watershed: before and after the fourth century BCE" J. Turfa contrasts Etruscan religious practice documented in the late Roman Republic with the religious practices already fully developed in 400 BCE when the Etruscan cities began to experience military eclipse. Her contribution is as far ranging as the Etruscan influence on Roman religion (temple architecture, divinatory practice and priests, cosmology, sacred texts) and Turfa's own ability to think broadly (e.g., Etruscan votives at Hellenic and panhellenic sanctuaries at Delphi, Olympia, and Athens). Turfa organizes her discussion by type of evidence (archaeology, epigraphy, literature) and only secondarily by topics in the study of religion (votives and individual participation in cults; sacred texts marking dedications and so-called "scripture"; divination; cosmology). The watershed emerges clearly as the loss of political independence and with it the political role of Etruscan religion, but Turfa suggests deep changes in religious practice and for the Etruscans a fundamental alienation from previous ritual identity. She documents the changing frameworks for religious practice at Tarquinia, Veii and Pyrgi, where votives first indicate a cult place, architecturally embellished in the sixth century, and anatomical votives indicate continued use of the site after the conquest by Rome. Turfa focuses on practices peculiar to Etruscan religion, namely the use of written texts and the emphasis on personal religious experience. In "Religious locales in the territory of Minturnae: aspects of Romanization" V. Livi uses archaeological evidence for cult (architectural forms and decoration; votives) to assess the effects of Roman conquest on an indigenous Italic people. She documents the changed patterns of religious life at Minturnae and suggests the cultural annihilation of the Aurunci people following the Roman conquest. The paper offers an important conclusion about Romanization at the level of the everyday, individual experience. It is a "how to" for organizing and thinking about archaeological material for an indigenous people and their confrontation with Rome, although her definition of the Aurunci community before Roman contact may be overstated, or at least is undocumented. Of the sanctuary of Marica and of the Aurunci she claims: "the sanctuary had served as a meeting place (religious, political, and economic) for a people that had few contacts with the outside world" (p. 112-13). The possible economic functions of the sanctuary are documented, but its political function and the political identity of the Aurunci as a people are not proven. In "Religion and memory at Pisaurum," P. Harvey interprets the epigraphic record of Pisaurum in order to understand the inscriptions recording Jupiter Latius in the second century CE. Harvey considers the physical characteristics of the inscriptions as well as orthography, letter style, and grammar, all of which indicate general dates in the third and early second centuries BCE (which Harvey later specifies to the period of the Roman colony founded in 184) and a linguistic population including "Latin and Sabine elements in the colony's population" (p. 122); prosopography corroborates a dedicating population of Roman and Latin peoples from west central Italy. Harvey's argument about the Pisauran cult of Jupiter Latius focuses first on nomenclature: Latius in place of Latiaris appears in Augustan poetry, and cultores appear as groups of worshippers of particular gods, including Jupiter, at e.g. Tarracina. Second, on historical context: coins of Antoninus Pius show nostalgia for Roman religious traditions, including IOVI LATIO in 143 CE. For Harvey then cultores Iovis Latii emerge at a particular historical moment, following a trend set by the emperor and consistent with the original Roman and Latin roots of the colonial population. This fine detective work shows the intersection of religion and identity, and an important aspect of political identity in the Empire. One wonders about the process by which religious memory was maintained from 184 BCE or recreated in late second century CE at Pisaurum; compare the proliferation of priesthoods celebrating and recollecting Roman ritual traditions, particularly traditions of origins, held by individuals of equestrian status from throughout the Roman Empire.[[1]] In "Inventing the sortilegus: lot divination and cultural identity in Italy, Rome and the provinces," W.E. Klingshirn begins with a religious category, the private lot diviner, and seeks to trace the evolution of the priestly type and the religious practice into the first century BCE. Klingshirn surveys objects identified as lots and Etruscan lot drawing scenes. He is most interested in tracing the development of the Christian holy man who stood apart from the structural frameworks of traditional, classical religion. To this end he focuses on accounts of itinerant priests (and their hostile public reception) in the second Punic war and private lot diviners and divination as described by Cicero De Div. Klingshirn is a keen reader: of representations of allotment he observes the depiction of the "dramatic moment of divine revelation" (p. 143) and he emphasizes Varro LL 6.51-76 explicitly defining the divinatory function of the lots to connect time and matters at hand. But in a discussion of a priesthood and a ritual practice I miss here a treatment of the Roman categories of religious experience--lot divination as an auspice, the role of the augurs who presided over the auspicia and over allotment used in Roman government.[[2]] While Klingshirn is right to observe the absence of an established, separate cult for private lot consultation at Rome, the evidence for the use of the lots in Roman government could have added a great deal about vessels, lots and procedures, and more importantly about what Romans (other than Cicero and as early as Plautus) at different historical periods thought about divination by lot. Moreover, in order to untangle disdain for status and ethnicity from disdain for itinerant priests, it might be useful to compare Roman accounts of individual women practioners of cult whose functioning in sacrifice and divination is recorded and denigrated in the Republican period.[[3]] Finally the augural disciplina regulating the procedure and interpretation of public sortition must factor into considering the claim of expertise by sortilegi in the early Empire and the response to them, i.e. the historical development reflects a changed circumstance and changed roles of traditional priests of the traditional religion as much as it represents something new. In "Hot, cold, or smelly: the power of sacred water in Roman religion, 400-100 BCE" Ingrid Edlund-Berry investigates the distribution and characteristics of cult places for water. She begins with a review of the Roman calendar revealing several celebrations of water deities, and surveys ritual cleansing. Edlund-Berry then explores the various contexts in which priests or individuals collected or used water for ritual purposes. Finally she focuses on a particular water deity, Mefitis "the goddess of stench," examining her shrines at Rome and in Italy and evaluating the location and accessiblity of sanctuaries to human and animal traffic. For this reviewer, her emphasis on practical logistics (who, what, where, when) is salutary. What emerges is a sense of water sanctuaries and water cult in the landscape of Roman Italy and the lived experience of religious celebrants. In "Religion and politics: did the Romans scruple about the placement of their temples," J. Muccigrosso focuses on building projects c. 300 BCE to assess their function as a means of political self-representation by the elite. The era is important, as Muccigrosso notes, because our sources are better and because of the emergence then of the patricio-plebeian nobility that defined the social and political ideology of the Roman Republic.[[4]] A change in ritual practice at this time has been observed,[[5]] and Muccigrosso offers the archaeologist's viewpoint on this crucial period. He plots the frequency and evolving distribution of temples in relation to traffic patterns beginning with the regal period. Numerically the third century stands out with temples vowed "at an average rate of nearly one every two years" (p. 190). More interesting, Muccigrosso observes the avoidance of low-trafficked areas, unsuited for the purposes of political advertisement, so the crowded but poor Subura. He questions, contra Ziolkowski, the ritual constraints on temple placement, observing that Rome had a plethora of sacred places, that deities had multiple temples and that gods could be moved. But the argument is uncompelling: that Rome had many sacred spaces (e.g. the Argei) means that Romans lived in a polytheistic world, not that all sacred space was alike or interchangeable; that Rome had multiple temples to the same general deity does not mean that all temples to Fortuna (e.g. Fors Fortuna, Fortuna Huiusce Diei) marked the same Fortuna. Nor does Muccigrosso consider the role of the pontifical college in identifying and establishing cult places. Nevertheless he interprets sensitively the impact of architecture. So the Aqua Appia and via Appia provided employment, and the road advertised Claudius' name in newly organized areas of Roman Italy where it facilitated the travel of newly organized voters and of their goods to the city. Muccigrosso interprets the cavalry parade (transvectio equitum) instituted by Q. Fabius Maximus Rullianus in 304 as a counter to Appius Claudius Caecus' road, the architectural elaboration of the ficus Ruminalis with statues of the suckling twins in 296 as a counter to the aedicula of Concord dedicated by Cn. Flavius in 304, and Fabius' suggested re-organization of the Lupercal as a counter to the temple of Victory dedicated by Postumius in 294. Fabius emerges as a copycat intent on getting the last word. In "Juno Sospita and Roman insecurity in the Social War" C. Schultz examines the Roman government's reaction to the potentially prophetic dream of the Roman matron Caecilia Metella during the Social War. Schultz reviews literary evidence and creates a religious history of Juno Sospita: she reviews government policy regarding Lanuvium, the source of Rome's cult to Juno Sospita, in the Latin settlement of 338, prodigy reports regarding Juno at Lanuvium in the Second Punic war, and the establishment of a temple to Juno Sospita at Rome in 194. She then reviews the attributes of Juno Sospita and her cult in literary accounts, in art and on coins, and in inscriptions. Schultz rightly emphasizes Sospita's associations with the military and political affairs of Lanuvium and then of Rome, over and against a role simply in traditionally feminine areas of fertility and childbirth, and she acutely reminds readers that Juno Lucina and Juno Sospita name two different gods. For Schultz the history of Juno Sospita illustrates the character of Romanization as "usurpation and incorporation" (p. 223). Finally Schultz traces the memory of Caecilia's dream and her service to the Roman state. Schultz correlates the shield wielded by Juno Sospita on coins to the depiction of a warrior wielding a trilobate shield on the frieze from the tomb of Caecilia Metella (the first cousin once removed of the Caecilia Metella who dreamed of Sospita) in order to suggest both a memory of her cousin's religious service but also the fusion of "masculine and feminine service to the res publica" (p. 227). The volume concludes with an essay by A.E. Cooley, "Beyond Rome and Latium: Roman religion in the age of Augustus." Cooley uses his introduction to sum up the several contributions as developing an understanding of Romanization as a dynamic interaction. Cooley herself focuses on "how the capital's religious institutions and practices had a distinctive impact upon Italy during the age of Augustus" (p. 228). She draws attention to the conscious conflation of Rome and Latium in the prayers for the secular games conducted by Augustus in 17 BCE, in the Fasti Praenestini published with the detailed commentary by the scholar (and Augustan family tutor) Verrius Flaccus, and in Ovid's poetic celebration of the Fasti. She ends with an interesting survey of the proliferation of deities (Fortuna, Pax) qualified with the imperial title Augusta, identified with the imperial house, and universalizing a (and not the) Roman religious experience. Even when I have disagreed with particular arguments I found the book useful and thought-provoking.[[6]] Anyone wanting to think more broadly about Romanization or about Roman religion stands to learn much from this book. ------------------ Notes: 1. See Chr. Saulnier, Latomus 43 (1984) 517-533; Y. Thomas, Origine et Commune Patrie (1996); J. Scheid and M. Grazia Granino Cecere, "Les Sacerdoces e/questres," in S. Demougin and M.Th. Raepsaet-Charlier, edd. Ordo equester. Histoire d'une aristocratie (Collection de' l'E/cole franc,aise de Rome, Rome, 1999) 1-112. 2. On ritual conception of allotment, see R. Stewart, Public Office in Early Rome. Ritual Procedure and Political Practice (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1998) 12-51. On the augural roles, see J. Linderski, "The Augural Law," ANRW 2.16.3 (1986) 2173-75 and 2193-96 (of an allotment in 176 BCE). 3. E.g. Hor. Serm. 1.9.29-30; Ov. Fasti 2.571-82; Petr. Sat. 137. 4. See K.-J. Hoelkeskamp, Die Enstehung der Nobilitaet: Studien zur sozialen und politischen Geschichte der roemischen Republik im 4. Jhdt v. Chr. (Stuttgart: Franz Steiner, 1990). 5. See S. Weinstock, "Victor and Invictus," HTR 50 (1957) 211-247, who focused on the changes in ritual practice, although his explanation of Greek influence is not compelling. 6. I found few typos: the publication date for Turfa 2004 b (correct in the bibliography) is incorrectly given throughout Glinister's article; something has fallen out on p. 120 ("located about mile outside the modern Italian municipality of Pesaro"); Crawford 480/3 is illustrated instead of Crawford 480/2 (p. 214, fig. 9.1), although the text refers expressly to the reverse of 480/2 (p. 224, cf. 213).

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BMCR 2008.05.06, Marc Van de Mieroop , A History of the Near East

Marc Van de Mieroop, A History of the Ancient Near East ca. 3000-323 BC. 2nd edition. Malden, MA: Blackwell, 2007. Pp. xix, 341. ISBN 978-1-4051-4911-2. $37.95. Reviewed by Peter Magee, Bryn Mawr College (pmagee@xxxxxxxxxxxx) Word count: 546 words ------------------------------- To read a print-formatted version of this review, see http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/bmcr/2008/2008-05-06.html ------------------------------- As I noted in my review of the first edition of this book (BMCR 2006.09.24), Van de Mieroop has done the Academy a great service by bringing together in an accessible fashion divergent historical sources on the Ancient Near East. To my knowledge, most reviewers agreed with this conclusion. I was somewhat surprised, therefore, to receive the second edition so shortly after publication of the first. Van De Mieroop notes in his preface that it was primarily to increase its accessibility as a textbook that a second edition was produced. Indeed this seems to be the most obvious justification for the volume. Many maps, illustrations and translations have been added to increase its ease-of-use. These include: new illustrations of an Uruk tablet; a cylinder seal used by Ilum-bani; a statue of a Syrian deity; a Kassite stele of the goddess Lama; a neo-Hittite orthostat from Tell Halaf; an Assyrian relief showing refugees; a plan of Babylon in the sixth century and the glazed brick representations of soldiers from Susa. All are perfectly situated in the text so that their relevance is clear. Five new maps grace the volume. Most of these are general maps at the beginning of each section that indicate the location of the major settlements. The "Documents," essentially text-boxes that provide translations and commentary on specific periods, have also been considerably expanded. These now include lexical lists, an extract from a ration list, hymns to the Kings of the Ur III dynasty, an extract from the edict of King Ammisaduqa of Babylon, an account of early Hittite history, Babylonian literature, Hurrian writings, Middle Elamite inscriptions, later reflections on the Dark Age, an Assyrian description of the Zagros mountains, King Sargon and Dur Sharrukin, scholarly commentaries, Neo-Babylonian private contracts, and the Persian library at Sippar. These are very useful additions, especially since Van de Mieroop provides a full bibliography for the translations that he has quoted. The "Suggested Readings" at the back of the book are greatly increased in number, which is also very welcome. There are also textual changes that reflect new archaeological discoveries. For example the discussion on the Uruk Expansion (p. 37) now includes reference to the presence of beveled rim bowls from Miri Qalat in Pakistan and to the on-going excavations at Nurabad in southern Iran. This is not only important for issues of accuracy, but it also serves the purpose of reinforcing the point that archaeological research is still occurring outside of southern Mesopotamia that has a direct bearing on developments throughout the region. Some of the issues raised in my review of the first edition still stand: There is very little discussion of the Sabaean Empire/State, and the section on the Achaemenid Empire still seems somewhat short (although it has increased by two pages from 13 in the first edition to 15 in the second). Maybe the third edition will address these two points. In the end, the additions to this volume have only added to its immense worth as both a textbook and a scholarly volume. Those who have not purchased the book before will be rewarded by its acquisition. Fortunately the price for the second edition softcover ($37.95) is not so excessive as to dissuade those who bought the first edition from purchasing the second as well.

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BMCR 2008.05.05, C. Schultz/P. Harvey (edd.), Religion in Rep. Italy

Celia E. Schultz, Paul B. Harvey, Jr., Religion in Republican Italy. Yale Classical Studies 33. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2007. Pp. xiv, 299. ISBN 978-0-521-86366-7. $85.00. Reviewed by Roberta Stewart, Dartmouth College (Roberta.Stewart@xxxxxxxxxxxxx) Word count: 2469 words ------------------------------- To read a print-formatted version of this review, see http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/bmcr/2008/2008-05-05.html ------------------------------- Table of Contents (http://catdir.loc.gov/catdir/enhancements/fy0710/2007296031-t.html) The collection Religion in Republican Italy edited by Celia Schultz and Paul Harvey promises to open new ground in the study of Roman religion by focusing on the intersection of religion and ethnicity in Republican Italy. Both Roman religion and ethnicity have been the focus of much recent work. The book thus promises two sexy topics together (religion, identity), examined from diverse analytical perspectives by field archaeologists, museum curators, and Roman historians. The book has the common weakness of collections: contributions of uneven quality orbit about a general theme without creating a coherent argument. Nevertheless the book offers useful syntheses of recent work in the field and almost textbook examples of the deployment of particular methodologies. In "Reconsidering 'religious Romanization'" Fay Glinister explores the evidence for anatomical terracottas and argues that their occurrence "is not, as usually supposed, limited to central Tyrrhenian Italy, nor the result of Roman colonization of the peninsula" (p. 11). Glinister reviews the sites and dates of anatomical votives (bronze and terracotta) and argues that an indigenous cult practice of anatomical votive dedications preceded Roman contact and conquest. But she addresses the typology of the terracotta anatomical votives by citing Lesk, who connected their introduction with Gravisca. To argue for a continuity of cult she adduces bronze anatomical votives from the sixth century (sites and objects unspecified) and cites Turfa. The point is crucial and needed illustrations from individual sites to sustain the argument. L. Lundeen provides a critical examination of evidence for the Etruscan priestess, beginning with Tanaquil, Livy's Etruscan woman skilled in reading bird signs, and including engravings on bronze mirrors, bronze figurines, funerary reliefs and sculpture, and inscriptions identifying an hatrencu. In each instance Lundeen offers the accepted viewpoint(s) and a critical assessment. She rightly invokes the difficulty of distinguishing representations in art of the public and private status of elite Etruscan women and their activities as elite women and rejects tenuous evidence. Lundeen interprets carefully the architecture and inscriptions in the Tomb of the Inscriptions at Vulci, where burials of hatrencu respected spousal or familial relationships and indicate that social identity trumped religious role and that religious role was not restricted by marriage. Although Lundeen rejects gendered identifications of hatrencu as priests of Mater Matuta or Dionysos, her own interpretation is tenuous. Two inscriptions qualify hatrencu as sacniu or "consecrated" and locate the term/individual in the religious sphere, which "in light of our current Roman comparanda... probably encompassed traditionally masculine acts gods, and concerns outside of the private sphere" (p. 54). To support this she cites an urn from Perugia showing a woman togate and accompanied by musicians, indicating a "prophetess" or "a public magistracy" and parallels from Roman imperial Asia Minor (evidence not specified). The history of state formation and the conflation of personal and public status in the emergent aristocratic states (in Etruria and at Rome) might help Lundeen's argument for public roles of elite women. In "Etruscan religion at the watershed: before and after the fourth century BCE" J. Turfa contrasts Etruscan religious practice documented in the late Roman Republic with the religious practices already fully developed in 400 BCE when the Etruscan cities began to experience military eclipse. Her contribution is as far ranging as the Etruscan influence on Roman religion (temple architecture, divinatory practice and priests, cosmology, sacred texts) and Turfa's own ability to think broadly (e.g., Etruscan votives at Hellenic and panhellenic sanctuaries at Delphi, Olympia, and Athens). Turfa organizes her discussion by type of evidence (archaeology, epigraphy, literature) and only secondarily by topics in the study of religion (votives and individual participation in cults; sacred texts marking dedications and so-called "scripture"; divination; cosmology). The watershed emerges clearly as the loss of political independence and with it the political role of Etruscan religion, but Turfa suggests deep changes in religious practice and for the Etruscans a fundamental alienation from previous ritual identity. She documents the changing frameworks for religious practice at Tarquinia, Veii and Pyrgi, where votives first indicate a cult place, architecturally embellished in the sixth century, and anatomical votives indicate continued use of the site after the conquest by Rome. Turfa focuses on practices peculiar to Etruscan religion, namely the use of written texts and the emphasis on personal religious experience. In "Religious locales in the territory of Minturnae: aspects of Romanization" V. Livi uses archaeological evidence for cult (architectural forms and decoration; votives) to assess the effects of Roman conquest on an indigenous Italic people. She documents the changed patterns of religious life at Minturnae and suggests the cultural annihilation of the Aurunci people following the Roman conquest. The paper offers an important conclusion about Romanization at the level of the everyday, individual experience. It is a "how to" for organizing and thinking about archaeological material for an indigenous people and their confrontation with Rome, although her definition of the Aurunci community before Roman contact may be overstated, or at least is undocumented. Of the sanctuary of Marica and of the Aurunci she claims: "the sanctuary had served as a meeting place (religious, political, and economic) for a people that had few contacts with the outside world" (p. 112-13). The possible economic functions of the sanctuary are documented, but its political function and the political identity of the Aurunci as a people are not proven. In "Religion and memory at Pisaurum," P. Harvey interprets the epigraphic record of Pisaurum in order to understand the inscriptions recording Jupiter Latius in the second century CE. Harvey considers the physical characteristics of the inscriptions as well as orthography, letter style, and grammar, all of which indicate general dates in the third and early second centuries BCE (which Harvey later specifies to the period of the Roman colony founded in 184) and a linguistic population including "Latin and Sabine elements in the colony's population" (p. 122); prosopography corroborates a dedicating population of Roman and Latin peoples from west central Italy. Harvey's argument about the Pisauran cult of Jupiter Latius focuses first on nomenclature: Latius in place of Latiaris appears in Augustan poetry, and cultores appear as groups of worshippers of particular gods, including Jupiter, at e.g. Tarracina. Second, on historical context: coins of Antoninus Pius show nostalgia for Roman religious traditions, including IOVI LATIO in 143 CE. For Harvey then cultores Iovis Latii emerge at a particular historical moment, following a trend set by the emperor and consistent with the original Roman and Latin roots of the colonial population. This fine detective work shows the intersection of religion and identity, and an important aspect of political identity in the Empire. One wonders about the process by which religious memory was maintained from 184 BCE or recreated in late second century CE at Pisaurum; compare the proliferation of priesthoods celebrating and recollecting Roman ritual traditions, particularly traditions of origins, held by individuals of equestrian status from throughout the Roman Empire.[[1]] In "Inventing the sortilegus: lot divination and cultural identity in Italy, Rome and the provinces," W.E. Klingshirn begins with a religious category, the private lot diviner, and seeks to trace the evolution of the priestly type and the religious practice into the first century BCE. Klingshirn surveys objects identified as lots and Etruscan lot drawing scenes. He is most interested in tracing the development of the Christian holy man who stood apart from the structural frameworks of traditional, classical religion. To this end he focuses on accounts of itinerant priests (and their hostile public reception) in the second Punic war and private lot diviners and divination as described by Cicero De Div. Klingshirn is a keen reader: of representations of allotment he observes the depiction of the "dramatic moment of divine revelation" (p. 143) and he emphasizes Varro LL 6.51-76 explicitly defining the divinatory function of the lots to connect time and matters at hand. But in a discussion of a priesthood and a ritual practice I miss here a treatment of the Roman categories of religious experience--lot divination as an auspice, the role of the augurs who presided over the auspicia and over allotment used in Roman government.[[2]] While Klingshirn is right to observe the absence of an established, separate cult for private lot consultation at Rome, the evidence for the use of the lots in Roman government could have added a great deal about vessels, lots and procedures, and more importantly about what Romans (other than Cicero and as early as Plautus) at different historical periods thought about divination by lot. Moreover, in order to untangle disdain for status and ethnicity from disdain for itinerant priests, it might be useful to compare Roman accounts of individual women practioners of cult whose functioning in sacrifice and divination is recorded and denigrated in the Republican period.[[3]] Finally the augural disciplina regulating the procedure and interpretation of public sortition must factor into considering the claim of expertise by sortilegi in the early Empire and the response to them, i.e. the historical development reflects a changed circumstance and changed roles of traditional priests of the traditional religion as much as it represents something new. In "Hot, cold, or smelly: the power of sacred water in Roman religion, 400-100 BCE" Ingrid Edlund-Berry investigates the distribution and characteristics of cult places for water. She begins with a review of the Roman calendar revealing several celebrations of water deities, and surveys ritual cleansing. Edlund-Berry then explores the various contexts in which priests or individuals collected or used water for ritual purposes. Finally she focuses on a particular water deity, Mefitis "the goddess of stench," examining her shrines at Rome and in Italy and evaluating the location and accessiblity of sanctuaries to human and animal traffic. For this reviewer, her emphasis on practical logistics (who, what, where, when) is salutary. What emerges is a sense of water sanctuaries and water cult in the landscape of Roman Italy and the lived experience of religious celebrants. In "Religion and politics: did the Romans scruple about the placement of their temples," J. Muccigrosso focuses on building projects c. 300 BCE to assess their function as a means of political self-representation by the elite. The era is important, as Muccigrosso notes, because our sources are better and because of the emergence then of the patricio-plebeian nobility that defined the social and political ideology of the Roman Republic.[[4]] A change in ritual practice at this time has been observed,[[5]] and Muccigrosso offers the archaeologist's viewpoint on this crucial period. He plots the frequency and evolving distribution of temples in relation to traffic patterns beginning with the regal period. Numerically the third century stands out with temples vowed "at an average rate of nearly one every two years" (p. 190). More interesting, Muccigrosso observes the avoidance of low-trafficked areas, unsuited for the purposes of political advertisement, so the crowded but poor Subura. He questions, contra Ziolkowski, the ritual constraints on temple placement, observing that Rome had a plethora of sacred places, that deities had multiple temples and that gods could be moved. But the argument is uncompelling: that Rome had many sacred spaces (e.g. the Argei) means that Romans lived in a polytheistic world, not that all sacred space was alike or interchangeable; that Rome had multiple temples to the same general deity does not mean that all temples to Fortuna (e.g. Fors Fortuna, Fortuna Huiusce Diei) marked the same Fortuna. Nor does Muccigrosso consider the role of the pontifical college in identifying and establishing cult places. Nevertheless he interprets sensitively the impact of architecture. So the Aqua Appia and via Appia provided employment, and the road advertised Claudius' name in newly organized areas of Roman Italy where it facilitated the travel of newly organized voters and of their goods to the city. Muccigrosso interprets the cavalry parade (transvectio equitum) instituted by Q. Fabius Maximus Rullianus in 304 as a counter to Appius Claudius Caecus' road, the architectural elaboration of the ficus Ruminalis with statues of the suckling twins in 296 as a counter to the aedicula of Concord dedicated by Cn. Flavius in 304, and Fabius' suggested re-organization of the Lupercal as a counter to the temple of Victory dedicated by Postumius in 294. Fabius emerges as a copycat intent on getting the last word. In "Juno Sospita and Roman insecurity in the Social War" C. Schultz examines the Roman government's reaction to the potentially prophetic dream of the Roman matron Caecilia Metella during the Social War. Schultz reviews literary evidence and creates a religious history of Juno Sospita: she reviews government policy regarding Lanuvium, the source of Rome's cult to Juno Sospita, in the Latin settlement of 338, prodigy reports regarding Juno at Lanuvium in the Second Punic war, and the establishment of a temple to Juno Sospita at Rome in 194. She then reviews the attributes of Juno Sospita and her cult in literary accounts, in art and on coins, and in inscriptions. Schultz rightly emphasizes Sospita's associations with the military and political affairs of Lanuvium and then of Rome, over and against a role simply in traditionally feminine areas of fertility and childbirth, and she acutely reminds readers that Juno Lucina and Juno Sospita name two different gods. For Schultz the history of Juno Sospita illustrates the character of Romanization as "usurpation and incorporation" (p. 223). Finally Schultz traces the memory of Caecilia's dream and her service to the Roman state. Schultz correlates the shield wielded by Juno Sospita on coins to the depiction of a warrior wielding a trilobate shield on the frieze from the tomb of Caecilia Metella (the first cousin once removed of the Caecilia Metella who dreamed of Sospita) in order to suggest both a memory of her cousin's religious service but also the fusion of "masculine and feminine service to the res publica" (p. 227). The volume concludes with an essay by A.E. Cooley, "Beyond Rome and Latium: Roman religion in the age of Augustus." Cooley uses his introduction to sum up the several contributions as developing an understanding of Romanization as a dynamic interaction. Cooley herself focuses on "how the capital's religious institutions and practices had a distinctive impact upon Italy during the age of Augustus" (p. 228). She draws attention to the conscious conflation of Rome and Latium in the prayers for the secular games conducted by Augustus in 17 BCE, in the Fasti Praenestini published with the detailed commentary by the scholar (and Augustan family tutor) Verrius Flaccus, and in Ovid's poetic celebration of the Fasti. She ends with an interesting survey of the proliferation of deities (Fortuna, Pax) qualified with the imperial title Augusta, identified with the imperial house, and universalizing a (and not the) Roman religious experience. Even when I have disagreed with particular arguments I found the book useful and thought-provoking.[[6]] Anyone wanting to think more broadly about Romanization or about Roman religion stands to learn much from this book. ------------------ Notes: 1. See Chr. Saulnier, Latomus 43 (1984) 517-533; Y. Thomas, Origine et Commune Patrie (1996); J. Scheid and M. Grazia Granino Cecere, "Les Sacerdoces e/questres," in S. Demougin and M.Th. Raepsaet-Charlier, edd. Ordo equester. Histoire d'une aristocratie (Collection de' l'E/cole franc,aise de Rome, Rome, 1999) 1-112. 2. On ritual conception of allotment, see R. Stewart, Public Office in Early Rome. Ritual Procedure and Political Practice (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1998) 12-51. On the augural roles, see J. Linderski, "The Augural Law," ANRW 2.16.3 (1986) 2173-75 and 2193-96 (of an allotment in 176 BCE). 3. E.g. Hor. Serm. 1.9.29-30; Ov. Fasti 2.571-82; Petr. Sat. 137. 4. See K.-J. Hoelkeskamp, Die Enstehung der Nobilitaet: Studien zur sozialen und politischen Geschichte der roemischen Republik im 4. Jhdt v. Chr. (Stuttgart: Franz Steiner, 1990). 5. See S. Weinstock, "Victor and Invictus," HTR 50 (1957) 211-247, who focused on the changes in ritual practice, although his explanation of Greek influence is not compelling. 6. I found few typos: the publication date for Turfa 2004 b (correct in the bibliography) is incorrectly given throughout Glinister's article; something has fallen out on p. 120 ("located about mile outside the modern Italian municipality of Pesaro"); Crawford 480/3 is illustrated instead of Crawford 480/2 (p. 214, fig. 9.1), although the text refers expressly to the reverse of 480/2 (p. 224, cf. 213).
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