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The Greek goddess Artemis and her Roman equivalent Diana constitute a multifaceted divinity. In Greek mythology she is the twin sister of Apollo and the virgin goddess who lives in the hills and the forests. She is potnia theron, the mistress of the animals, but she is also the goddess of child birth and fertility. This volume contains a wide range of approaches to Artemis written by classical archaeologists, philologists and historians. Chronologically the topics range from the first mentioning of the goddess in the pre-historic sources, Homer and the Greek tragedies to Late Antiquity and the post-antique perception of the goddess. Several of the articles concentrate on regional aspects; others treat the iconography of the goddess as well as the role of her cult and the rituals in the sanctuaries both in the East and the West. Collectively, the contributions offer one of the most comprehensive studies to date of the goddess.
Approaches to Artemis: in Bronze Age Greece
págs. 21-39
págs. 41-49
págs. 51-60
págs. 61-78
págs. 79-82
The Sanctuay of Artemis Brauronia: Can Architecture and Iconography Help to Locate the Settings of the Rituals?..
págs. 83-116
págs. 117-126
págs. 127-152
Artemis Orteia: a Goddess of Nature or a Goddess of Culture?
págs. 153-190
págs. 195-206
Artemis in Sicily and South Italy: A Picture of Diversity
págs. 207-260
Artumes in Etruria: The Borrowed Golddess
págs. 261-301
Quantifying Black Sea Artemis: Some Methodological Reflections
págs. 303-332
Bears and bees in Themiscyra: a sanctuary for Artemis in the land of Amazons?
págs. 333-340
Diana and her Followers in a Late Republican Temple Pediment from Nemi.: A Preliminary Note
págs. 345-367
págs. 369-381
págs. 383-400
págs. 401-425
págs. 427-451
"Diana Efesia Multimammia": The Metamorphoses of a Pagan Goddess from the Renaissance to the Age of Neo-Classicism
págs. 455-496
págs. 497-522
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