Imagining the Afterlife in the Ancient World

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5th Century BCE
ancient necromancy
Apollonius Rhodius
Archaic Greek
Category=NHC
Category=NKD
Category=QDHA
classical mythology death
De Grummond
Dining Scene
Early 5th Century BCE
Epistulae Ad Familiares
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eq_history
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eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Etruscan Religion
Etymologicum Magnum
Female Demon
Fourth Century BCE
Frances Foster
funerary ritual interpretation
Gabriela Ingle
Ghost Stories
Greek funerary practices
Infernal Regions
Isabella Bossolino
Janek Kucharski
Josipa Lulic
Julia Doroszewska
Latin Love Elegy
Literary Ghost Stories
Molly Evangeline Allen
mortuary archaeology
Museo Nazionale Delle Terme
Nick Brown
Orphic Gold Tablets
Prothesis Scenes
Roman burial customs
Roman Tombs
Safari F. Grey
Sleep Paralysis
Stephanie Crooks
underworld beliefs antiquity
Underworld Myth Funerary Ritual Cosmology Ancient Religion Philosophy Belief Ghosts Dreams Oracles Classical Literature Archaeology
Van De Put
Virgil's Underworld
Virgil’s Underworld
Von Vacano
White Ground Lekythoi
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138299795
  • Weight: 435g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 04 Sep 2018
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Human beings have speculated about whether or not there is life after death, and if so, what form that life might take, for centuries. What did people in the ancient world think the next life would hold, and did they imagine there was a chance for a relationship between the living and the dead? How did people in the ancient world keep their dead loved ones alive through memory, and were they afraid the dead might return and haunt the living in another form? What sort of afterlife did the ancient Greeks and Romans imagine for themselves? This volume explores these questions and more.

While individual representations of the afterlife have often been examined, few studies have taken a more general view of ideas about the afterlife circulating in the ancient world. By drawing together current research from international scholars on archaeological evidence for afterlife belief, chiefly from funerary sites, together with studies of works of literature, this volume provides a broader overview of ancient ideas about the afterlife than has so far been available.

Imagining the Afterlife in the Ancient World explores these key questions through a series of wide-ranging studies, taking in ghosts, demons, dreams, cosmology, and the mutilation of corpses along the way, offering a valuable resource to those studying all aspects of death in the ancient world

Juliette Harrisson is a Senior Lecturer in Ancient History at Newman University in Birmingham, UK. Her primary research interests lie in Roman period myth and religion, and in the reception of ancient Greece and Rome in modern popular culture, especially film, television and novels. Her monograph, Dreams and Dreaming in the Roman Empire: Cultural Memory and Imagination was published in 2013, and she is also the co-editor of Memory and Urban Religion in the Ancient World (with Martin Bommas and Phoebe Roy).