ABSTRACT

Dedicating objects to the divine was a central component of both Greek and Roman religion. Some of the most conspicuous offerings were shaped like parts of the internal or external human body: so-calledanatomical votives. These archaeological artefacts capture the modern imagination, recalling vividly the physical and fragile bodies of the past whilst posing interpretative challenges in the present. This volume scrutinises this distinctive dedicatory phenomenon, bringing together for the first time a range of methodologically diverse approaches which challenge traditional assumptions and simple categorisations. The chapters presented here ask new questions about what constitutes an anatomical votive, how they were used and manipulated in cultural, cultic and curative contexts and the complex role of anatomical votives in negotiations between humans and gods, the body and its disparate parts, divine and medical healing, ancient assemblages and modern collections and collectors. In seeking to re-contextualise and re-conceptualise anatomical votives this volume uniquely juxtaposes the medical with the religious, the social with the conceptual, the idea of the body in fragments with the body whole and the museum with the sanctuary, crossing the boundaries between studies of ancient religion, medicine, the body and the reception of antiquity.

chapter |19 pages

Introduction

Debating the anatomical votive

chapter 1|25 pages

Corpora in connection

Anatomical votives and the confession stelai of Lydia and Phrygia

chapter 2|18 pages

Partible humans and permeable gods

Anatomical votives and personhood in the sanctuaries of central Italy

chapter 3|14 pages

Anatomical votives (and swaddled babies)

From Republican Italy to Roman Gaul

chapter 4|18 pages

Hair today, gone tomorrow

The use of real, false and artificial hair as votive offerings

chapter 5|17 pages

Demeter as an ophthalmologist?

Eye votives and the cult of Demeter and Kore 1

chapter 6|19 pages

Wombs for the gods 1

chapter 7|16 pages

Ritual and meaning

Contextualising votive terracotta infants in Hellenistic Italy 1

chapter 8|18 pages

The foot as gnṓrisma

chapter 9|28 pages

The open man

Anatomical votive busts between the history of medicine and archaeology

chapter 10|21 pages

Fragmentation and the body's boundaries

Reassessing the body in parts

chapter 11|23 pages

Votive genitalia in the Wellcome collection

Modern receptions of ancient sexual anatomy

chapter 12|4 pages

Votive futures

An afterword