ABSTRACT

The papers assembled in this selection of studies range in subject matter from early Judaic magic to an inscribed monument of the Neo-Classical period. The principal emphasis of the collection is nevertheless on religious developments under the High Roman Empire: problems arising from the interpretation of oriental cults imported from the Hellenistic East but primarily the development of imperial cult, the one universal religion of the empire before the coming of Christianity. The essays divide into five categories: Divinity and Power; The Imperial Numen; The Imperial Cult: Review and Discussion; Rituals and Ceremonies; Ainigmata. The titles of the individual articles speak for themselves but readers may also find the preface of interest in so far as it sets out the author's ideas on the controversial nature of the emperor's divinity. While this is a topic deserving of a book in its own right, the preface together with the points raised by individual studies within the overall framework may go some way to repairing this defficiency.

chapter I|10 pages

Votive Offerings to the Emperor?

chapter II|12 pages

Prudentius and the Cult of Divus Augustus

chapter III|6 pages

Ovid and Divus Augustus

chapter IV|5 pages

Seneca and the Temple of Divus Claudius

chapter V|10 pages

Soldier and Emperor

chapter VI|8 pages

A Silver Aedicula at Mérida

chapter |9 pages

The Deification of Claudius *

chapter VIII|17 pages

The Imperial Nvmen in Roman Britain

chapter IX|4 pages

Numen Augusti

chapter X|12 pages

Le Numen Impérial en Afrique Romaine

chapter XI|16 pages

Numinibus Aug(ustorum)

chapter XII|9 pages

Numen Augustum

chapter XIII|4 pages

Numinibus Domus Divinae

chapter XIV|6 pages

Book Review

chapter XVII|19 pages

Hastiferi 1

chapter XVIII|8 pages

Pliny and the Christians

The rites ad imaginem principis

chapter XIX|21 pages

Un Don De Statues D’argent à Narbo Martius

chapter XX|17 pages

Imperial Processions at Augusta Emerita

chapter XXI|13 pages

An Early Christian Cryptogram?

chapter XXII|13 pages

The Talpioth Ossuaries Again

chapter XXIII|15 pages

On the Origin of the Rotas-Sator Square 1

chapter XXIV|16 pages

Un code secret à Shugborough Hall?