ABSTRACT

This volume examines the ways in which divination, often through oracular utterances and other mechanisms, linked mortals with the gods, and places the practice within the ancient sociopolitical and religious environment. Whether humans sought knowledge by applying to an oracle through which the god was believed to speak or used soothsayers who interpreted specific signs such as the flight of birds, there was a fundamental desire to know the will of the gods. In many cases, pragmatic concerns – personal, economic or political – can be deduced from the context of the application.

Divination and communication with the gods in a post-pagan world has also produced fascinating receptions. The presentation of these processes in monotheistic societies such as early Christian Late Antiquity (where the practice continued through the use of curse tablets) or medieval Europe, and beyond, where the role of religion had changed radically, provides a particular challenge and this topic has been little discussed by scholars. This volume aims to rectify this desideratum by providing the opportunity to address questions related to the reception of Greco-Roman divination, oracles and prophecy, in all media, including literature and film.

Several contributions in this volume originated in the 2015 Classics Colloquium held at the University of South Africa and the volume has been augmented with additional contributions.

chapter |15 pages

Introduction

chapter |15 pages

A story of blood, guts and guesswork

Synthetic reasoning in classical Greek divination 1

chapter |11 pages

Value-added divination at Dodona

chapter |19 pages

Profiting from prophecy

Q. Marcius Rex and the construction of the Aqua Marcia 1

chapter |16 pages

‘Arrows fletched from our own wings’

Discovering a ‘Delphi of the mind’ in the writings of the Early Church Fathers 1

chapter |18 pages

Sosipatra: prophetess, philosopher and theurgist

Reflections on divination and epistemology in late antiquity 1

chapter |21 pages

One oracle too many?

Corippus (and Procopius) on female prophecy in North African divination and profit in the Roman world 1

chapter |16 pages

Deconstructing divination

Superstition, anticlericalism and Cicero’s De Divinatione in Enlightenment England, c. 1700–1730

chapter |10 pages

Prophecy and Paul Kruger

Robert Grendon’s appropriation of Graeco-Roman prophets and prophetic devices in his South African epic, Paul Kruger’s Dream

chapter |12 pages

Cassandra prophesies back

Marion Zimmer Bradley’s Firebrand