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Throughout his career Arthur Darby Nock (1902-1963) made unique and lasting contributions to classical scholarship and the history of religion, especially to the study of ancient religion, magic, and the relation of paganism to early Christianity and Judaism. Nock's genius showed itself early: endowed with a prodigious memory and an unerring linguistic skill, he combined speed and accuracy in reading and a delight in the discovery, ordering and establishment of facts. At the age of twenty he was made annual reviewer of Latin literature for "The Year's Work in Classical Studies"; and at twenty-four he produced an important edition of a fourth-century Greek text, Sallustius "On the Gods and the Universe," which included a translation and a masterly introduction. At twenty-seven, having come to the United States from England the year before, Nock was appointed Frothingham Professor of the History of Religion at Harvard University. In his early thirties he wrote two books, "Conversion"--an imaginative and exacting study of religious currents in the Hellenistic and Roman world--and "St. Paul." Mainly, however, A. D. Nock poured his immense learning into articles and reviews, which heretofore have been scattered through many different journals. Representing a formidable range of learning, these essays deal for the most part with historical evidence (from all sources, including papyri, inscriptions, and coins) of the beliefs, superstitions, and religious practices of ordinary people. Nock saw the essence of religion not only in philosophy ortheology, but in piety and cult, in the practices and the expressions of the common man. His unusual combination of genius and common sense allowed him to treat the actual manifestations of religious sentiment without condescension. For this edition of Arthur Darby Nock's writings, Zeph Stewart has garnered a substantial selection of Nock's most important essays and has indexed and cross-referenced them as well.
| ISBN | 0674021134 | | Pages | 534 | | ISBN13 | 9780674021136 (What's this?) | | Weight (grammes) | 890 | | Publisher | Harvard University Press | | Published in | Cambridge, Mass | | Imprint | Harvard University Press | | Height (mm) | 235 | | Format | Hardback | | Width (mm) | 155 | | Publication date | 15 Dec 2005 | | Academic level | Professional / Scholarly | | Writer of introduction | Zeph Stewart | |
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Greeks and Magi Tomb Violations and Pontifical Law Religious Attitudes of the Ancient Greeks Ruler-Worship and Syncretism Philo and Hellenistic Philosophy Later Egyptian Piety The Cult of Heroes Mana and Roman Religion Sarcophagi and Symbolism Word-Coinage in Greek The Emperor's Divine Comes Christianity and Classical Culture The Problem of Zoroaster Graeco-Egyptian Religious Propaganda Tertullian and the Ahori Soter and Euergetes The Roman Army and the Roman Religious Year Hellenistic Mysteries and Christian Sacraments The Book of Acts Deification and Julian A Cult Ordinance in Verse Posidonius Religious Symbols and Symbolism I Religious Symbols and Symbolism II Religious Symbols and Symbolism III Nymphs and Nereids 'Son of God' in Pauline and Hellenistic Thought Gnosticism Isopoliteia and the Jews Obiter Dicta BIBLIOGRAPHICA Bibliography of the published writings of A. D. Nock Index of cross-references Index of books reviewed INDEXES Names and Subjects Texts Emended or Interpreted Modern Authors
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