68 resultados para Religionsgeschichte
Resumo:
Die traverse lancierte im Jahr 2010 eine Reihe von vier historiographischen Sonderheften. Nach der Wirtschaftsgeschichte (1/2010), der Sozialgeschichte (1/2011) und der Kulturgeschichte (1/2012) wird die Reihe mit einem Heft zur Politikgeschichte (1/2013) abgeschlossen. In 14 Artikeln werden Themen aus dem Mittelalter, der Neuzeit, der Sattelzeit und der Zeitgeschichte aufgenommen. Die Beiträge bieten Forschungsüberblicke zur Geschichte der Parteien und der politischen Bewegungen, der Militärgeschichte, der Rechtsgeschichte, der staatsbürgerlichen Rechte und der Staatsbürgerschaft, den auswärtigen Beziehungen, der Neutralität, der schweizerischen Mitarbeit in internationalen Organisationen, des Service Publics, des Parlamentes und der Verfassung, der Religionsgeschichte und des Säkularismus, der Umwelt und zur Konstruktion von Geschichte und nationaler Indentität. Zusätzlich werden die beiden Arbeitsinstrumente Diplomatische Dokumente der Schweiz und das Jahrbuch Schweizerische Politik (L'Année politique suisse) vorgestellt und am Beispiel des Bergier-Berichts wird die politische Instrumentalisierung der Geschichte diskutiert.
Resumo:
The present article deals exemplarily with the remarkable iconographic attestations connected with the Wadi ed-Daliye (WD) findings. The discussed bullae were attached to papyri which provide a clear dating of the hoard between 375-335 BCE. Considering style and convention the preserved motives are to be classified as Persian, Greek or Greco-Persian. A major goal of the following presentation is the contextualization of the very material; this is achieved by taking into account local parallels as well as relevant attestations of the dominant / “imperial” cultures of Persia and Greece. The correlation of motives with the (often more complex, more detailed or more contoured) examples stemming from the “source-cultures” follows a clear agenda: It is methodologically based on the approach that was employed by Silvia Schroer and Othmar Keel throughout the project „Die Ikonographie Palästinas/Israels und der Alte Orient (IPIAO). Eine Religionsgeschichte in Bildern” (2005, 23ff). The WD-findings demand a careful analysis since the influencing cultures behind the imagery are deeply rooted in the field of Greek mythology and iconography. Special attention has to be drawn to the bullae, as far as excavated, from a huge Punic temple archive of Carthago (Berges 1997 and 2002) as well as those from the archive of the satrap seat in Daskyleion in the Northwest of Asia Minor (Kaptan 2002), which are chronologically close (end 5th and 4th century BCE) to the WD-finds. Not each and every single motive and artifact of the WD-corpus comprising more than 120 items can be dealt with in detail throughout the following pages. We refer to the editio princeps by Leith (1990, 1997) respectively to the concerning chapter in Keel’s Corpus volume II (Keel 2010, 340-379). The article gives a brief history of research (2.), some basic remarks on the development of style (3.) and a selection of detail-studies (4.). A crosscheck with other relevant corpora of stamp-seals (5.) as well as a compressed synthesis (6.) are contributions in order to characterize and classify the unique iconographic assemblage. There are rather few references to the late Persian coins from Samaria (Meshorer/Qedar 1999), which have been impressed about contemporaneous with the WD-bullae (372-333 BCE), as there is an article by Patrick Wyssmann in this volume about that specific corpus. Through the perspective of the late Persian iconography, Samaria appears as a dazzling metropolis at the crossroads of Greek and Persian culture, which is far away from a strict and revolutionary religious orthodoxy