Beloved and God: The Story of Hadrian and Antinous |
From inside the book
Niðurstöður 1 - 3 af 46
Síða 16
When , in the first century BC , the Roman Republic extended its control over the Hellenistic world , Bithynia became more of a client kingdom and a battlefield , devastated like much of Greece in the wars between Sulla and Mithridates ...
When , in the first century BC , the Roman Republic extended its control over the Hellenistic world , Bithynia became more of a client kingdom and a battlefield , devastated like much of Greece in the wars between Sulla and Mithridates ...
Síða 195
Even then a faith in Antinous survived surreptitiously or belligerently for another century and a half , down to the last struggles between the pagans and the Christians . Everywhere his games continued to thrive , and these , it should ...
Even then a faith in Antinous survived surreptitiously or belligerently for another century and a half , down to the last struggles between the pagans and the Christians . Everywhere his games continued to thrive , and these , it should ...
Síða 204
jealous local officials : with decreasing success in the third century . Another lucrative privilege was the right of citizens who had their children registered within thirty days of birth to have them maintained out of funds specially ...
jealous local officials : with decreasing success in the third century . Another lucrative privilege was the right of citizens who had their children registered within thirty days of birth to have them maintained out of funds specially ...
What people are saying - Write a review
We haven't found any reviews in the usual places.
Efni
Scandal of the centuries | 1 |
Antinous the young Greek c 11023 | 15 |
Hadrian the Roman Emperor 76123 | 33 |
Höfundarréttur | |
20 aðrir hlutar ekki sýndir
Aðrar útgáfur - View all
Common terms and phrases
accepted Alexandria already ancient Antinoopolis Antinous appears artists Athens Bank of Italy bear Beaujeu beauty become beloved Bithynion body busts called century Christian claimed Clairmont coins Commodus cult culture death Dietrichson Dionysos divine doubt earlier early east Egypt Egyptian Eleusis Emperor Empire eromenos evidence face fact final followed given gods Greece Greek Hadrian head Head of Antinous Hermes hero historians honoured images imperial issued Italy late later least less linked Maza memory Minor mysteries nature never Nile obelisk offered official original Osiris pagan pederastic perhaps political priests probably recently references reign relationship relief religious remains Roman Rome sculptures seems Senate sexual sometimes sources statue style suggest temple took Villa Weber whole writers young youth