Die antike Stadt Ephesos und ihr Umland boten eine breite Palette religiöser Möglichkeiten, im Privaten sowie öffentlich. Die Beiträge dieses Bandes zeigen, wie Strukturen, Statuten, Münzen, Inschriften und Texte die bemerkenswerte Diversität religiöser Ideen und Praktiken in Ephesos bezeugen.
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Verlagsort
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Produkt-Hinweis
Maße
Höhe: 23.8 cm
Breite: 16.3 cm
Dicke: 2.3 cm
Gewicht
ISBN-13
978-3-16-152515-5 (9783161525155)
Schweitzer Klassifikation
Herausgeber*in
1998 BA from Oklahoma Christian University; 2002 MA from Harding School of Theology; 2002 MDiv from Harding School of Theology; 2007 MA from the University of Chicago; currently PhD (Candidate), University of Chicago.
1974 BA from Harding University; 1980 MTh from Harding School of Theology; 1985 PhD from Emory University; since 1983 Dean and Professor of New Testament at Harding School of Theology.
1986 BA from the University of Minnesota; 1995 PhD from Harvard University; since 1996 Associate Professor at the University of California, Santa Barbara.
I. Ephesos the City
Elisabeth Rathmayr: New Evidence for Imperial Cult in Unit 7 in Terrace House 2 in Ephesos - Hilke Thür: The House of C. Fl. Furius Aptus in Ephesos: Clubhouse of a Dionysiac Association? - Ulrike Muss: The Artemision of Ephesos in the Imperial Period - Guy Maclean Rogers: Some Prytaneis of Ephesos - Steven J. Friesen: The Customs House Inscription from Ephesos: Exchange, Surplus, Ideology, and the Divine - Daniel Schowalter: Ephesos under the Flavians: Domitiansplatz as a Marker of Local and Imperial Identity
II. Ephesos in Christian Memory
Paul Trebilco: Reading Ephesians in Ephesos: A Letter to Pauline and Johannine Christ-followers? - Gregory Stevenson: "Do Not Harm the Suppliant": Inviolability and Asylum at Ephesos and in the Book of Revelation - Jerry L. Sumney: Family and Filial Language in Ephesians