Search results for " Mithology"

showing 2 items of 2 documents

El mito de Icario en la General estoria de Alfonso X

2013

This article studies the myth of Icarus as it is translated in the first part of Alfonso X's General estoria. Its analysis highlights aspects that are usually found in the mythographical episodes of the Alfonsine estoria, particularly linked with its possible sources and its internal characteristics. The latter ones are defined by the anonymity of the quote and an evident moral intention. Regarding the sources, if it is known that the mythography gets to the Alfonsine text through two paths, the gloss in the manuscripts and a mythographical work, the exact source or sources used by Alfonsine historians are still unidentified. I have begun searching where the elements that are found in no pr…

Classical Reception Studies[SHS.LITT]Humanities and Social Sciences/LiteratureMithographyPagan/Christian Relations in the Early Middle AgesAlfonso X el SabioSpanish LiteratureGreek and Roman Mithologyand Liber De Natura DeorumMoralityMedieval SpainMythography[SHS.LITT] Humanities and Social Sciences/LiteratureLatin Literature[SHS.HIST] Humanities and Social Sciences/HistoryAllegoryMithology[SHS.CLASS] Humanities and Social Sciences/Classical studiesClassical philologyClassicsOvid[SHS.HIST]Humanities and Social Sciences/HistoryPagan StudiesEuhemerism[SHS.CLASS]Humanities and Social Sciences/Classical studiesMedieval Studies
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Could Themis be the Deity who «Steers» Parmenides’ Cosmos?

2021

In this paper I will investigate the identity of the daímōn introduced by Parmenides in B12, 3 DK, the deity “who steers all things”. The importance of this deity is not adequately reflected in ancient doxography but in recent decades many scholars have reconsidered its role. I argue that in Parmenides’ poem this daímōn may play a relevant role in connecting the theological, ontological and cosmological planes. My purpose is to provide enough arguments for the hypothesis that the daímōn may be the same goddess, Themis, who in the proem (B1, 28) is paired with Dike as a guide for Parmenides to the theá who will reveal to him the truth of tò eón, and in the part of the poem called alḗtheia (B…

Settore M-FIL/07 - Storia Della Filosofia AnticaSettore M-FIL/06 - Storia Della FilosofiaParmenides Ancient philosophy Ancient cosmology Ancient astronomy tò eón daímōn 28 B12 DK Mithology Themis Ananke eros
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