General Index Achaia, 5, 59, 77, 151 Achaia, Roman prov<strong>in</strong>ce, 6, 29 Achaian League, 74, 78, 80, 86, 89 acroliths, 109 Aelian, Varia Historia, 27, 27n67 Africa, 67; North Africa, 37-8, 53; West Africa, 49 Agamemnon, 55, 73 agora, 17, 91, 95; Athens, 76, 94, 100; Messene, 17; Tegea, 40, 93, 95, 98-9 agriculture, 59, 62-3 Aigeira, 108 Aig<strong>in</strong>a, 59, 143; temple of Aphaia, 125 aitia, 40, 74-5 Aitolia, 6 Akarnania, 6 Aleos, 95-7, 99 Alexander historians, 51-2 Alexander Romance, 52 Alexander the Great, 6, 29, 38, 51-2, 88 Alk<strong>in</strong>oos, 44, 46 Alpheios, 62 altars, 95-6, 100, 102 Altertumswissenschaften, 125 amber, 110 Amphiktyony (of Delphi), 6 Amphissa, 147 Amyklai, Throne of Apollo, 41n61, 107n9, 113 Anacharsis, 37, 56 Anatolia, 51 ancient art, modern approaches, 120-5, 130 ancient sites, 1, 3, 12-14, 94-5, 120, 125, 128, 131-2, 133, 135-9, 141-2, 144-5 animals (fauna), 27n66, 49, 51-2, 59 anthropology, 126-7 Ant<strong>in</strong>oos, 27 antiquarian travel, 131-2, 135-46 Anton<strong>in</strong>us Pius, 24 Anton<strong>in</strong>us Pythodorus, 25n55, 27 Aphrodite, 17, 20, 21, 68, 95 Apollo, 17, 95, 108, 113 Apollonios of Tyana, 37, 47 Apuleius, 25, 27n70, 37; Metamorphoses, 48 archaeology, 12-14, 93-4, 118, 125-8, 136, 139; classical, 15, 125, 128-9, 131 archaic style, 112-13 architects, 121 architecture, 38, 106-7; orders, 107, 108 archon dates, 84 Ares, 98 Argolid, 4, 69, 70-1, 72, 77, 131-2, 151 Argonauts, 83 Argos, 72, 131, 151 Arimaspians, 50 Aristarchos (guide at Olympia), 36 Aristeas of Prokonnesos, 50 Aristeides, 25, 27n70, 33, 41, 55; Praise of Rome, 33; Sacred Tales, 20, 47 Aristomenes, 83 Aristotle, 51 Arkadia, 59, 61-62, 64, 67-8, 72, 74, 77-8, 93, 96-7, 139, 145, 151; Arkadian genealogy 82-3, 97; history 77-8, 96-7 Arrian, 55; Indike, 52, 55n61; Periplous of the Black Sea, 49 art history, 19, 106, 120-5; modern (W<strong>in</strong>ckelmann), 123-4; <strong>in</strong> <strong>Pausanias</strong>, 114-15 art, 105-17; ancient connoisseurship, 106-9; ancient criticism, 107-9, 111-12, 113-14, 111; material, 107, 109-10, 112, 116, 122, 123; public art, 106-7, 110, 115-17, 124, 130, 141; and religion, 113-16; as source, 114-15; style analysis, 107-9, 112-13, 115; 217
General Index technique, 107, 109, 111-12, 115, 116, 122-3; and text, 113-14 Artaxerxes II, 51 Artemis, 68, 99, 101; Artemision at Ephesos, 23 artists, 40, 107-8, 101, 116, 120-1, 122, 124, 143; artists’ signatures, 39 Asia M<strong>in</strong>or, 6, 21-3, 25, 32, 34, 38, 77, 97, 102, 139, 142, 143 Asia, 6, 38, 50, 52, 67, 133 As<strong>in</strong>e, 70 Asios, 81 Asklepios, 20, 34, 47; Asklepieion at Pergamon, 21; at Smyrna, 21-2 Atalante, 97 Atargatis, 103 Athena, 46, 62, 105; Athena Alea (Tegea), 93, 95, 97-8, 100-1, 149; Athena Parthenos (Athens), 7, 105, 109; at Sounion, 1, 2 Athenagoras, 27 Athenaios, Deipnosophistai, 26n64, 27n67 Athens, 1, 77, 79, 95, 103, 133-5, 146; Acropolis, 53, 75; agora, 75-6, 94, 100; altars, 100; Enneakrounos founta<strong>in</strong>, 125n48; first modern map, 132; Odeion of Herodes Atticus, 23-4; Parthenon, 105-6, 120, 125; Stoa of Attalos, 76, 115 Atlantic coast, 49 Atthidography, 75 Attica, 1, 4, 52-3, 59, 62, 75, 77, 135 Auge, 97-9, 102 Augustus, 28, 87, 98, 101 autopsy, 38-9, 54-5, 133-5 Baktria, 51 barbarians, 37, 46, 49, 56, 85-7 Bassai, 125 battlefields, 63, 79 benefactors, 25, 30; of <strong>Greece</strong>, 87 Black Sea, 6, 33, 49, 51 Boiotia, 5, 7, 9, 62, 72, 135, 151 books, ancient, 24, 35, 40-1 Brita<strong>in</strong>, 49 Byzant<strong>in</strong>e Empire, 131 Caligula, 89 Canova, A., 105 Cappadocia, 49 carriage, 35 Carthage, 49 Caylus (A.C.P. de Tubières), 106, 121-3, 130, 139, 143 Chaironeia, 25, 91; battle, 77 Chandler, Richard, 135 Chest of Kypselos, 41n61, 107, 112-13, 113 chronology, 19, 83-5, 114-15, 124; absolute dates, 84-5; framework, 96; genealogy, 40, 83-4, 114 Cicero, 121, 143 city walls, 91-2, 94, 95 city-state, see polis classical literature (‘canonical’ texts), 26-7, 74, 76, 82, 84, 93, 100-2, 128, 130, 133, 137, 142 classical studies, 11, 13-15, 120, 125-9, 154 Claudius Saethidas, 25n55, 27 coastl<strong>in</strong>es, 34, 48-53, 57-8, 64-5, 67-68, 70 colonies, Roman, 18, 23, 28 colonisation, Greek, 33 Commodus, 24 Constant<strong>in</strong>ople, 119; fall, 120, 131-2, 146 cont<strong>in</strong>uity (of Greek history/culture), 89-90, 142-4, 149-50 contradictory traditions, 18-19, 81, 89, 99, 102 copies of ancient art works, 108, 123, 125 Cor<strong>in</strong>th, 17-18, 57-9, 95, 113, 135, 137, 143, 151; Roman colony, 18, 23; sack by the Romans, 18, 85-6 Cor<strong>in</strong>thian Gulf, 57-9, 135 cosmopolitanism, 37 Costoboci, 24n45 countryside 9, 72, 96, 130, 135 Cretan tales, 46 Crete, 18-19 cross-references, 2, 6-8, 18, 80 Cyriac of Ancona, 131, 131n4, 136 Cyrus, 51 Daidalos, 27n66, 108, 115 Damophon of Messene, 17 Dapper, Olfert, 132-4 Dareios I, 50 218
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PAUSANIAS Travel Writing in Ancient
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CLASSICAL LITERATURE AND SOCIETY Pa
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Contents Editor’s Foreword Prefac
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Editor’s Foreword The aim of this
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Preface ‘And what do you do?’
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Robert Porod, Barbara Porod and Ala
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List of Illustrations Fig. 1. Greec
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1 Approaching Pausanias’ Perieges
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1. Approaching Pausanias’ Periege
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1. Approaching Pausanias’ Periege
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1. Approaching Pausanias’ Periege
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2. Pausanias: the Man and his Time
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2. Pausanias: the Man and his Time
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2. Pausanias: the Man and his Time
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2. Pausanias: the Man and his Time
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2. Pausanias: the Man and his Time
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2. Pausanias: the Man and his Time
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3. The Importance of Travelling Bro
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3. The Importance of Travelling poi
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3. The Importance of Travelling ler
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3. The Importance of Travelling had
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3. The Importance of Travelling als
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3. The Importance of Travelling ver
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4. Greek Travel Writing: Between Re
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4. Greek Travel Writing: Between Re
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4. Greek Travel Writing: Between Re
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4. Greek Travel Writing: Between Re
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4. Greek Travel Writing: Between Re
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4. Greek Travel Writing: Between Re
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5 A Sense of Space: Landscape and G
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5. A Sense of Space: Landscape and
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5. A Sense of Space: Landscape and
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5. A Sense of Space: Landscape and
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5. A Sense of Space: Landscape and
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5. A Sense of Space: Landscape and
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6 A Sense of Time: Pausanias as His
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6. A Sense of Time: Pausanias as Hi
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6. A Sense of Time: Pausanias as Hi
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7 Describing a City From Chaironeia
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7. Describing a City special festiv
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7. Describing a City can be a matte
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7. Describing a City nese, the Tege
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7. Describing a City of Herodotos
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7. Describing a City scholarly comm
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7. Describing a City relationship w
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8 Considering Works of Art As you e
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8. Considering Works of Art Pausani
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8. Considering Works of Art though
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8. Considering Works of Art scene.
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8. Considering Works of Art ‘anci
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8. Considering Works of Art artisti
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8. Considering Works of Art classic
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9. Pausanias and his Readers book.
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9. Pausanias and his Readers is ess
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9. Pausanias and his Readers mann i
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9. Pausanias and his Readers strong
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9. Pausanias and his Readers reache
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9. Pausanias and his Readers than j
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10. Discovering Greece with Pausani
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10. Discovering Greece with Pausani
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10. Discovering Greece with Pausani
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10. Discovering Greece with Pausani
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10. Discovering Greece with Pausani
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Epilogue: ‘Solid Instruction and
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Epilogue: ‘Solid Instruction and
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Notes 1. Approaching Pausanias’ P
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Notes to pages 11-17 42. With the p
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Notes to pages 20-23 7.24.6-7, 7.25
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Notes to pages 26-28 60. On Atticis
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Notes to pages 32-35 |kousa d5 |dh
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Notes to pages 38-40 42. E.g. the A
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