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9783752008197

Raeck, Wulf

Konkurrenz und Charisma. Porträts in der politischen Kultur des antiken Griechenland

Product Available Date 2025-05-28
21.0 x 29.7 cm, 180 p., 97 illustrations b/w, hardback
59,00 €

ISBN: 9783752008197
Preface
Table of Contents
Sample

Short Description

The political context for the creation of portraits and the way they were handled affected their appearance in different ways. The book deals with varying facets of this topic for ancient Greece from the Archaic to the end of the Hellenistic period.
The competitive behavior of the aristocratic elites in the 6th century BC is seen as an essential stimulus for the preparation of the individual portrait. The standardized portraits of the conformist high classical polis of the 5th century BC then raise a question that concerns a central problem for portraiture of all times, that of the relationship between beauty and truth or ideality and individuality. In the political milieu of the High Classical period, this means: is the ‘own face’ frowned upon or tolerated, is it considered more desirable than the standardized ideal face, and is this perhaps context-dependent?
The dichotomy alluded to continued in the Hellenistic period in the design of realistic portraits of citizens and portraits of rulers that tended to be idealized and exaggerated, whereby the proportions between the two modes of representation varied greatly.
With the increasing Roman presence and dominance in the eastern Mediterranean, the previously practiced conventions of representation appear to have partially dissolved. Another important question for historically oriented portrait research is the recognizability of politically or ideologically defined social groups in portraits. It is raised here on the basis of a long-discussed problem, the question of the distinctiveness of Greek and Roman portraits and the recognizability of “Roman friends” in the portraiture of the Greek East.
Finally, the controversies between the Athenian opinion leaders Aeschines and Demosthenes in the 4th century BC, which have been handed down in writing and visualized in sculptures, provide a concrete insight into the contemporary view of the appearance of politicians in public and their counterparts in portrait sculpture.
The portraits dealt with in this book and the attempts to explain them have mostly only been discussed in excerpts. By inserting them into a longer historical process, new perspectives arise for our understanding of ancient portraits in their respective political and social contexts. The book combines the presentation of the basics of ancient portrait research with the discussion of partial aspects and is therefore aimed at both the specialist audience in the narrower and broader sense, not least at students and other interested parties from the neighbouring disciplines of classical archaeology.

Description

The political context for the creation of portraits and the way they were handled affected their appearance in different ways. The book deals with varying facets of this topic for ancient Greece from the Archaic to the end of the Hellenistic period.
The competitive behavior of the aristocratic elites in the 6th century BC is seen as an essential stimulus for the preparation of the individual portrait. The standardized portraits of the conformist high classical polis of the 5th century BC then raise a question that concerns a central problem for portraiture of all times, that of the relationship between beauty and truth or ideality and individuality. In the political milieu of the High Classical period, this means: is the ‘own face’ frowned upon or tolerated, is it considered more desirable than the standardized ideal face, and is this perhaps context-dependent?
The dichotomy alluded to continued in the Hellenistic period in the design of realistic portraits of citizens and portraits of rulers that tended to be idealized and exaggerated, whereby the proportions between the two modes of representation varied greatly.
With the increasing Roman presence and dominance in the eastern Mediterranean, the previously practiced conventions of representation appear to have partially dissolved. Another important question for historically oriented portrait research is the recognizability of politically or ideologically defined social groups in portraits. It is raised here on the basis of a long-discussed problem, the question of the distinctiveness of Greek and Roman portraits and the recognizability of “Roman friends” in the portraiture of the Greek East.
Finally, the controversies between the Athenian opinion leaders Aeschines and Demosthenes in the 4th century BC, which have been handed down in writing and visualized in sculptures, provide a concrete insight into the contemporary view of the appearance of politicians in public and their counterparts in portrait sculpture.
The portraits dealt with in this book and the attempts to explain them have mostly only been discussed in excerpts. By inserting them into a longer historical process, new perspectives arise for our understanding of ancient portraits in their respective political and social contexts. The book combines the presentation of the basics of ancient portrait research with the discussion of partial aspects and is therefore aimed at both the specialist audience in the narrower and broader sense, not least at students and other interested parties from the neighbouring disciplines of classical archaeology.

Biographical Note

Born 1950, studied in Bonn, Göttingen and Hamburg. Doctorate in Bonn in 1980. Habilitation 1987 in Munich. Professor of Classical Archaeology at the University of Greifswald 1994 to 1996. Professor of Classical Archaeology at the University of Frankfurt a. M. 1996 to 2015. Head of archaeological work during the restoration of the Temple of Trajan in Pergamon 1982 to 1995. Head of excavations in Priene 2001 to 2014.
Main areas of research: Ancient portraits; ancient urbanism; archaeology of Greek and Roman Asia Minor; history of classical archaeology

Keywords

Altertumswissenschaften (137) || Ancient history (98) || Archaeology (544) || Archaeology by period / region (460) || European history (223) || European history: the Romans (22) || Greece (60) || History (844) || Kultur (52) || Porträt (7) || Southeast Europe (42)