Minerva 201

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Highlights:

From the Editor:
Could the intriguing set of Neolithic figurines with chairs that grace our cover represent a pantheon of gods or members of a community? Both these interpretations have been suggested, and each highlights an important strand running through our first feature: ritual activity and community organisation. Attila Gyucha and William A Parkinson take us on a journey through some of the remarkable finds from hoards, cemeteries, and possible sanctuaries across south-east Europe that show how rulers grew their power around ritual, trade, warfare, and changing technologies, moving from the agricultural, egalitarian societies of the Neolithic to the elite warrior class of the Bronze and Iron Age.

Ancient Thrace was particularly rich in lavish burials, replete with the spectacular metalwork its elites valued. We return to Thrace elsewhere in this issue when we take a look at the Panagyurishte Treasure, found in Bulgaria, with Henry Bishop-Wright. This set of golden wine-drinking vessels combines ancient Greek and Persian form, function, and decoration – an eloquent example of the dynamic interplay that took place across the Mediterranean as motifs associated with power were adopted and adapted in high-end luxury goods.

Cultural fluidity can also be seen in mummies of Graeco-Roman period Egypt, with some featuring Greek inscriptions, Roman motifs in funerary paintings on wood, and pharaonic Egyptian imagery. We speak to Campbell Price, who argues that the costly funerary arts of gilded mummies and Fayum panel portraits enabled the deceased to become like the gods.

Wood is a rare survivor from antiquity, but Roman Herculaneum boasts many examples of wooden artefacts that offer an intimate look into the town’s domestic interiors, as Dalu Jones writes.

For our final feature, Jane Stevenson explores the art and architecture of medieval Siena. Aristocrats set up palaces with tall towers in this Tuscan city, but there was public spiritedness too, with great churches being built and adorned with paintings, and civic structures similarly furnished with rich allegorical frescoes that spoke back to Siena’s rulers.


Cover Date: May / Jun 2023, Volume 34 Issue 3

Cover Story

The rise of royalty in prehistoric Europe Extraordinary burials discovered in south-eastern Europe marked out individuals even at a time of egalitarian societies. Attila Gyucha and William A Parkinson guide us through spectacular finds from eleven countries…

Features

In the lap of luxury: decadence in the ancient Persian and Greek worlds A new exhibition at the British Museum delves into drinking and decadence in the ancient Persian and Greek worlds. Henry…
Siena’s medieval monuments As the Tuscan city of Siena grew in prosperity, its citizens made their mark through magnificent art and architecture, from…
Wooden wonders of Herculaneum An astonishing array of wooden objects has survived from Herculaneum, carbonised by the volcanic eruption that destroyed the town. This…
Face to face with Fayum mummy portraits The Fayum mummy portraits are masterpieces of ancient painting, but are they portraits? With an exhibition of these paintings and…

Comment

Brigit: Irish goddess turned Christian saint? She is a goddess of poetry, medicine, and blacksmithing, but there is no mention of the fire that becomes associated…
Margaret Alice Murray (1863-1963) These same people would not hesitate to wear a scarab-ring taken off a dead man’s hand… Their objections – their…

News

Views

Minerva’s April listings: exhibitions from around the world The dates listed below may have changed since we went to print. Check the websites of the museums for the…
Brigit: Irish goddess turned Christian saint? She is a goddess of poetry, medicine, and blacksmithing, but there is no mention of the fire that becomes associated…
Face to face with Fayum mummy portraits The Fayum mummy portraits are masterpieces of ancient painting, but are they portraits? With an exhibition of these paintings and…
Margaret Alice Murray (1863-1963) These same people would not hesitate to wear a scarab-ring taken off a dead man’s hand… Their objections – their…
Jalame, 1963-1971 Image: Corning Museum of Glass, Corning, New York Viewers of the Netflix competition series Blown Away will be familiar both…

Reviews

The Etruscans in the Modern Imagination Review by Lucy Shipley This book is very clearly a passion project, the result of a lifetime’s love for and…
Nubia: Lost Civilizations Review by Nigel Fletcher-Jones In recent years there has been increasing desire among travellers to visit the archaeological sites of…
Gods of Thunder: How Climate Change, Travel, and Spirituality Reshaped Precolonial America Review by Eric Singleton It is a welcome departure to see a scholar stepping outside their regionalised field of study…

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