From Hattusa to Memphis. Jacques Freu in honorem.
Harmattan| N° d'inventaire | 17112 |
| Format | 15.3 x 23.7 |
| Détails | 284 p., paperback. |
| Publication | Paris, 2013 |
| Etat | Nine |
| ISBN | |
Honoring one of their own, Jacques Freu, researchers report on their research on Anatolia, Asia Minor, and neighboring countries, opening up a space for intertextuality with that of their colleague. Beyond Hittite culture, the authors have, in fact, examined the most distant origins as well as the most modern elements of this civilization and its relations with neighboring countries. They offer here a wide range of studies in the fields addressed by this great scholar throughout his career. These mixtures are addressed to an enthusiastic researcher who, according to his colleagues, made a decisive contribution to the knowledge and understanding of the Hittite world and civilization. Therefore, this collective tribute to his talent and his fruitful scientific career is not a coincidence, but a testimony to the esteem and friendship of all. SUMMARY Sydney H. Aufrère, Michel Mazoyer: "One is not born a researcher, one becomes one..." Jacques Freu Michel Mazoyer: Bibliography of Jacques Freu PART 1: A LOOK AT THE ORIGINS. Jean-Pierre Levet: Does Hittite provide illuminating support for Eurasian theory? PART 2: ON THE HITTITE CIVILIZATION. 1. The people and the facts. Massimo Forlanini: The roads of Palâ. Susanne Heinhold-Krahmer: The history of the Hittite Vasallenstaates Wilusa in the southwestern Kleinasiens. Cyril Lachez: On Hittite music. 2. Beliefs and ideology Shilong Dai: On sacred singers in the Hittite period. Magdalena Kapelus: The town of Zithara. Michel Mazoyer: The journey of the aegis in Hittite mythology. Raphaël Nicolle: On the mention of the Storm God in CTH 726.1. Piotr Taracha: How many grain deities Halki / Nisaba? PART 3: THE HITTITES AND THE PERIPHERAL REGIONS (Egypt, Ugarit and Cyprus). Pierre Bordreuil: The alphabetic tablets of the House of Ourtenou (meeting place of the archives of the acropolis of Ugarit, the palaces of Ugarit and the residence of Ras Ibn Hani). Robert Hawley and Dennis Pardee: Two doubtful witnesses. Itamar Singer: Two notes on the sea links between Egypt and the Hittite Empire. Sydney H. Aufrère: The polysemy of Coptic. From infamy or abjection to depravity and from reprobation to inaptitude. Fred C. Woudhuizen: The Amathus Bilingual Inscription. PART 4: THE SURVIVAL OF THE HITTITE WORLD. 1. The Hittites in Antiquity. Hugo Naccaro: Maliya at the “banquet of the twelve divinities”. Sabrina Rahmani: Study of the kukeon according to the reading of Homer. Sébastien Barbara: Nero and Agrippina on joint emissions of Eumeneia (Phrygia): An attempt at interpretation. Michèle Biraud: The first Hymn to Isis by Isidoros (an overall structure underlined by accentual clauses). Valérie Faranton: Agamemnon, the impious king. René Lebrun: Permanence of Luwian gods in Hellenistic Lycia. 2. The Hittites and the contemporary world. Françoise Bader: E. Benveniste and RM Rilke.
Honoring one of their own, Jacques Freu, researchers report on their research on Anatolia, Asia Minor, and neighboring countries, opening up a space for intertextuality with that of their colleague. Beyond Hittite culture, the authors have, in fact, examined the most distant origins as well as the most modern elements of this civilization and its relations with neighboring countries. They offer here a wide range of studies in the fields addressed by this great scholar throughout his career. These mixtures are addressed to an enthusiastic researcher who, according to his colleagues, made a decisive contribution to the knowledge and understanding of the Hittite world and civilization. Therefore, this collective tribute to his talent and his fruitful scientific career is not a coincidence, but a testimony to the esteem and friendship of all. SUMMARY Sydney H. Aufrère, Michel Mazoyer: "One is not born a researcher, one becomes one..." Jacques Freu Michel Mazoyer: Bibliography of Jacques Freu PART 1: A LOOK AT THE ORIGINS. Jean-Pierre Levet: Does Hittite provide illuminating support for Eurasian theory? PART 2: ON THE HITTITE CIVILIZATION. 1. The people and the facts. Massimo Forlanini: The roads of Palâ. Susanne Heinhold-Krahmer: The history of the Hittite Vasallenstaates Wilusa in the southwestern Kleinasiens. Cyril Lachez: On Hittite music. 2. Beliefs and ideology Shilong Dai: On sacred singers in the Hittite period. Magdalena Kapelus: The town of Zithara. Michel Mazoyer: The journey of the aegis in Hittite mythology. Raphaël Nicolle: On the mention of the Storm God in CTH 726.1. Piotr Taracha: How many grain deities Halki / Nisaba? PART 3: THE HITTITES AND THE PERIPHERAL REGIONS (Egypt, Ugarit and Cyprus). Pierre Bordreuil: The alphabetic tablets of the House of Ourtenou (meeting place of the archives of the acropolis of Ugarit, the palaces of Ugarit and the residence of Ras Ibn Hani). Robert Hawley and Dennis Pardee: Two doubtful witnesses. Itamar Singer: Two notes on the sea links between Egypt and the Hittite Empire. Sydney H. Aufrère: The polysemy of Coptic. From infamy or abjection to depravity and from reprobation to inaptitude. Fred C. Woudhuizen: The Amathus Bilingual Inscription. PART 4: THE SURVIVAL OF THE HITTITE WORLD. 1. The Hittites in Antiquity. Hugo Naccaro: Maliya at the “banquet of the twelve divinities”. Sabrina Rahmani: Study of the kukeon according to the reading of Homer. Sébastien Barbara: Nero and Agrippina on joint emissions of Eumeneia (Phrygia): An attempt at interpretation. Michèle Biraud: The first Hymn to Isis by Isidoros (an overall structure underlined by accentual clauses). Valérie Faranton: Agamemnon, the impious king. René Lebrun: Permanence of Luwian gods in Hellenistic Lycia. 2. The Hittites and the contemporary world. Françoise Bader: E. Benveniste and RM Rilke.