Apects of slavery in Dio Chrysostoms discourses - 3 Angebote vergleichen

Bester Preis: 21,99 (vom 02.12.2016)
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9783659957871 - Konstantinos Mantas: Apects of slavery in Dio Chrysostoms discourses
Konstantinos Mantas

Apects of slavery in Dio Chrysostoms discourses (2016)

Lieferung erfolgt aus/von: Schweiz DE PB NW

ISBN: 9783659957871 bzw. 3659957879, in Deutsch, LAP Lambert Academic Publishing, Taschenbuch, neu.

30,07 (Fr. 32,40)¹ + Versand: 16,71 (Fr. 18,00)¹ = 46,78 (Fr. 50,40)¹
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A view on slavery as a moralistic topic, Dio Chrysostom was a member of the Second Sophistic, an intellectual movement of the early imperial period in the Graeco-Roman world. Despite its name, Second Sophistic had little to do with the original Sophistic of the 5th century BC. whose members were first rate intellectuals of democratic ideological disposition. On the contrary, Dio and the other members of the Second Sophistic were rather second -rate ones with rather conformistic ideas. Dio. Though was a brilliant rhetor and a man of a more humane disposition towards the people of the lower-classes. In his voluminous body of his work that has survived, he used his cynic and stoic background in order, among other things to construct an ideology of slavery and freedom as spiritual, esoteric conditions of mind. Thus, his discourses are of less interest as sources of social history . His views influenced the Christian Fathers, thus helping their construction of social and philosophical theory. So. This book might be of interest to people who would like to be informed on the history of the idea of slavery, especially in the first and second century AD. Taschenbuch, 29.10.2016.
2
9783659957871 - Konstantinos Mantas: Apects of slavery in Dio Chrysostoms discourses
Konstantinos Mantas

Apects of slavery in Dio Chrysostoms discourses

Lieferung erfolgt aus/von: Deutschland DE NW

ISBN: 9783659957871 bzw. 3659957879, in Deutsch, neu.

Lieferung aus: Deutschland, Lieferzeit: 8 Tage.
Dio Chrysostom was a member of the Second Sophistic, an intellectual movement of the early imperial period in the Graeco-Roman world. Despite its name, Second Sophistic had little to do with the original Sophistic of the 5th century BC. whose members were first rate intellectuals of democratic ideological disposition. On the contrary, Dio and the other members of the Second Sophistic were rather second -rate ones with rather conformistic ideas. Dio. Though was a brilliant rhetor and a man of a more humane disposition towards the people of the lower-classes. In his voluminous body of his work that has survived, he used his cynic and stoic background in order, among other things to construct an ideology of slavery and freedom as spiritual, esoteric conditions of mind. Thus, his discourses are of less interest as sources of social history . His views influenced the Christian Fathers, thus helping their construction of social and philosophical theory. So. This book might be of interest to people who would like to be informed on the history of the idea of slavery, especially in the first and second century AD.
3
9783659957871 - Konstantinos Mantas: Apects of slavery in Dio Chrysostoms discourses
Konstantinos Mantas

Apects of slavery in Dio Chrysostoms discourses

Lieferung erfolgt aus/von: Deutschland EN NW

ISBN: 9783659957871 bzw. 3659957879, in Englisch, neu.

Lieferung aus: Deutschland, Sofort lieferbar.
A view on slavery as a moralistic topic, Dio Chrysostom was a member of the Second Sophistic, an intellectual movement of the early imperial period in the Graeco-Roman world. Despite its name, Second Sophistic had little to do with the original Sophistic of the 5th century BC. whose members were first rate intellectuals of democratic ideological disposition. On the contrary, Dio and the other members of the Second Sophistic were rather second -rate ones with rather conformistic ideas. Dio. Though was a brilliant rhetor and a man of a more humane disposition towards the people of the lower-classes. In his voluminous body of his work that has survived, he used his cynic and stoic background in order, among other things to construct an ideology of slavery and freedom as spiritual, esoteric conditions of mind. Thus, his discourses are of less interest as sources of social history . His views influenced the Christian Fathers, thus helping their construction of social and philosophical theory. So. This book might be of interest to people who would like to be informed on the history of the idea of slavery, especially in the first and second century AD.
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