This book presents a range of case-studies of pilgrimage in Graeco-Roman antiquity, drawing on a wide variety of evidence. It rejects the usual reluctance to accept the category of pilgrimage in pagan polytheism and affirms the significance of sacred mobility not only as an important factor in understanding ancient religion and its topographies but also as vitally ancestral to later Christian practice.
Introduction 1. Mapping out Communitas: Performances of Theoria in their Sacred and Political Context,Barbara Kowalzig 2. Hiketai and Theoroi at Epidaurus,Fred Naiden 3. Pilgrimage to the Oracle of Apollo at Delphi: Patterns of Public and Private Consultation,Michael Arnush 4. Pilgrimage and Greek Religion: Sacred and Secular in the Pagan Polis,Scott Scullion 5. Downstream to the Cat-Goddess: Herodotus on Egyptian Pilgrimage,Ian Rutherford 6. The Philosopher at the Festival: Plato's Transformation of Traditional Theoria,Andrea Wilson-Nightingale 7. The Body in Space: Visual Dynamics in Graeco-Roman Healing Pilgrimage,Alexia Petsalis-Diomidis 8. Mucianus and a Touch of the Miraculous: Pilgrimage and Tourism in Roman Asia Minor,George Williamson 9. Pilgrimage as Elite Habitus: Educated Pilgrims in Sacred Landscape during the Second Sophistic,Marco Galli 10. The Construction of Religious Space in Pausanias,William Hutton 11. A Journey to the End of the World,Andrew Fear 12. Pilgrims and Ethnographers: In Search of the Syrian Goddess,J. L. Lightfoot 13. Divine and Human Feet: Records of Pilgrims Honouring Isis,Sarolta A. Takacs 14. Rabbi Aqiba Comes to Rome: A Jewish Pilgrimage in Reverse,David Noy 15. `Interningled until the end of time': Ambiguity as a Central Condition of Early Christian Pilgrimage,Wendy Pullan 16. Piety and Passion: Contest and Consensus in Audiences for Early Chrl#Ð