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Fortuna
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This book focuses on the Latin goddess Fortuna, one of the better known deities in ancient Italy. The earliest forms of her worship can be traced back to archaic Latium, and she was still a widely recognized allegorical figure during the Middle Ages and the Renaissance. The main reason for her longevity is that she was a conceptual deity, and had strong associations with chance and good fortune. When they were interacting with the goddess, communities, individuals, and gender and age groups were inevitably also interacting with the concept. These relations were not neutral: they allowed people to renegotiate the concept, enriching it with new meanings and challenging established ones. The geographical and chronological scope of this book is Italy from the archaic age to the late Republic. In this period Italy was a fragmented, multicultural and multilinguistic environment, characterized by a wide circulation of people, customs, and ideas, in which Rome played an increasingly dominant role. All available sources on Fortuna have been used: literary, epigraphic, and archaeological. The study of the goddess based on conceptual analysis will serve to construct a radically new picture of the historical development of this deity in the context of the cultural interactions taking place in ancient Italy. The book also aims at experimenting with a new approach to polytheism, based on the connection between gods and goddesses and concepts.
Title: Fortuna
Description:
This book focuses on the Latin goddess Fortuna, one of the better known deities in ancient Italy.
The earliest forms of her worship can be traced back to archaic Latium, and she was still a widely recognized allegorical figure during the Middle Ages and the Renaissance.
The main reason for her longevity is that she was a conceptual deity, and had strong associations with chance and good fortune.
When they were interacting with the goddess, communities, individuals, and gender and age groups were inevitably also interacting with the concept.
These relations were not neutral: they allowed people to renegotiate the concept, enriching it with new meanings and challenging established ones.
The geographical and chronological scope of this book is Italy from the archaic age to the late Republic.
In this period Italy was a fragmented, multicultural and multilinguistic environment, characterized by a wide circulation of people, customs, and ideas, in which Rome played an increasingly dominant role.
All available sources on Fortuna have been used: literary, epigraphic, and archaeological.
The study of the goddess based on conceptual analysis will serve to construct a radically new picture of the historical development of this deity in the context of the cultural interactions taking place in ancient Italy.
The book also aims at experimenting with a new approach to polytheism, based on the connection between gods and goddesses and concepts.
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Fortuna in Translation, Fortuna as Translation
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This chapter considers the relationship between Fortuna and Tyche as one of translatability. The first half of the chapter focuses on Tyche, with the aim of determining semantic an...
Fortuna and the Republic
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This chapter studies all the public temples of Fortuna at Rome in the Republican period. The main focal points of the chapter are the precise historical circumstances for the vow, ...
The City of Fortuna
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This chapter is focused on the most famous sanctuary of Fortuna in ancient Italy, the one dedicated to Fortuna Primigenia in the Latin town of Praeneste. It is argued that the dive...
A Godless Goddess
A Godless Goddess
This chapter studies the negative meanings attributed to Fortuna, related to instability and bad luck. These meanings have always been attributed to the deity, and are attested alr...
Antonio Carneo (1637-1692)
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