Olympus, or, The religion of the Homeric age
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Olympus, or, The religion of the Homeric age
(Cambridge library collection, . Classics . Studies on Homer and the Homeric age / Willian Ewart Gladstone ; v. 2)
Cambridge University Press, 2010
- : pbk
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Note
Original t.p. reads: Studies on Homer and the Homeric age : Olympus: or, The religion of the Homeric age
Reprint. Originally published: Oxford : At the University Press, 1858
Includes bibliographical references
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Four-time prime minister William Ewart Gladstone (1809-1898) was also a prolific author and enthusiastic scholar of the classics. Gladstone had spent almost two decades in politics prior to his writing the three-volume Studies on Homer and the Homeric Age. This work and the preceding 'On the place of Homer in classical education and in historical inquiry' (1857), reflect Gladstone's interest in the Iliad and the Odyssey, which he read with increasing frequency from the 1830s onward and which he viewed as particularly relevant to modern society. As he relates, he has two objects in the Studies: 'to promote and extend' the study of Homer's 'immortal poems' and 'to vindicate for them ... their just degree both of absolute and, more especially, of relative critical value'. Volume 2 presents an exhaustive study of the 'Theo-mythology', religious traditions and sources, and morals of Homer's age.
Table of Contents
- 1. On the mixed character of the supernatural system, or theo-mythology of Homer
- 2. The traditive element of the Homeric theo-mythology
- 3. The inventive element of the Homeric theo-mythology
- 4. The composition of the Olympian court, and the classification of the whole supernatural order in Homer
- 5. The Olympian community and its members considered in themselves
- 6. The Olympian community and its members considered in their influence on human society and conduct
- 7. On the traces of an origin abroad for the Olympian religion
- 8. The morals of the Homeric age
- 9. Woman in the heroic age
- 10. The office of the Homeric poems in relation to that of the early books of Holy Scripture.
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