Horion & Co.: Greek Hybrid Names and their Value for the Study of Intercultural Contacts in Graeco-Roman Egypt

Names provide a gateway to the values of people not represented by literary sources.1 In complex societies, they as a rule do not only serve to individuate people but also position their bearers within the community.2 They can refer to family relationships, political convictions, religious beliefs o...

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Détails bibliographiques
Publié dans:Historia. - Stuttgart : Steiner, 1950. - 66(2017), 2, Seite 193
Auteur principal: Nico Dogaer (Auteur)
Autres auteurs: Mark Depauw (Autre)
Format: Article
Langue:English
Publié: 2017
Accès à la collection:Historia
Sujets:Ancient history Religion Deities Personal names Linguistics Data bases
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520 |a Names provide a gateway to the values of people not represented by literary sources.1 In complex societies, they as a rule do not only serve to individuate people but also position their bearers within the community.2 They can refer to family relationships, political convictions, religious beliefs or membership of all kinds of groups, including ethnic and cultural ones. Isis and Sarapis were Egyptian in origin, but they also attained considerable popularity among Greeks, within and outside of Egypt.10 They enjoyed both Ptolemaic royal and Roman imperial patronage and came to be worshipped in a Greek guise as well.11 The origin of the Ammon so often included in Greek theophoric names (mainly Ammonios), on the other hand, is unclear.12 Names derived from these deities are thus excluded here.13 Compound forms of an Egyptian deity and the ending ... , e. g. Souchammon, are included, however, as the element seems to have lost its original meaning in the Roman period, functioning as a 'semantically eroded' Greek suffix for the construction of theophoric names.14 Another complication is caused by geographical names, e. g. derivations from Egyptian villages, such as Boubastites. Place names are conservative, however, and do not usually adapt to the political or demographic situation. [...]derivations of geographical entities are not included in this study. [...]some names contain both an Egyptian prefix and a Greek suffix of the same gender. [...]it is impossible to determine whether the names are Greek derivations of Egyptian or Egyptian derivations of Greek. First Results of a... 
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