Pericles and the City Gods

Vincent Azoulay · 2014

This chapter examines Pericles' personal relations with the city gods and how his career as a <italicstratēgos</italic illuminates the Athenians' collective relationship to all that was divine.

Type:
Book Chapter
Author:
Vincent Azoulay
Published:
2014
Publisher:
Princeton University Press

This chapter examines Pericles' personal relations with the city gods and how his career as a <italic>stratēgos</italic> illuminates the Athenians' collective relationship to all that was divine. As a reelected <italic>stratēgos</italic> and a persuasive orator, Pericles was the spokesman of a civic religion that was undergoing a mutation. He was engaged in various religious activities at a time when the city was introducing profound changes into its religious account of its origins—that is, autochthony—within a context of strained diplomatic relations. The chapter first considers Pericles' role in religion and politics in the context of Athenian democracy, with particular emphasis on the religious festivals supposedly instituted by him, before discussing Pericles' privileged links with several deities in the pantheon. It also explores the increase in the number of impiety trials in Pericles' time.

Get this book

ⓘ These are affiliate links; if you make a purchase, we may earn a commission at no extra cost to you.

Türkçe sayfa →

Sıkça sorulan sorular

What is "Pericles and the City Gods" about?
This chapter examines Pericles' personal relations with the city gods and how his career as a <italicstratēgos</italic illuminates the Athenians' collective relationship to all that was divine.
Who wrote "Pericles and the City Gods"?
Vincent Azoulay