Image for Imagining the Heavens across Eurasia from Antiquity to Early Modernity

Imagining the Heavens across Eurasia from Antiquity to Early Modernity

Brentjes, Rana(Edited by)Brentjes, Sonja(Edited by)Mastorakou, Stamantina(Edited by)Schafer, Dagmar(Edited by)
Part of the Art series
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This book surveys how humans across Eurasia depicted their knowledge of the heavens over a period of nearly 4,000 years.

Frequently focusing on enigmatic objects, the authors present a wide variety of objects – through text and pictures – from tombs, churches, temples, caves, museums, libraries and even a bathroom.

Analyzing and contextualizing the objects and their astral imageries, the authors narrate what the producers and users of these images knew about the heavens and how they shaped their relationships to them through the objects presented.

Among the images treated in the chapters we find planetary and celestial deities (Egypt, Rome, India, Japan), the seven-day-week (Rome, Tibet, Japan), constellations and zodiacal signs (Mesopotamia, the Islamic world, Europe), the Sun and the Moon (Sasanian Iran, northern China, Islamic Iraq), scholars, muses and globes (ancient Greece), power and politics (Rome, Italy), and a dancing goat (Iran).

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£60.99
Product Details
Mimesis International
8869774252 / 9788869774256
Hardback
930
19/06/2023
Italy
English
750 pages : illustrations
24 cm