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Materialism
(955 words)
[German version] The concept of materialism does not appear until the first half of the eighteenth century, and is first used polemically in the context of the criticism of materialist thought in Enlightenment philosophy, as antithesis of idealism or spiritualism (Kant). Here, only those teachings will be designated as materialism which (a) represent a monism which holds that all being can be reduced to one or more material principles, while (b) that which appears to be non-material is either an e…
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Brill’s New Pauly
Drainage
(646 words)
[German version] The meagre productivity of ancient agriculture rendered the effective use and cultivation of any suitable land imperative for growing grain, viticulture, and planting olive trees. Hills and mountain slopes in Greece were prepared for cultivation through terracing, and drainage measures were used to gain virgin land or to protect land from flooding after the winter rains. The requirements were different in Greece and Italy: in the Greek interior, there are fairly large plains in which lakes are formed by surface inflow; run-off is often subsurface (
katavothra) and is sometimes insufficient to prevent the water table from rising and flooding inland regions. In Italy, on the other hand, it was the formation of marshes in the coastal plains that constituted a serious problem. Even in the Mycenaean period the Greeks went to great lengths to use drainage measures to extend the areas for cultivation and protect them from flooding. At Lake Copais in Boeotia a ditch 25 km long and 40 m wide was excavated, through which the water flowing into the lake was diverted, with the result tha…
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Brill’s New Pauly
Nutrition
(3,630 words)
[German version] I. General With respect to human history, nutrition, generally defined as the intake of substances for the sustenance, procreation and growth of living organisms, should not in any way be understood or investigated only as a physiological process, but must be seen in the context of a multiplicity of economic, social, cultural and religious factors. The choice of foodstuffs in a society is made not only with regard to their nutritional value, but also based on social and religious values (which either assig…
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Brill’s New Pauly
Hyginus, C. Iulius
(841 words)
[German version] I. Life and Work a) A philo…
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Brill’s New Pauly
Rations
(515 words)
[German version] I. Ancient Near East In the Ancient Near Eastern
…
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Brill’s New Pauly
Lead
(759 words)
[German version] Metal of low hardness, high specific weight (11.34) and low melting point (327°C); the most important lead-ore to be found in nature is galena (galenite; PbS), due to its silver content of up to 1% of greater economic significance in antiquity, mainly for the extraction of silver. The silver of Laurium, for instance, was extracted by mining and smelting galena. Important deposits outside of Attica were located mainly in Spain, Sardinia and Britain. In antiquity, lead and tin were considered two types of one metal; in Latin, lead was called
plumbum nigrum, tin
plumbum candidum; due to this inexact terminology, it often remains unclear if the word
plumbum refers to lead or tin. Galena is in fact the ancient term
galena. Pliny dedicate…
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Brill’s New Pauly
Technology, History of
(4,496 words)
Schneider, Helmuth (Kassel) [German version] A. The Technology of Classical Antiquity as a Research Area (CT) Classical scholarship did not recognize ancient technology as the subject of a special discipline in its own right until late. Up to about 1980, investigations into problems of ancient technology by Classical historians, archaeologists and linguists were relatively rare, and only a few essays and monographs were generally devoted to the field; there were no general treatments of a scholarly standard, no scho…
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Brill’s New Pauly
Fowling
(509 words)
[German version] (ὀρνιθευτική/
ornitheutikḗ, ἰξευτικά/
ixeutiká; Latin
aucupium). As is shown by the large number of casual references, fowling was probably very widespread in Antiquity, and in rural regio…
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Brill’s New Pauly
Artes liberales
(2,330 words)
Schneider, Helmuth (Kassel) [German version] Artes liberales (CT) The Artes Liberales (AL) describe a group of usually seven of study, ‘worthy of a free man’ (Seneca epist. 88; i.e.: grammar, logic/dialectics, rhetoric and arithmetic, music, geometry, and astronomy). They originate from the Greek educational programme of the
enkyklios paideia, which were passed on to the Latin Middle Ages through the encyclopaedias of Martianus Capella, Cassiodorus, and Isidor of Seville. They are usually divided up into groups of three and four; since Boethius the group of four is (
De arithmetica …
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Brill’s New Pauly
Bücher-Meyer controversy
(2,128 words)
Schneider, Helmuth (Kassel) [German version] A. Introduction (CT) The debate that went on between 1893 and 1902 over the basic features of the economy in Classical Antiquity is referred to in more recent scholarly historical lite…
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Brill’s New Pauly
Barrels (wooden)
(229 words)
[German version] While in the Mediterranean, liquids such as wine and oil were generally stored in large clay jars (ίθος,
dolium) and transported in animal skins or amphorae, we find the increasing use of wooden …
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Brill’s New Pauly
Gynaecocracy
(553 words)
[German version] (γυναικοκρατία;
gynaikokratía). The term gynaecocracy (‘Rule of women’, from Greek γυνή/
gynḗ, ‘woman’ and κρατεῖν/
krateín, ‘to rule’; cf.
gynaikokrateísthai, ‘to be ruled by women’) is first attested in philosophical texts from the 4th cen…
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Brill’s New Pauly
Oils for cooking
(2,001 words)
[German version] I. Ancient Orient and Egypt In the Ancient Orient and Egypt, oil was not only part of human nutrition (e.g. the daily rations for the population dependent on central institutions), but was also used as body oil, f…
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Brill’s New Pauly
Screw
(531 words)
[German version] The screw appears among the five simple mechanical instruments listed in the
Mechanics of Hero I of Alexandria (1st cent. AD), next to the rotating axle, lever, pulley and wedge (Hero, Mēchaniká 2,5). It is not mentioned either in the description of surgical instruments in Hippocrates (Hippoc. Perì agmô…
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Lifting devices
(629 words)
[German version] Ever since large temples were built of stone in Greece (early 6th cent. BC), architects have been faced with the problem of lifting heavy blo…
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Brill’s New Pauly