Search
Your search for 'dc_creator:( "Scholz, Udo W. (Würzburg)" ) OR dc_contributor:( "Scholz, Udo W. (Würzburg)" )' returned 3 results. Modify search
Did you mean: dc_creator:( "scholz, udo W. (wurzburg)" ) OR dc_contributor:( "scholz, udo W. (wurzburg)" )Sort Results by Relevance | Newest titles first | Oldest titles first
Ekphrasis
(1,256 words)
Scholz, Udo W. (Würzburg) [German version] A. Concept (CT) In ancient (Greek) rhetoric (Dionysius of Halicarnassus, Rhet. 10,17), the term
ekphrasis describes a mode of epideictic speech, specifically a form of description that aims at depicting the subject so clearly (i.e., in such detail) that listeners or readers would have the impression of seeing the subject before their own eyes.
Descriptio, the equivalent Latin rhetorical term, preserves this speech-related meaning, for example, in Quintilian, who presents the visualization evoked by a successful
descriptio in the cont…
Source:
Brill’s New Pauly
Compitalia
(1,111 words)
[German version] A. Term The junction of three or more roads is called a
compitum (ThlL, s.v. 2075, 77ff.). It was the site of altars, chapels and other monuments (also called
compita) at which farmers and their servants prayed
in fundi villaeque conspectu (Cic. Leg. 2,27) to the Lares, offered sacrifices and where adjoining residents met for consultation (Trebatius in Serv. Georg. 2,382). Whatever older ideas one may assume to lie behind this custom (on this debate: Wissowa-Samter [4. 224ff.]), the earliest attested cultural practices and concepts of the
compitum and the Compital …
Source:
Brill’s New Pauly
Fabius
(6,346 words)
Roman patrician family name, probably derived from Etruscan
fapi [1. 162]. According to ancient etymology, however, either from
faba ‘(broad)bean’ (‘legume grower’: Plin. HN 18,10; [2]) or from the original ‘Fodius’, ‘Fovius’ (‘wolf pit hunter’: Plut. Fabius 1,2; Fest. 77 L.) because the Fabii with the Quinctii originally appointed the priesthood of the Luperci; the Lupercalia were also the family celebration of the Fabii (Ov. Fast. 193ff.). Early Imperial pseudogenealogy, which perhaps arose in the literary ci…
Source:
Brill’s New Pauly