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Tiresias: The Ancient Mediterranean Religions Source Database



7537
Lucian, Gout, 172-173
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Intertexts (texts cited often on the same page as the searched text):

18 results
1. Hebrew Bible, Exodus, 20.24 (9th cent. BCE - 3rd cent. BCE)

2. Herodotus, Histories, 7.114 (5th cent. BCE - 5th cent. BCE)

7.114. After using these enchantments and many others besides on the river, they passed over it at the Nine Ways in Edonian country, by the bridges which they found thrown across the Strymon. When they learned that Nine Ways was the name of the place, they buried alive that number of boys and maidens, children of the local people. ,To bury people alive is a Persian custom; I have learned by inquiry that when Xerxes' wife Amestris reached old age, she buried twice seven sons of notable Persians as an offering on her own behalf to the fabled god beneath the earth.
3. Plato, Republic, 364b (5th cent. BCE - 4th cent. BCE)

364b. and disregard those who are in any way weak or poor, even while admitting that they are better men than the others. But the strangest of all these speeches are the things they say about the gods and virtue, how so it is that the gods themselves assign to many good men misfortunes and an evil life but to their opposites a contrary lot; and begging priests and soothsayers go to rich men’s doors and make them believe that they by means of sacrifices and incantations have accumulated a treasure of power from the gods that can expiate and cure with pleasurable festival
4. Strabo, Geography, 16.2.43 (1st cent. BCE - 1st cent. BCE)

16.2.43. Such are the phenomena. But Posidonius says, that the people being addicted to magic, and practising incantations, (by these means) consolidate the asphaltus, pouring upon it urine and other fetid fluids, and then cut it into pieces. (Incantations cannot be the cause), but perhaps urine may have some peculiar power (in effecting the consolidation) in the same manner that chrysocolla is formed in the bladders of persons who labour under the disease of the stone, and in the urine of children.It is natural for these phenomena to take place in the middle of the lake, because the source of the fire is in the centre, and the greater part of the asphaltus comes from thence. The bubbling up, however, of the asphaltus is irregular, because the motion of fire, like that of many other vapours, has no order perceptible to observers. There are also phenomena of this kind at Apollonia in Epirus.
5. Josephus Flavius, Against Apion, 2.148 (1st cent. CE - 1st cent. CE)

2.148. Moreover, since this Apollonius does not do like Apion, and lay a continued accusation against us, but does it only by starts, and up and down his discourse, while he sometimes reproaches us as atheists, and man-haters, and sometimes hits us in the teeth with our want of courage, and yet sometimes, on the contrary, accuses us of too great boldness, and madness in our conduct; nay, he says that we are the weakest of all the barbarians, and that this is the reason why we are the only people who have made no improvements in human life;
6. Juvenal, Satires, 6.542-6.546 (1st cent. CE - 2nd cent. CE)

7. Pliny The Elder, Natural History, 30.11, 30.13 (1st cent. CE - 1st cent. CE)

8. Suetonius, Nero, 16.2 (1st cent. CE - 2nd cent. CE)

9. Tacitus, Histories, 5.5.2 (1st cent. CE - 2nd cent. CE)

10. Clement of Alexandria, Christ The Educator, 3.4 (2nd cent. CE - 3rd cent. CE)

11. Irenaeus, Refutation of All Heresies, 1.13.1 (2nd cent. CE - 3rd cent. CE)

12. Justin, First Apology, 14.2 (2nd cent. CE - 2nd cent. CE)

13. Lucian, Alexander The False Prophet, 13 (2nd cent. CE - 2nd cent. CE)

13. In the fullness of time, his plan took shape. He went one night to the temple foundations, still in process of digging, and with standing water in them which had collected from the rainfall or otherwise; here he deposited a goose egg, into which, after blowing it, he had inserted some new born reptile. He made a resting place deep down in the mud for this and departed. Early next morning he rushed into the market place, naked except for a gold spangled loin cloth; with nothing but this and his scimitar, and shaking his long loose hair, like the fanatics who collect money in the name of Cybele[1], he climbed on to a lofty altar and delivered a harangue, felicitating the city upon the advent of the God now to bless them with his presence. In a few minutes nearly the whole population was on the spot, women, old men, and children included; all was awe, prayer, and adoration. He uttered some unintelligible sounds, which might have been Hebrew or Phoenician[2], but completed his victory over his audience, who could make nothing of what he said, beyond the constant repetition of the names Apollo and Asclepius. [1] Cybele | Great mother goddess of Anatolia. [2] Hebrew or Phoenician | Both are languages from the Central Semitic language subgroup and would have sounded similar to an untrained ear.
14. Lucian, The Lover of Lies, 16 (2nd cent. CE - 2nd cent. CE)

15. Lucian, Gout, 173, 171 (2nd cent. CE - 2nd cent. CE)

16. Diogenes Laertius, Lives of The Philosophers, 1.9 (3rd cent. CE - 3rd cent. CE)

17. Origen, Against Celsus, 1.25-1.26 (3rd cent. CE - 3rd cent. CE)

1.25. And perhaps there is a danger as great as that which degrades the name of God, or of the Good, to improper objects, in changing the name of God according to a secret system, and applying those which belong to inferior beings to greater, and vice versa. And I do not dwell on this, that when the name of Zeus is uttered, there is heard at the same time that of the son of Kronos and Rhea, and the husband of Hera, and brother of Poseidon, and father of Athene, and Artemis, who was guilty of incest with his own daughter Persephone; or that Apollo immediately suggests the son of Leto and Zeus, and the brother of Artemis, and half-brother of Hermes; and so with all the other names invented by these wise men of Celsus, who are the parents of these opinions, and the ancient theologians of the Greeks. For what are the grounds for deciding that he should on the one hand be properly called Zeus, and yet on the other should not have Kronos for his father and Rhea for his mother? And the same argument applies to all the others that are called gods. But this charge does not at all apply to those who, for some mysterious reason, refer the word Sabaoth, or Adonai, or any of the other names to the (true) God. And when one is able to philosophize about the mystery of names, he will find much to say respecting the titles of the angels of God, of whom one is called Michael, and another Gabriel, and another Raphael, appropriately to the duties which they discharge in the world, according to the will of the God of all things. And a similar philosophy of names applies also to our Jesus, whose name has already been seen, in an unmistakeable manner, to have expelled myriads of evil spirits from the souls and bodies (of men), so great was the power which it exerted upon those from whom the spirits were driven out. And while still upon the subject of names, we have to mention that those who are skilled in the use of incantations, relate that the utterance of the same incantation in its proper language can accomplish what the spell professes to do; but when translated into any other tongue, it is observed to become inefficacious and feeble. And thus it is not the things signified, but the qualities and peculiarities of words, which possess a certain power for this or that purpose. And so on such grounds as these we defend the conduct of the Christians, when they struggle even to death to avoid calling God by the name of Zeus, or to give Him a name from any other language. For they either use the common name - God - indefinitely, or with some such addition as that of the Maker of all things, the Creator of heaven and earth - He who sent down to the human race those good men, to whose names that of God being added, certain mighty works are wrought among men. And much more besides might be said on the subject of names, against those who think that we ought to be indifferent as to our use of them. And if the remark of Plato in the Philebus should surprise us, when he says, My fear, O Protagoras, about the names of the gods is no small one, seeing Philebus in his discussion with Socrates had called pleasure a god, how shall we not rather approve the piety of the Christians, who apply none of the names used in the mythologies to the Creator of the world? And now enough on this subject for the present. 1.26. But let us see the manner in which this Celsus, who professes to know everything, brings a false accusation against the Jews, when he alleges that they worship angels, and are addicted to sorcery, in which Moses was their instructor. Now, in what part of the writings of Moses he found the lawgiver laying down the worship of angels, let him tell, who professes to know all about Christianity and Judaism; and let him show also how sorcery can exist among those who have accepted the Mosaic law, and read the injunction, Neither seek after wizards, to be defiled by them. Moreover, he promises to show afterwards how it was through ignorance that the Jews were deceived and led into error. Now, if he had discovered that the ignorance of the Jews regarding Christ was the effect of their not having heard the prophecies about Him, he would show with truth how the Jews fell into error. But without any wish whatever that this should appear, he views as Jewish errors what are no errors at all. And Celsus having promised to make us acquainted, in a subsequent part of his work, with the doctrines of Judaism, proceeds in the first place to speak of our Saviour as having been the leader of our generation, in so far as we are Christians, and says that a few years ago he began to teach this doctrine, being regarded by Christians as the Son of God. Now, with respect to this point - His prior existence a few years ago - we have to remark as follows. Could it have come to pass without divine assistance, that Jesus, desiring during these years to spread abroad His words and teaching, should have been so successful, that everywhere throughout the world, not a few persons, Greeks as well as Barbarians, learned as well as ignorant, adopted His doctrine, so that they struggled, even to death in its defense, rather than deny it, which no one is ever related to have done for any other system? I indeed, from no wish to flatter Christianity, but from a desire thoroughly to examine the facts, would say that even those who are engaged in the healing of numbers of sick persons, do not attain their object - the cure of the body - without divine help; and if one were to succeed in delivering souls from a flood of wickedness, and excesses, and acts of injustice, and from a contempt of God, and were to show, as evidence of such a result, one hundred persons improved in their natures (let us suppose the number to be so large), no one would reasonably say that it was without divine assistance that he had implanted in those hundred individuals a doctrine capable of removing so many evils. And if any one, on a candid consideration of these things, shall admit that no improvement ever takes place among men without divine help, how much more confidently shall he make the same assertion regarding Jesus, when he compares the former lives of many converts to His doctrine with their after conduct, and reflects in what acts of licentiousness and injustice and covetousness they formerly indulged, until, as Celsus, and they who think with him, allege, they were deceived, and accepted a doctrine which, as these individuals assert, is destructive of the life of men; but who, from the time that they adopted it, have become in some way meeker, and more religious, and more consistent, so that certain among them, from a desire of exceeding chastity, and a wish to worship God with greater purity, abstain even from the permitted indulgences of (lawful) love.
18. Pseudo Clementine Literature, Homilies, 5.4-5.7 (3rd cent. CE - 4th cent. CE)



Subjects of this text:

subject book bibliographic info
cannibalism Janowitz, Icons of Power: Ritual Practices in Late Antiquity (2002b) 2
celsus Bloch, Ancient Jewish Diaspora: Essays on Hellenism (2022) 43
dead sea Bloch, Ancient Jewish Diaspora: Essays on Hellenism (2022) 43
israel (ancient) Bloch, Ancient Jewish Diaspora: Essays on Hellenism (2022) 43
jerusalem Bloch, Ancient Jewish Diaspora: Essays on Hellenism (2022) 43
jesus, as magician Janowitz, Icons of Power: Ritual Practices in Late Antiquity (2002b) 2
jews, denounced jesus Janowitz, Icons of Power: Ritual Practices in Late Antiquity (2002b) 2
jews, said to be devoid of creativity Isaac, The invention of racism in classical antiquity (2004) 476
jews, said to be fraudulent Isaac, The invention of racism in classical antiquity (2004) 476
magic, anti-jewish accusation Bloch, Ancient Jewish Diaspora: Essays on Hellenism (2022) 43
magic, as criminal offense Janowitz, Icons of Power: Ritual Practices in Late Antiquity (2002b) 2
magic, as pejorative Janowitz, Icons of Power: Ritual Practices in Late Antiquity (2002b) 2
magic, christian and jewish rituals as Janowitz, Icons of Power: Ritual Practices in Late Antiquity (2002b) 2
magic, christians alleged to practice Janowitz, Icons of Power: Ritual Practices in Late Antiquity (2002b) 2
magic, dangerous and barbaric Janowitz, Icons of Power: Ritual Practices in Late Antiquity (2002b) 2
magic, greco-roman rituals as Janowitz, Icons of Power: Ritual Practices in Late Antiquity (2002b) 2
magic, jewish Bloch, Ancient Jewish Diaspora: Essays on Hellenism (2022) 43
magic Janowitz, Icons of Power: Ritual Practices in Late Antiquity (2002b) 2
magicians Janowitz, Icons of Power: Ritual Practices in Late Antiquity (2002b) 2
marcel simon Bloch, Ancient Jewish Diaspora: Essays on Hellenism (2022) 43
moses, as magician Bloch, Ancient Jewish Diaspora: Essays on Hellenism (2022) 43
pliny (the younger), on the christians Isaac, The invention of racism in classical antiquity (2004) 476
pliny the elder Janowitz, Icons of Power: Ritual Practices in Late Antiquity (2002b) 2
posidonius' Bloch, Ancient Jewish Diaspora: Essays on Hellenism (2022) 43
ritual, efficacy of Janowitz, Icons of Power: Ritual Practices in Late Antiquity (2002b) 2
sacrifice, human Janowitz, Icons of Power: Ritual Practices in Late Antiquity (2002b) 2
stereotypes, ancient, about the jews Isaac, The invention of racism in classical antiquity (2004) 476