Kings into gods
how prostration shaped Eurasian civilizations
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Author
Contributions
- D'Auria, Matthew, translator - Contributor
Publication
2015 - Brill Academic Pub, Leiden, Netherlands
Language
English
Word Count
38,000 words, Guess
Page Count
152 pages
Identifiers
- Open LibraryOL30397385M
- ISBN-139789004288416
- OCLC Control Number911019413
- Library of Congress Control Number2015025697
Classifications
- DDC321/.6095
- LCCJC375 .C6813 2015
- LCCJC375.C6813 2015
Description
"One might be surprised, astonished or indignant seeing men and women prostrating themselves in front of other men and other women. Or one might feel it is right to bow down before God, Allah, the saints, the Holy Virgin or the gods. Kings into Gods: How Prostration Shaped Eurasian Civilizations investigates the reasons why men prostrate themselves before deities or before powerful men. Through an in-depth historical and cultural analysis, this book highlights the connection between rituality and royalty within the Eurasian civilizations. The narrative and iconic documentation gathered and analyzed concerns the Greek and Roman world, the Mongolian civilization during the Middle Ages, the Hindu and Chinese civilizations, the Islamic civilization in India in the fourteenth century, the Mughal civilization and European civilization in the late Middle Ages. The different forms of the rituals in the courts of kings and emperors are tightly connected with the concept of royalty. The prostration is an act of humiliation of defeated enemies, a means to establish an abysmal distance between powerful elite and the people, a way of creating hierarchies within the elite itself"--
Subjects
Series Statement
- International studies in sociology and social anthropology -- volume 127
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