Chapter Genealogical Writing and Epigraphic Layout: Some Preliminary Remarks

After some preliminary reflections on the ancient Greeks’ genealogical attitude, the chapter focuses on the layout of genealogical gravestones, which consist of two main types. The first type includes individual gravestones, where the name of the deceased is followed by a linear, ascending genealogy...

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Autore principale: MARCHIANDI, DANIELA FRANCESCA
Natura: Online
Lingua:inglese
Pubblicazione: Firenze University Press 2025
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Accesso online:ONIX_20250801T173835_9791221504569_318
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author MARCHIANDI, DANIELA FRANCESCA
author_browse MARCHIANDI, DANIELA FRANCESCA
author_facet MARCHIANDI, DANIELA FRANCESCA
author_sort MARCHIANDI, DANIELA FRANCESCA
collection Directory of Open Access Books
description After some preliminary reflections on the ancient Greeks’ genealogical attitude, the chapter focuses on the layout of genealogical gravestones, which consist of two main types. The first type includes individual gravestones, where the name of the deceased is followed by a linear, ascending genealogy that relates the male ancestors, expressed in a list-like style without lateral branches. The second type consists of the so-called family-tree gravestones, a typical product of classical Attica consistently associated with funerary periboloi, where names of various family members were inscribed in descending order, starting from a forefather and moving down through the generations, according to a predominantly age criterion. In both cases the layout contributes significantly to the visual communication of the genealogical message. In the first case, the mise en page was carefully planned to emphasize the line of ancestry, as in the pedigrees of Homeric heroes: long sequences of names arranged in columns stress the antiquity of the lineage and the direct filial relationships linking the deceased to a (presumably) illustrious forefather. In the second case, the attention shifts from ancestry to dynasty: the focus is on the development of the forefather’s family over time through its various ramifications. The difficulty of progressively adding the names of the most recently deceased and graphically representing the lateral branches, without abandoning the list-format, posed difficult challenges for the stonecutters. They responded with a sort of predictive layout, reserving empty spaces for individuals still living.
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spelling doab-20.500.12854ir-1634472025-08-02T05:09:12Z Chapter Genealogical Writing and Epigraphic Layout: Some Preliminary Remarks MARCHIANDI, DANIELA FRANCESCA family genealogies family memory genealogical gravestones Classical Athenian family tombs periboloi. After some preliminary reflections on the ancient Greeks’ genealogical attitude, the chapter focuses on the layout of genealogical gravestones, which consist of two main types. The first type includes individual gravestones, where the name of the deceased is followed by a linear, ascending genealogy that relates the male ancestors, expressed in a list-like style without lateral branches. The second type consists of the so-called family-tree gravestones, a typical product of classical Attica consistently associated with funerary periboloi, where names of various family members were inscribed in descending order, starting from a forefather and moving down through the generations, according to a predominantly age criterion. In both cases the layout contributes significantly to the visual communication of the genealogical message. In the first case, the mise en page was carefully planned to emphasize the line of ancestry, as in the pedigrees of Homeric heroes: long sequences of names arranged in columns stress the antiquity of the lineage and the direct filial relationships linking the deceased to a (presumably) illustrious forefather. In the second case, the attention shifts from ancestry to dynasty: the focus is on the development of the forefather’s family over time through its various ramifications. The difficulty of progressively adding the names of the most recently deceased and graphically representing the lateral branches, without abandoning the list-format, posed difficult challenges for the stonecutters. They responded with a sort of predictive layout, reserving empty spaces for individuals still living. 2025-08-02T05:09:12Z 2025-08-02T05:09:12Z 2025-08-01T16:00:41Z 2024 chapter ONIX_20250801T173835_9791221504569_318 2612-7997 https://library.oapen.org/handle/20.500.12657/104868 9791221504569 https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/163447 eng Edizioni dell’Istituto Papirologico «G. Vitelli» open access image/jpeg Attribution 4.0 International https://library.oapen.org/bitstream/20.500.12657/104868/1/43356.pdf Firenze University Press 10.36253/979-12-215-0456-9.05 10.36253/979-12-215-0456-9.05 2ec4474d-93b1-4cfa-b313-9c6019b51b1a 9791221504569 25 Florence open access
spellingShingle family genealogies
family memory
genealogical gravestones
Classical Athenian family tombs
periboloi.
MARCHIANDI, DANIELA FRANCESCA
Chapter Genealogical Writing and Epigraphic Layout: Some Preliminary Remarks
title Chapter Genealogical Writing and Epigraphic Layout: Some Preliminary Remarks
title_full Chapter Genealogical Writing and Epigraphic Layout: Some Preliminary Remarks
title_fullStr Chapter Genealogical Writing and Epigraphic Layout: Some Preliminary Remarks
title_full_unstemmed Chapter Genealogical Writing and Epigraphic Layout: Some Preliminary Remarks
title_short Chapter Genealogical Writing and Epigraphic Layout: Some Preliminary Remarks
title_sort chapter genealogical writing and epigraphic layout some preliminary remarks
topic family genealogies
family memory
genealogical gravestones
Classical Athenian family tombs
periboloi.
topic_facet family genealogies
family memory
genealogical gravestones
Classical Athenian family tombs
periboloi.
url ONIX_20250801T173835_9791221504569_318
work_keys_str_mv AT marchiandidanielafrancesca chaptergenealogicalwritingandepigraphiclayoutsomepreliminaryremarks