Who were the Lelegians? Interrogating affiliations, boundaries and difference in ancient Caria

IF 0.3 1区 历史学 0 ARCHAEOLOGY
J. Mokrišová
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Abstract

Abstract Who were the Lelegians? Ancient Greek and Latin texts refer to the Lelegians as an indigenous people, locating them in southwestern Anatolia in a region known in historical times as Caria. Yet attempts to find evidence for the Lelegians ‘on the ground’ have met with questionable success. This paper has two aims. First, it provides an up-to-date picture of the archaeology of ancient Caria and shows that there is little indication of distinctly ‘Lelegian’ forms of material culture during the first millennium BCE. Second, it juxtaposes archaeological evidence with the development of the Lelegian ethnonym and suggests that the idea of a distinct Lelegian identity was retrospectively constructed by the Carians to fulfil the role of an imaginary ‘barbarian other’. This happened in the late Classical and early Hellenistic periods, a time of intensified Carian ethnogenesis, and was a process that responded to and made creative use of earlier Greek knowledge traditions. Finally, this paper argues that a later horizon of Lelegian imagining occurred in modern scholarship of the 19th and 20th centuries. Who, then, were the Lelegians? This article proposes that they were an imaginary people, invented and reinvented over the centuries.
Lelegians是谁?古代加勒比海的隶属关系、边界和差异
摘要勒勒吉安人是谁?古希腊语和拉丁语文本将Lelegians称为土著民族,他们位于安纳托利亚西南部,历史上被称为Caria。然而,试图在“实地”为Lelegians寻找证据的努力却取得了令人怀疑的成功。本文有两个目的。首先,它提供了古卡里亚考古的最新情况,并表明在公元前一千年期间,几乎没有迹象表明有明显的“勒勒吉安”形式的物质文化。其次,它将考古证据与勒勒吉亚民族名称的发展并置,并表明独特的勒勒吉亚人身份的概念是由加勒比人追溯性地构建的,以履行想象中的“野蛮人”的角色。这发生在古典主义晚期和希腊化早期,这是一个强化加勒比民族起源的时期,是一个对早期希腊知识传统的回应和创造性利用的过程。最后,本文认为,勒勒的想象出现在19世纪和20世纪的现代学术中。那么,谁是Lelegians?这篇文章提出,他们是一个虚构的民族,经过几个世纪的发明和改造。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Anatolian Studies
Anatolian Studies Multiple-
CiteScore
2.20
自引率
25.00%
发文量
13
期刊介绍: Anatolian Studies contains articles focused on Turkey and the Black Sea littoral in all academic disciplines within the arts, humanities, social sciences and environmental sciences as related to human occupation and history. Articles are in English and are accessible to a wide academic readership. Anatolian Studies is a refereed journal.
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