Magical Objects, Magical Writing: Amulets Across the Ages

Author:

TAMÁS HAJNALKAORCID, , ,

Abstract

This note focuses on recent discussions on gemstone amulets from Late Antiquity through insights offered in two contributions to the volume Textual Amulets from Antiquity to Early Modern Times: The Shape of Words (Theis and Vitellozzi 2022). After a general presentation of the volume, I turn to the first two chapters, penned each by one of the volume’s editors. Paolo Vitellozzi’s paper examines the evolution of the textuality of magical gems in light of speech act theories and taxonomies elaborated in earlier secondary literature. Vitellozzi also analyses the complex interaction of medium (the gemstone), text and image in the course of this evolutionary process, showing how writing progressively assumed magical efficacy. In the following paper, Christoffer Theis analyses a specific category of magical gems, namely those which represent divinities with multiple heads. Theis’ observations implicitly complement Vitellozzi’s conclusions on the textuality of gemstone amulets. In the final paragraphs of this note, I briefly comment on Christian amulets and isopsephisms.

Publisher

Muzeul National al Taranului Roman

Reference14 articles.

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2. 2. Endreffy, Kata, Árpád M. Nagy, and Jeffrey Spier, eds. 2019. Magical Gems in their Contexts: Proceedings of the International Workshop Held in the Museum of Fine Arts, Budapest, 16-18 February 2012. Studia Archaeologica 229. Rome: L'Erma di Bretschneider.

3. 3. Faraone, Christopher A. 1991. "The Agonistic Context of Early Greek Binding Spells." In Magika Hiera: Ancient Greek Magic and Religion, eds. Christopher A. Faraone, and Dirk Obbink, 3-32. New York, and Oxford: Oxford University Press.

4. 4. ---------. 2018. The Transformation of Greek Amulets in Roman Imperial Times. Empire and After. Philadelphia, PA: University of Pennsylvania Press.

5. 5. Frankfurter, David. 2019. "The Magic of Writing in Mediterranean Antiquity." In Guide to the Study of Ancient Magic, ed. David Frankfurter, 626-58. Leiden, Boston: Brill.

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