Three Myths of Kingship in Early Greece and the Ancient Near East
The Servant, the Lover, and the Fool
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Published:2nd Jan '25
Should be back in stock very soon

Offers a groundbreaking reconstruction of three story-patterns about human kingship in early Greek and ancient Near Eastern myth.
Starting from detailed reconsiderations of a wide range of ancient Near Eastern literary sources, the book proposes original and persuasive readings of familiar early Greek authors including Homer, Hesiod and Herodotus, and of other famous works such as the Hebrew Bible.On the basis of recently discovered sources and original research, this book identifies and analyses three story-patterns associated with human kingship in early Greek and ancient Near Eastern myth. The first of these, the 'Myth of the Servant', was used to explain how an individual of non-royal lineage rose to power from obscure origins. The second myth, on the 'Goddess and the Herdsman', made the fundamental claim that the ruler engaged in a sexual relationship with a powerful female deity. Third, although kings are often central to the ancient literary evidence, the texts themselves were usually authored by others, such as poets, priests, prophets or scholars; like kings, these characters similarly tended to base their authority on their ability to articulate and enact the divine will. The stage was thus set for narratives of conflict between kings and other intermediaries of the gods.
ISBN: 9781009481496
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
302 pages