Ktistēs as an Honorific Title in Roman Asia Minor

The term ktistēs, more recent and more polysemous than oikistēs, was nevertheless used in ancient sources to designate the mythological or historical founder of a community. From the first century BC onwards, a new meaning and new contexts of use...

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發表在:Electrum
主要作者: Anna Heller
格式: Article
語言:德语
出版: Jagiellonian University 2025-08-01
在線閱讀: https://ejournals.eu/en/journal/electrum/article/ktistes-as-an-honorific-title-in-roman-asia-minor
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author Anna Heller
author_facet Anna Heller
author_sort Anna Heller
collection DOAJ
container_title Electrum
description The term ktistēs, more recent and more polysemous than oikistēs, was nevertheless used in ancient sources to designate the mythological or historical founder of a community. From the first century BC onwards, a new meaning and new contexts of use of this term developed: it became part of the honorific vocabulary used by cities to praise individuals whom they wished to reward or distinguish. As a title officially awarded by civic institutions, it assimilated the person who received it to a new founder. This paper, based on the results of an overall study on the honorific titles attested in Asia Minor during the Roman period, sheds light on the genesis of the title ktistēs, its geographical and chronological distribution, the status of the individuals to whom it was granted and the nature of their action in favour of the community—which, contrary to an old opinion, was not limited to financing constructions.
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2084-3909
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publisher Jagiellonian University
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spelling doaj-art-e85aee3bc6ae4f57b951d26e0b78b6f52025-09-04T06:49:31ZdeuJagiellonian UniversityElectrum1897-34262084-39092025-08-012025128129310.4467/20800909EL.25.019.21409 Ktistēs as an Honorific Title in Roman Asia Minor Anna Heller0https://orcid.org/0009-0005-5606-7495 Centre Tourangeau d'Histoire et d'étude des Sources (CeTHis) The term ktistēs, more recent and more polysemous than oikistēs, was nevertheless used in ancient sources to designate the mythological or historical founder of a community. From the first century BC onwards, a new meaning and new contexts of use of this term developed: it became part of the honorific vocabulary used by cities to praise individuals whom they wished to reward or distinguish. As a title officially awarded by civic institutions, it assimilated the person who received it to a new founder. This paper, based on the results of an overall study on the honorific titles attested in Asia Minor during the Roman period, sheds light on the genesis of the title ktistēs, its geographical and chronological distribution, the status of the individuals to whom it was granted and the nature of their action in favour of the community—which, contrary to an old opinion, was not limited to financing constructions. https://ejournals.eu/en/journal/electrum/article/ktistes-as-an-honorific-title-in-roman-asia-minor
spellingShingle Anna Heller
Ktistēs as an Honorific Title in Roman Asia Minor
title Ktistēs as an Honorific Title in Roman Asia Minor
title_full Ktistēs as an Honorific Title in Roman Asia Minor
title_fullStr Ktistēs as an Honorific Title in Roman Asia Minor
title_full_unstemmed Ktistēs as an Honorific Title in Roman Asia Minor
title_short Ktistēs as an Honorific Title in Roman Asia Minor
title_sort ktistes as an honorific title in roman asia minor
url https://ejournals.eu/en/journal/electrum/article/ktistes-as-an-honorific-title-in-roman-asia-minor
work_keys_str_mv AT annaheller ktistesasanhonorifictitleinromanasiaminor