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	<title>Religions of the Ancient Mediterranean &#187; Magic</title>
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	<description>Religions of the Ancient Mediterranean houses my podcast, websites, blog, and publications, providing an entryway into social and religious life among Greeks, Romans, Jews, Christians, and others in the Roman empire.</description>
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		<title>David Frankfurter on &#8220;fetus magic&#8221; in Roman Egypt</title>
		<link>http://www.philipharland.com/Blog/2006/03/19/david-frankfurter-on-fetus-magic-in-roman-egypt/</link>
		<comments>http://www.philipharland.com/Blog/2006/03/19/david-frankfurter-on-fetus-magic-in-roman-egypt/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 19 Mar 2006 20:17:12 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Phil Harland</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Greco-Roman religions and culture]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Magic]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Papyri (documents from Egypt)]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.philipharland.com/Blog/?p=157</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The most recent issue of Greek, Roman and Byzantine Studies (current issue not yet online) has a fascinating article by David Frankfurter (U. New Hampshire): &#8220;Fetus Magic and Sorcery Fears in Roman Egypt,&#8221; GRBS 46 (2006), 37-62. Frankfurter explores the case of one Gemellus Horion, a partially blind descendent of a Roman veteran who brought [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The most recent issue of <em><a href="http://www.duke.edu/web/classics/grbs/">Greek, Roman and Byzantine Studies</a></em> (current issue not yet online) has a fascinating article by David Frankfurter (U. New Hampshire): &#8220;Fetus Magic and Sorcery Fears in Roman Egypt,&#8221; <em>GRBS</em> 46 (2006), 37-62.  Frankfurter explores the case of one Gemellus Horion, a partially blind descendent of a Roman veteran who brought a formal complaint before the Roman <em>strategos</em> over an incident that occured in the village of Karanis in 197 CE.  Horion&#8217;s not-so-friendly neighbours &#8212; the family of Julius &#8212; had on more than one occasion robbed Horion&#8217;s family of their harvest and had ensured that their thieving action would not be stopped by using magic.  Not once, but twice, the neighbours had thrown an aborted or miscarried fetus (<em>brephos</em>) in order to &#8220;surround [the Horion family] with malice&#8221; and create a binding spell that would ensure that noone would stop them &#8211;apparently with success to the point of Horion&#8217;s petition for Roman action.  The complaint on the papyrus, as translated by Frankfurter, reads in part: </p>
<blockquote><p>&#8220;[Julius] again trespassed with his wife and a certain Zenas, holding a <em>brephos</em> (fetus), intending to surround my cultivator with malice so that he would abandon his labor after having harvested . . . Again, in the same manner, they threw the same <em>brephos</em> toward me, intending to surround me also with malice. . .  Julius, after he had gathered in the remaining crops from the fields, took the <em>brephos</em> away to his house (<em>PMich</em> VI 423-424, lines 12-14, 16-18, 20-21, as translated by Frankfurter 2006:41).</p></blockquote>
<p>Frankfurter goes on to discuss this incident of a binding spell within the context of local traditions of magical practice and shows how the fetus functions primarily as something completely out of place or &#8220;weird&#8221; and therefore impure (making use of Malinowksi&#8217;s principle of the &#8220;coefficient of weirdness&#8221;) (p. 52).   I would highly recommend this and the many other solid studies that David Frankfurter has produced, including his <em>Religion in Roman Egypt: Assimilation and Resistance</em> (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2000) and &#8220;Ritual as Accusation and Atrocity: Satanic Ritual Abuse, Gnostic Libertinism, and Primal Murders,&#8221; <em>History of Religions</em> 40 (2001), 352-381.</p>
<p>Frankfurter has a knack for picking interesting topics and solving important issues in the process, I would suggest.</p>
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