Ethnic Relations and Migration in the Ancient World: The Websites of Philip A. Harland

Portal to my podcast, websites, blog, and publications, providing an entryway into social and cultural life anong Greeks, Romans, Judeans, Christians, and others in ancient Mediterranean. Ethnicity, Diaspora, and relations among ethnic and minority groups is a focus.

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  • PHIL’S WEBSITES
    • Ethnic Relations and Migration in the Ancient World (2022)
    • Associations in the Greco-Roman World (2012)
    • Religions of the Ancient Mediterranean blog archive (2005)
    • Virtual Tours of Archeological Museums (2004)
  • PODCAST
  • BOOKS / ARTICLES
  • COURSES
  • BIO
Ethnic Relations and Migration in the Ancient World:  The Websites of Philip A. Harland

Category Archives: Origen (Greek)

Barbarian wisdom: Celsus and Origen of Alexandria (second-third centuries CE)

Posted in (05) Judeans (Jews) and Christians as participants in ethnographic culture, (a) Northern peoples, (d) Eastern peoples, ancient ethnography / ethnographic culture, Babylonians / Chaldeans, Celsus (Greek), Egyptians, Ethnicity in early Christianity and the New Testament, ethnicity in the ancient world, Judeans / Jews / Israelites / Hebrews, Origen (Greek), Phoenicians / Canaanites, Scythians / Pontic peoples (broad category), Thracians (broad category) on June 17, 2022 by Philip A. Harland.

Judean, Indian, Babylonian, and Egyptian wisdom: Numenius the Platonic philosopher (mid-second century CE)

Posted in (04) Greeks on wise "barbarians" and noble "savages", ancient ethnography / ethnographic culture, Babylonians / Chaldeans, Egyptians, ethnicity in the ancient world, Eusebius (Greek), Indians / Brahmans, Judeans / Jews / Israelites / Hebrews, Numenius of Apameia (Syrian / Roman), Origen (Greek), Suda lexicon author(s) (Greek) on September 22, 2022 by Philip A. Harland.

Any photos or translations by Harland or Kotrosits are licensable for non-commercial purposes with attribution under Creative Commons CC BY-NC-SA 4.0.

Construction of this site was supported by a grant from the Social Sciences and Humanities Council of Canada.

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