Archeologia e Topografia del sogno rituale dall’Arcaismo alla Tarda Antichità nel mondo Greco-Romano
Abstract
The goal of the thesis is an analysis of the evolution of the cognitive and ritual devices related to
dreams and visions in different cultic contexts – from the hero cult in ancient Greece, to those of
epiphanic and healing deities during Antiquity, to that of the Christian saints in Late Antiquity – with
the aim of tracing the diachronic change of the cultural functions of vision in relation to the
construction of the identity of the communities here analysed. The research presents two
complementary levels: that of religious history and anthropology concerning the development of the
ritual devices, and that of archaeology and topography concerning the evolution of the ritual patterns
and of the topographical relationship between the spaces devoted to ritual dreaming and the other
areas of the cities. We therefore tried to outline a material history of the role of visions in relation to
the construction and evolution of the cultural memory and its materialization in space.