Death Imagined
Ancient Perceptions of Death and Dying
Contributor(s)
Sekita, Karolina (editor)
Southwood, Katherine E. (editor)
Language
EnglishAbstract
Death is common and inescapable – everyone will agree. Yet, how one imagines the experience of dying and the beyond is very individual. Ancient cultures were not indifferent to this grim and painful moment and ‘the unknown beyond’. Needless to say, representations of the final moments and transition to the world of the dead filled many pages and paintings of the past. Unsurprisingly, perhaps, given that no one comes back to tell the story, the world of the after-death is stained by a perception of the process of dying and a negative reflection of the world of the living. The present book explores the ideas regarding death, dying, and the world beyond death of those who came long before us, living in Mesopotamia, Egypt, the Levant, ancient Greece, Etruria, Rome, and even the Incan world. Even though separated by centuries, the reader will be surprised that the ancient experience of ‘the unknown’ does not seem unfamiliar, but still has much to offer in terms of reflection on ‘when we are not’.
Keywords
Death;Underworld;Imagination;Journey to the World of the Dead;Tomb;Etruscan;Ancient Egypt;Mesopotamia;Rome;Ancient GreeceISBN
9781802077582, 9781836246138, 9781835536940Publisher
Liverpool University PressPublisher website
https://www.liverpooluniversitypress.co.uk/Publication date and place
2025Classification
Ancient, classical and medieval texts
Ancient history
Archaeology by period / region
Italy
Greece
c 1000 to c 500 BCE
c 500 BCE to c 1BCE