Update cookies preferences

Miracula: Weird and Wonderful Stories of Ancient Greece and Rome [Hardback]

  • Format: Hardback, 472 pages, height x width: 216x138 mm, 42 illustrations
  • Pub. Date: 01-Apr-2025
  • Publisher: Reaktion Books
  • ISBN-10: 1836390491
  • ISBN-13: 9781836390497
Other books in subject:
  • Format: Hardback, 472 pages, height x width: 216x138 mm, 42 illustrations
  • Pub. Date: 01-Apr-2025
  • Publisher: Reaktion Books
  • ISBN-10: 1836390491
  • ISBN-13: 9781836390497
Other books in subject:
Occasionally scandalous and always fascinating, a cornucopia of surprising and little-told yarns from the classical world.
 
Both humorous and shocking, Miracula is filled with astonishing facts and stories drawn from ancient Greece and Rome that have rarely been retold in English. It explores “the incredible” as presented by little-known classical writers like Callimachus and Phlegon of Tralles. Yet, it offers much more: even familiar authors such as Herodotus and Cicero often couldn’t resist relating sensational, tabloid-worthy tales. The book also tackles ancient examples of topics still relevant today, such as racism, slavery, and misogyny. The pieces are by turns absorbing, enchanting, curious, unbelievable, comical, astonishing, disturbing, and occasionally just plain daft. An entertaining and sometimes lurid collection, this book is perfect for all those fascinated by the stranger aspects of the classical world, for history enthusiasts, and for anyone interested in classical history, society, and culture.

Reviews

The efforts of a Robert Ripley or the Weekly World News are more recent examples, but the tradition of paradoxography writings about the unusual, the miraculous, and the absurd runs back to Hellenistic Greece and beyond, including Aristotle, Callimachus, Cicero, and Pliny alongside lesser-known practitioners. In this connection the historian Chrystals new Miracula is both a continuation and a commentary, presenting oddities, trivia, and twice-told tales from the ancient world and contextualizing them for the reader. Here are marvels from pygmies to the Polyphagus (Neros personal cannibal), the war-cats of Cambyses to the longest word in ancient Greece. * The New Criterion *

Foreword by Philip
Matyszak



Preface



Introduction







1 Strangely Strange
and Oddly Normal







The Sciences



2 Agriculture



3 The Climate and
Natural Disaster



4 Roman Recycling

5 Astronomy and Space Travel







Medicine



6
Medicine and the Medical Arts



7 Physiology



8
Embalming



9 Deformity and Disability



10 Female Genital Mutilation (fgm)







Language



11 The
Greek Alphabet Derived from the Phoenician Alphabet



12 The Written
Word and Bad Books



13 The Pontius Pilate Stone,
Tiberius Julius Abdes Pantera and Jesus of Nazareth



14 The Spoken Word:
Rough-Speaking Romans



15 Graffiti



16 Aphorisms: True Or Not So True?







Sex
and Sexuality



17 Fetishes and Voyeurism



18 Pederasty: The Sexual
Pursuit of Boys by Men



19 Sex: From Buttocks Partialism to Zoophilia



20 Satyrs
and Satyriasis



21
Priapus and Priapism



22 Candaules, 'Dog Throttler', Father of Candaulism (and Voyeurism)



23 Lesbianism and Sappho



24 Hermaphrodites
and Other Wondrous Beings



25 Gender
Reassignment



26 Aphrodisiacs and Anti-Aphrodisiacs



27 The Roman Joy
of Sex



28 Dildos



Social Sciences



29 Bad Parenting,
Good Parenting?



30 Sexism and Misogyny



31 Domestic and
Sexual Abuse



32 On Being a Left-Hander, and Toilet Etiquette



33 Men
and Boys







History and
Ethnography



34 Aethiopians
and Black People



35 Sparta and the Spartan Stasi



36 The Death of Pyrrhus: History's
Best-Aimed Tile



37 Mithridates



38 Socrates: He
Danced Alone



39 The Celts



40 Dinner with
Attila the Hun, 450 ce







Greek and Roman Society



41 Children and Schooling



42 The Games



43
The Law



44 Public Services



45 Food and Feasting



46 Drink and Drinking



47 Slaves and
Revolting Slaves



48 The Public Baths, Sex and
Hair-Pulling



49 The Hell that Is Urban Living



50 Parking Restrictions



51 All Creatures Great and
Small



52 Pets







Mythology



53 The Graeae: The Oldest Triplets
the World Has Ever Seen



54 Philomena and Procne



55 The
Unicorn



56 Charon: A Life Underground



57 Talos: The World's First Automaton



58 Cerberus: Guard Dog
from Hell







The Military and
War



59 The
Military



60 War Crimes and
Crimes Against Humanity



61 Women at War



62 Torture







Religion and
Superstition



63 Religion and Superstition



64 Entombing a Vestal Virgin



65 Omens,
Prodigies and Oracles



66 Spells, Curses and
Voodoo Dolls



67 Witches and Witchcraft



68 Werewolves and Lycanthropy



69 Witch-Lite:
The Bogeywoman Is Coming to Get You



70 Ghosts







Travel and
Archaeology



71 Wild Travel and
Exploration



72 Explorers
- Gorillas or Hairy Women?



73 Skeletons from the Far East
Found in Roman London







Epilogue



Further Reading



Acknowledgements



Photo Acknowledgements



Index
Paul Chrystal is a contributor to a number of history and archaeology magazines, and TV and radio programmes. He is the author of many books published on a wide range of subjects, including, most recently, The Book in the Ancient World: How the Wisdom of the Ages Was Preserved (2025).