The Cultural Impact of Visits to the Roman Metropolis: Jews and the Big City

Speaker
Professor Eyal Ben-Eliyahu
Event date
Event time
17:15 - 19:00
Venue
Worcester College
Walton Street
Oxford
OX1 2HB
Venue details

Sultan Nazrin Shah Centre

Event type
Lectures and seminars
Event cost
Free
Disabled access?
Yes
Booking required
Required

As a leading administrative-cultural center, the Roman metropolis constituted a major tourist attraction for visitors from both the center and the periphery of the empire, among them Jews from the land of Israel. Using ancient Jewish culture as a test case, this lecture addresses the extent and type of influence of such visits on local cultures. It focuses on how the encounter with the city’s spatial aspects, its buildings and traditions, left their impress on Jewish culture, law, collective memory and art in the first centuries CE. The examples taken from the literary realm – rabbinic law and legend – and the numismatic sphere, all relate to space identity and shed light on how the encounter with the city of Rome influenced a minority culture.

The presentation will be followed by discussion and drinks. The event is free.