Book contents
- Private Associations in the Ancient Greek World
- Private Associations in the Ancient Greek World
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Tables
- Contributors
- Preface
- Abbreviations
- Chapter 1 Associations’ Regulations from the Ancient Greek World and Beyond
- Chapter 2 Admission Procedures and Financial Contributions in Private Associations
- Chapter 3 Regulations on Absence and Obligatory Participation in Ancient Associations
- Chapter 4 The Place of Purity
- Chapter 5 Associations and Place
- Chapter 6 Greek thorybos, Roman eustatheia
- Chapter 7 Private Affairs in a Public Domain
- Chapter 8 A World Full of Associations
- Chapter 9 Ordo corporatorum
- Chapter 10 Rules and Regulations of Associations
- Chapter 11 Conclusion
- Bibliography
- Subject Index
- Index Locorum
Chapter 10 - Rules and Regulations of Associations
The Eurasian comparandum*
- Private Associations in the Ancient Greek World
- Private Associations in the Ancient Greek World
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Tables
- Contributors
- Preface
- Abbreviations
- Chapter 1 Associations’ Regulations from the Ancient Greek World and Beyond
- Chapter 2 Admission Procedures and Financial Contributions in Private Associations
- Chapter 3 Regulations on Absence and Obligatory Participation in Ancient Associations
- Chapter 4 The Place of Purity
- Chapter 5 Associations and Place
- Chapter 6 Greek thorybos, Roman eustatheia
- Chapter 7 Private Affairs in a Public Domain
- Chapter 8 A World Full of Associations
- Chapter 9 Ordo corporatorum
- Chapter 10 Rules and Regulations of Associations
- Chapter 11 Conclusion
- Bibliography
- Subject Index
- Index Locorum
Summary
1 scholars have traditionally opted for units of study comprising distinct cultural and political entities, such as ‘Classical Greek,’ ‘Hellenistic,’ or ‘Roman’ associations. Occasionally, though, Greek and Roman traditions for associating have been treated as an implicit case of Mediterranean institutional unity, constituting one overarching fenomeno associativo, ‘associational phenomenon’.2 Thus, particularly the older historiography of the subject reflects this basic premise of wider Greco-Roman institutional connectedness and compatibility, in that even though the two subjects are most often dealt with separately, they are assumed to add up to a mutually coherent framework for interpreting one or the other or both.
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- Private Associations in the Ancient Greek World , pp. 214 - 236Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2021