TY - BOOK AU - Jones,Alexander AU - Evans,James ED - New York University. TI - Time and cosmos in Greco-Roman antiquity SN - 9780691174402 PY - 2016///] CY - New York, NY, Princeton, NJ PB - Institute for the Study of the Ancient World at New York University, Princeton University Press KW - Time KW - History KW - Exhibitions KW - Time measurements KW - Civilization, Greco-Roman KW - fast KW - Astronomy KW - Mid-East KW - Antiquity Greece Rome KW - Catalog antique KW - Steele John KW - Schaldach, Karlheinz KW - Lehoux Daryn KW - Heilen Stephan KW - Weisser Bernard KW - Gieseler Dorian KW - Timekeeper (general) KW - Exhibition catalogs KW - lcgft N1 - Published on the occasion of the exhibition held at the Institute for the Study of the Ancient World, New York University, New York, October 19, 2016-April 23, 2017; Includes bibliographical references (pages 194-203); Introduction; Alexander Jones --; Near East relations : Mesopotamia and Egypt; John Steele --; Measuring the hours : sundials, water clocks, and portable sundials; Karlheinz Schaldach --; Days, months, years, and other time cycles; Daryn Lehoux --; Astrology in the Greco-Roman world; Stephan Heilen, Dorian Gieseler Greenbaum --; Images of time and cosmic connection; James Evans --; Roman imperial imagery of time and cosmos; Bernhard Weisser --; Exhibition checklist N2 - The Greeks and Romans lived according to a distinctively Hellenic conception of time as an aspect of cosmic order and regularity. Appropriating ideas from Egypt and the Near East, the Greeks integrated them into a cosmological framework governed by mathematics and linking the cycles of the heavenly bodies to the human environment. From their cosmology they derived instruments for measuring and tracking the passage of time that were sophisticated embodiments of scientific reasoning and technical craft, meant not solely for the study of specialists and connoisseurs but for the public gaze. Time and Cosmos in Greco-Roman Antiquity, the accompanying catalogue for the exhibition at the Institute for the Study of the Ancient World, New York University, explores through thematic essays and beautiful illustrations the practical as well as the artistic, ideological, and spiritual role of time technology and time imagery in the Mediterranean civilizations. Highlights among the more than one hundred objects from the exhibition include marvelously inventive sundials and portable timekeeping devices, stone and ceramic calendars, zodiac boards for displaying horoscopes, and mosaics, sculptures, and coins that reflect ancient perceptions of the controlling power of time and the heavens ER -