Fowden, Egyptian Hermes (1993)
[Bibliography]

Abbreviation
Fowden, Egyptian Hermes (1993)
Form of publication
Book

Garth Fowden, The Egyptian Hermes. A historical approach to the late pagan mind, series Mythos: The Princeton / Bollingen Series in World Mythology (Princeton University Press, 1st Princeton Paperback printing, with corrections and a new preface, Princeton, New Jersey 1993)

ISBN / ISSN
ISBN 0-691-02498-7
First edition
Publisher of first edition
Cambridge University Press
Place of publication of first edition
Cambridge
Date of publication of first edition
1986
Data
The Egyptian Hermes: A historical approach to the late pagan mind by Garth Fowden is a historical, sociological, religious and philosophical study of ancient Egypt’s sage, Hermes Trismegistus, and the influence of Hermetism in Late Antiquity. The 1993 paperback edition published by Princeton University Press is a corrected reprint of the original edition published in 1986 by Cambridge University Press. Preface to the 1993 edition pp. xiii-xix. Preface (1986) pp. xxi-xxv. Introduction: The texts pp. 1-11. Map of ancient Egypt p. 12. Part One pp. 13-74. Part Two pp. 75-212. Conclusions pp. 213-215. Appendix: pp. 216-217. Bibliography pp. 218-236. Index pp. 237-244. Total pages vii-xxv and 1-244.
Key words
Aesculapius / Asklepios.
Alchemy.
Alexandria, Egypt.
Ammianus Marcellinus.
Ammonios Sakkas.
Amun / Ammon.
Antiquity.
Apollonius of Tyana.
Astrology.
Augustine, saint.
Chaldaeans.
Christianity.
Clement of Alexandria.
Copts.
Cyril of Alexandria.
Egypt.
Egyptian civilization.
Egyptian gods.
Eunapius / Eunapios.
Hellenistic period.
Hermes Trismegistos.
Hermes, god.
Hermetic texts.
Hermetism.
Horus, god.
Iamblichus / Iamblichos of Apamea.
Ioannes Stobaeus, anthologist / Stobaeus.
Isis, goddess.
Julian, emperor.
Lactantius.
Late Antiquity.
Lucian.
Manichaeism.
Michael Psellus / Psellos.
Nehepsos, astrologer.
Nile.
Occultism.
Origen.
Panopolis / Akhmim, Egypt.
Philosophy.
Plato, Platonists.
Plotinus.
Porphyry, philosopher.
Ptolemies.
Pythagoras.
Pythagoreanism.
Rituals.
Roman period.
Sarapis / Serapis, god.
Sciences.
Synesius of Cyrene.
Thoth, god.
Upper Egypt.
Vitys, priest.
Zoroaster.
Zosimos of Panopolis.