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- Ancient_Greek_eros abstract "Ancient Greeks used the word eros (Greek: ἔρως) to refer to different aspects of love. This diverse range of meanings is expressed by the plurality of Greek words for Love, reflecting the versatility and complexity of eros. The term was used to describe not only the affectionate marital relationship between a man and a woman but also the institution of pedagogic \"pederastic\" relations (Eros paidikos, παιδικός ἔρως), solemnized in certain Greek poleis. Such was the importance of eros for the ancient Greeks that the god of love, also named Eros, was held in Hesiod's cosmogony to be the primordial deity, the first god, older than all the others.Ancient Greek philosophers were also interested in the conception of eros, which became a central issue in their analyses. In particular, Plato devoted two of his dialogues, Phaedrus and Symposium, to the philosophical dimensions of love, and in particular pederastic love. In Phaedrus, the best eros of a man for a boy is said to be a form of divine madness that is a gift from the gods, and that its proper expression is rewarded by the gods in the afterlife; the Symposium details the method by which love takes one to the form of beauty and wisdom. The term Platonic love derived from the philosopher's influential writings, and describes the passionate but chaste love of a man for a youth.".
- Ancient_Greek_eros thumbnail Eros_bobbin_Louvre_CA1798.jpg?width=300.
- Ancient_Greek_eros wikiPageExternalLink alcibiad.html.
- Ancient_Greek_eros wikiPageExternalLink LIFE_OF_ALKIBIADES.
- Ancient_Greek_eros wikiPageID "7794998".
- Ancient_Greek_eros wikiPageLength "9551".
- Ancient_Greek_eros wikiPageOutDegree "42".
- Ancient_Greek_eros wikiPageRevisionID "685772594".
- Ancient_Greek_eros wikiPageWikiLink Achilles.
- Ancient_Greek_eros wikiPageWikiLink Alcibiades.
- Ancient_Greek_eros wikiPageWikiLink Anatolia.
- Ancient_Greek_eros wikiPageWikiLink Ancient_Greece.
- Ancient_Greek_eros wikiPageWikiLink Ares.
- Ancient_Greek_eros wikiPageWikiLink Aspasia.
- Ancient_Greek_eros wikiPageWikiLink Athens.
- Ancient_Greek_eros wikiPageWikiLink Category:Eros_in_ancient_Greece.
- Ancient_Greek_eros wikiPageWikiLink Category:Human_sexuality.
- Ancient_Greek_eros wikiPageWikiLink Courtesan.
- Ancient_Greek_eros wikiPageWikiLink Dorians.
- Ancient_Greek_eros wikiPageWikiLink Erastes.
- Ancient_Greek_eros wikiPageWikiLink Eros.
- Ancient_Greek_eros wikiPageWikiLink Ganymede_(mythology).
- Ancient_Greek_eros wikiPageWikiLink Greek_language.
- Ancient_Greek_eros wikiPageWikiLink Greek_words_for_love.
- Ancient_Greek_eros wikiPageWikiLink Hetaira.
- Ancient_Greek_eros wikiPageWikiLink Hipparete.
- Ancient_Greek_eros wikiPageWikiLink Hipponicus_III.
- Ancient_Greek_eros wikiPageWikiLink History_of_Athens.
- Ancient_Greek_eros wikiPageWikiLink Ioannis_Sykoutris.
- Ancient_Greek_eros wikiPageWikiLink Love.
- Ancient_Greek_eros wikiPageWikiLink Miletus.
- Ancient_Greek_eros wikiPageWikiLink Patroclus.
- Ancient_Greek_eros wikiPageWikiLink Pederasty_in_ancient_Greece.
- Ancient_Greek_eros wikiPageWikiLink Pericles.
- Ancient_Greek_eros wikiPageWikiLink Phaedrus_(dialogue).
- Ancient_Greek_eros wikiPageWikiLink Plato.
- Ancient_Greek_eros wikiPageWikiLink Platonic_love.
- Ancient_Greek_eros wikiPageWikiLink Plutarch.
- Ancient_Greek_eros wikiPageWikiLink Polis.
- Ancient_Greek_eros wikiPageWikiLink Alcibiades.
- Ancient_Greek_eros wikiPageWikiLink Socratic_dialogue.
- Ancient_Greek_eros wikiPageWikiLink Sparta.
- Ancient_Greek_eros wikiPageWikiLink Symposium_(Plato).
- Ancient_Greek_eros wikiPageWikiLink File:Aspasie_Pio-Clementino_Inv272.jpg.
- Ancient_Greek_eros wikiPageWikiLink File:Eros_bobbin_Louvre_CA1798.jpg.
- Ancient_Greek_eros wikiPageWikiLink File:Ganyrubn.jpg.
- Ancient_Greek_eros wikiPageWikiLink File:Wikisource-logo.svg.
- Ancient_Greek_eros wikiPageWikiLinkText "Ancient Greek eros".
- Ancient_Greek_eros wikiPageWikiLinkText "Eros".
- Ancient_Greek_eros wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Cite_book.
- Ancient_Greek_eros wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Refbegin.
- Ancient_Greek_eros wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Refend.
- Ancient_Greek_eros wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Ancient_Greek_eros subject Category:Eros_in_ancient_Greece.
- Ancient_Greek_eros subject Category:Human_sexuality.
- Ancient_Greek_eros type Redirect.
- Ancient_Greek_eros type Relationship.
- Ancient_Greek_eros comment "Ancient Greeks used the word eros (Greek: ἔρως) to refer to different aspects of love. This diverse range of meanings is expressed by the plurality of Greek words for Love, reflecting the versatility and complexity of eros. The term was used to describe not only the affectionate marital relationship between a man and a woman but also the institution of pedagogic \"pederastic\" relations (Eros paidikos, παιδικός ἔρως), solemnized in certain Greek poleis.".
- Ancient_Greek_eros label "Ancient Greek eros".
- Ancient_Greek_eros sameAs Q4752851.
- Ancient_Greek_eros sameAs Eros_greco_antico.
- Ancient_Greek_eros sameAs Seksualiteit_in_de_oudheid.
- Ancient_Greek_eros sameAs m.026d8sq.
- Ancient_Greek_eros sameAs Q4752851.
- Ancient_Greek_eros wasDerivedFrom Ancient_Greek_eros?oldid=685772594.
- Ancient_Greek_eros depiction Eros_bobbin_Louvre_CA1798.jpg.
- Ancient_Greek_eros isPrimaryTopicOf Ancient_Greek_eros.