Publisher's Synopsis
Excerpt from Outline-History of Greek Religion
For determining our view of Greek religion in the second millennium b.c., when Hellenism was in the making, the poems of Homer and Hesiod are of priceless value if they are used with cautious and trained criticism. We depend greatly also on the general inductions of comparative religion and anthropology, which may sometimes guide us rightly in this matter, especially if the anthropo logical comparison is drawn from more or less adjacent communities rather than from the Antipodes. We depend also on the evidence of the monuments of the minoan-mycenaean religion, revealing glimpses of the practices and faith of a people of high culture, whom no one would dare now to call, at least in the earlier stage of their life, Hellenic, but from whom the earliest Hellenes doubtless adopted much into their own religion.
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