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Full citation – Référence complète:
Todorovska, M. “To sleep, perchance to dream: a brief overview of the status of Hypnos in ancient culture”. Živa Antika / Antiquité Vivante 75.1-2 (2025), pp. 93–112.
DOI: https://www.doi.org/10.47054/ZIVA251-293t
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Abstract. – The text analyzes the personification of concepts and abstract ideas in ancient culture; it examines the status of Hypnos and his relation to Asclepius within the framework of incubation practices; it explores the place of sleep as well as the general lack of interest shown toward Hypnos and related personifications in both Presocratic and systematic philosophy; finally, it offers a synthesis of the relationship between Hypnos and Asclepius through an epidemiological approach to cultural transmission.
The liminality and practical dimension of Hypnos – who responds to immediate human needs and is linked to fundamental existential questions of life and death, consciousness and unconsciousness, health and illness, protection and danger – should have made him an ideally positioned religious concept, either to be integrated into the more elaborate cults of other divine or sacred entities, or to give rise to the development of a cult of his own, capable of fulfilling important religious and cultural functions, since he stands at the intersection between the intimate domain of individual dream experience and the divine sphere of sacred dreaming. Yet a theoretical analysis of the personification of abstraction, of the cultural conception of sleep, and of the particular nature of Hypnos, as well as of his relation to death and, especially, to healing, fails to explain why he did not develop a firmly established or widely disseminated cult.
Key words. – Hypnos, Sleep, dreams, Asclepius, cult, personification, culture