Christianity, Philosophy, and Roman Power
This book rethinks the Christianisation of the late Roman empire as a crisis of knowledge, pointing to competitive cultural re-assessment as a major driving force in the making of the Constantinian and post-Constantinian state. Emperor Julian's writings are re-assessed as key to accessing the rise and consolidation of a Christian politics of interpretation that relied on exegesis as a self-legitimising device to secure control over Roman history via claims to Christianity's control of paideia. This reconstruction infuses Julian's reaction with contextual significance. His literary and political project emerges as a response to contemporary reconfigurations of Christian hermeneutics as controlling the meaning of Rome's culture and history. At the same time, understanding Julian as a participant in a larger debate re-qualifies all fourth-century political and episcopal discourse as a long knock-on effect reacting to the imperial mobilisation of Christian debates over the link between power and culture.
- Rethinks the religious transition of the later Roman empire as a crisis of knowledge
- Explains fourth-century socio-political change as the outcome of a 'politics of interpretation' rewriting the self-image of imperial and episcopal leaders
- Rethinks Julian's cultural and religious project by contextualising his reaction to Christianity within the fourth-century debates on Christianity's intellectual control over Greco-Roman culture
Reviews & endorsements
'Christianity, Philosophy, and Roman Power is filled with insight and fresh thinking that breathes new life into the study of kingship literature and the way Christians successfully adapted classical values to their own uses.' Harold Drake, Sehepunkte
'… the author offers an important contribution to the understanding of the internal tensions of the clergy and pagan culture of the 4th century, studied in the light of an extremely rich bibliography and a great variety of literary and iconographic sources (fifteen images, mainly coins). Lea Niccolai's book thus marks a fundamental stage in the study of the political and religious history of the 4th century AD.' Gianluca Piscini, Bryn Mawr Classical Review
Product details
May 2023Adobe eBook Reader
9781009299268
0 pages
This ISBN is for an eBook version which is distributed on our behalf by a third party.
Table of Contents
- Introduction
- Part I. At Constantius' Court: Julian Caeser:
- 1. How philosophers should take compliments when they happen to become kings
- 2. Climbing the ladder
- Part II. Making and Breaking Constantine: Julian Augustus
- 3. Holy hermeneutics
- 4. A life for a life
- Part III. After Julian: Philosophy in the World:
- 5. Those who know if the emperor knows
- 6. Wisdom for the many, and wisdom for the few
- Conclusions.