Our systems are now restored following recent technical disruption, and we’re working hard to catch up on publishing. We apologise for the inconvenience caused. Find out more

Recommended product

Popular links

Popular links


Private Worship, Public Values, and Religious Change in Late Antiquity

Private Worship, Public Values, and Religious Change in Late Antiquity

Private Worship, Public Values, and Religious Change in Late Antiquity

Kim Bowes, University of Pennsylvania
February 2011
Paperback
9781107400498
$67.99
USD
Paperback
USD
Hardback

    Conventional histories of late antique Christianity tell the story of a public institution – the Christian church. In this book, Kim Bowes relates another history, that of the Christian private. Using textual and archaeological evidence, she examines the Christian rituals of home and rural estate, which took place outside the supervision of bishops and their agents. These domestic rituals and the spaces in which they were performed were rooted in age-old religious habits. They formed a major, heretofore unrecognized force in late ancient Christian practice. The religion of home and family, however, was not easily reconciled with that of the bishop’s church. Domestic Christian practices presented challenges to episcopal authority and posed thorny questions about the relationship between individuals and the Christian collective. As Bowes suggests, the story of private Christianity reveals a watershed in changing conceptions of “public” and “private,” one whose repercussions echo through contemporary political and religious debate.

    • Uses both texts and archaeology to revise the history of Christianity's first public centuries
    • Emphasizes that the family and the individual presented real challenges to the Christian Church
    • Presents a history of Christianity in which individuals were more powerful than institutions

    Reviews & endorsements

    "Kim Bowes's book, Private Worship, Public Values, and Religious Change in Late Antiquity, manages to be both original and relevant...This book is commendable not only for adding great complexity to our view of late antique Christianity, but especially for the type of scholarship it represents. ...Private Worship will be of interest to a wide audience. ...This is not just a book about the religious history of the later Roman Empire, but a good example of total history in the style of Marc Bloch and Georges Duby. Scholars have recently criticized late antique scholarship for neglecting the crucial, 'hard' questions of social relations and historical change that marked this period. B's work is a fine example of how these wider questions can be re-addressed, without neglecting the important contributions of cultural and religious historians. --BMCR

    "This book is both important and exciting. Bowes deploys a wealth of evidence, both textual and material, in order to examine the scope that was available to late antique individuals for religious activity beyond the reach of institutionalized authority structures, and discovers that this was very much greater than conventional accounts have allowed." --Early Medieval Europe

    See more reviews

    Product details

    February 2011
    Paperback
    9781107400498
    380 pages
    254 × 178 × 18 mm
    0.92kg
    25 b/w illus. 10 maps
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • 1. An empire of friends and family: public and private in Roman religions
    • 2. Two Christian capitals: private worship in Rome and Constantinople
    • 3. 'Christianizing' the countryside: rural estates and private cult
    • 4. Ideologies of the private: private cult and the construction of heresy and sanctity.
      Author
    • Kim Bowes , University of Pennsylvania

      Kim Bowes is an associate professor of classics at the University of Pennsylvania and has also taught at Cornell University. She has published on subjects ranging from Christian archaeology and domestic architecture to settlement dynamics and the late Roman economy, and she has excavated Roman and late Roman sites around the Mediterranean.