This volume deals with several figures of spiritual authority in Christianity during late antiquity and the early middle ages, and seeks to illuminate the way in which the struggle for religious influence evolved with changes in church and society.
A number of literary portraits are examined, portraits which, in various literary genres, are themselves designed to establish and propagate the authority of the people whose lives and activities they describe.
The sequence begins with visionary and prophetic figures of the second and third centuries, proceeds through several testimonies from the fourth century to the power of holy persons, moves on to Syriac portraits of the fifth to seventh centuries, and ends with the demise of the authority of the holy man in the eighth.
Jan Willem Drijvers, Ph.D. (1989), University of Groningen, is Lecturer in Ancient History at the University of Groningen. He has published on various topics concerning Late Antiquity, including
Helena Augusta, The Mother of Constantine the Great and the Legend of Her Finding of the True Cross (Leiden, 1992). He is co-author of
Philological and Historical Commentary on Ammianus Marcellinus XXII, XXIII (Groningen, 1995, 1998).
John W. Watt, Ph.D. (1974), University of St. Andrews, is Senior Lecturer in Religious Studies, Cardiff University. His publications include
Philoxenus of Mabbug, Fragments of the Commentary on Matthew and Luke (Louvain, 1978) and
The Fifth Book of the Rhetoric of Antony of Tagrit (Louvain, 1986).
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The publisher of this book, and its editors alike, deserve admiration for their scholar achievement…Challenging and controversial…worthy of attention for all…’
Mihail Neamtu,
Archaevs. Studies in History of Religions, 2003.
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...this volume offers an interesting and informative glimpse of a range of interpretational method.'
E.D. Hunt,
Journal of Ecclesiastical History, 2002.
All those interested in Religious Studies, the history of Late Antiquity, the History of the Church, the Lives of Saints, as well as Byzantinists and Syriacists.