According to its author, the primary purpose of this book is ‘to describe how Christian hagiography began in the second century as the commemoration of martyrs, but became a vehicle for deliberate ction in the fourth century and then a normal mode of literary composition’ (xi). This perhaps overstates the coherence of these seven chapters, which are connected in fairly broad fashion by a range of questions arising from the growth and development of Christianity in the Roman Empire from the rst to the sixth centuries A.D. At the same time, however, it understates the extent to which Timothy Barnes here sets out to be argumentative more than descriptive. In place of a single overall thesis, the book offers the meticulous demonstration ...
Daniel Boyarin has done it again. With this book—a part of the important new Stanford University Pre...
The following books are reviewed in this issue:Haustein J 2011. Writing religious history: The histo...
The introduction to Representing the Dead is a valuable resource in itself. There, Helen Swift defi...
According to its author, the primary purpose of this book is ‘to describe how Christian hagiography ...
Adriana Destro and Mauro Pesce, eds., Texts, Practices, and Groups: Multidisciplinary Approaches to ...
This is an especially fine study of martyrdom in 16th-century Europe. Drawing on a wide range of sou...
As the author states at the outset, this book is about the impression Francis made--intentionally a...
Catholicism: The Story of Catholic Christianity begins at the inception of the Catholic Church and d...
BEGINNING AND END, FROM DUSK TO DAWN ... The beginnings of the Christian historiographical genre and...
Readers should not be misled by the title of Lee Palmer Wandel’s new book. The Reformation: Towards ...
The editors of this volume have assembled an unusual mix of papers pertaining to the Camino de Santi...
Perhaps more than anywhere else, the imperial city of Augsburg was riven by disagreements over the p...
In one of the most important works of historical scholarship of the last century, Peter Laslett gave...
A book review of 'Christians and their Many Identities in Late Antiquity: North Africa, 200 - 450 CE...
The article is a lengthy review of the book Jesus’ resurrection in Joseph’s garden by P.J.W. (Flip) ...
Daniel Boyarin has done it again. With this book—a part of the important new Stanford University Pre...
The following books are reviewed in this issue:Haustein J 2011. Writing religious history: The histo...
The introduction to Representing the Dead is a valuable resource in itself. There, Helen Swift defi...
According to its author, the primary purpose of this book is ‘to describe how Christian hagiography ...
Adriana Destro and Mauro Pesce, eds., Texts, Practices, and Groups: Multidisciplinary Approaches to ...
This is an especially fine study of martyrdom in 16th-century Europe. Drawing on a wide range of sou...
As the author states at the outset, this book is about the impression Francis made--intentionally a...
Catholicism: The Story of Catholic Christianity begins at the inception of the Catholic Church and d...
BEGINNING AND END, FROM DUSK TO DAWN ... The beginnings of the Christian historiographical genre and...
Readers should not be misled by the title of Lee Palmer Wandel’s new book. The Reformation: Towards ...
The editors of this volume have assembled an unusual mix of papers pertaining to the Camino de Santi...
Perhaps more than anywhere else, the imperial city of Augsburg was riven by disagreements over the p...
In one of the most important works of historical scholarship of the last century, Peter Laslett gave...
A book review of 'Christians and their Many Identities in Late Antiquity: North Africa, 200 - 450 CE...
The article is a lengthy review of the book Jesus’ resurrection in Joseph’s garden by P.J.W. (Flip) ...
Daniel Boyarin has done it again. With this book—a part of the important new Stanford University Pre...
The following books are reviewed in this issue:Haustein J 2011. Writing religious history: The histo...
The introduction to Representing the Dead is a valuable resource in itself. There, Helen Swift defi...