Introduction to the
Mediterranean World, c. 150-650: Geography,
Chronology, etc.
The Idea of "Conversion"
Introduce: "How to Read a Document," by Mark A. Kishlansky, et
al., Sources of the West: Readings for Western Civilization,
vol.
1, From the
Beginning to 1648
(New York: HarperCollins, 1991), pp. xi – xix; on-line précis of
it here: http://www.lclark.edu/dept/history/reading.html.
Here is the
original version of "How
to Read a Document"
Part I: The Roman
Religious World
Part II: Christian
Missionaries
and Apologists
General Background
(highly recommended):
Brown, WLA, pp. 49-57 and 70-81. (Optional: pp.1-45)
Philip Rousseau, “Giving Shape to Early Christian History,” in The
Early Christian Centuries, chapter 1, pp. 1-20 [very helpful
intro to central issues in
history of
Christianity in this era]
Primary Sources:
MacMullen/Lane, pp. 15-22 (1.4-1.8): dreams & astrology; 29-32
(2.1-2.3): healing shrines; 42-46: cult scenes; 53-56 (4.2-4.5): hymns;
84-103: Apuleius’s
conversion to the cult of
Isis; 106-108: Marcus Aurelius; 138-142: Philostratus on Apollonius of
Tyana; 148-151: missionizing (non-Christian); 152-160:
Roman perceptions of
Jews;
207-215: conversions wrought by Gregory the Wonderworker
Justin
Martyr, Dialogue with Trypho the Jew, chapters 1-9; skim
the
rest
Justin Martyr, Second
Apology; available on-line in an old translation, but
preferably
read the new translation available through in Coakley and Sterk, eds.,
Readings in World
Christian
History (Maryknoll, N.Y.: Orbis, 2004), pp. 37-43. available
through
the library's electronic reserves [ER]
parts of Justin
Martyr, First Apology: Read or at least skim chapters
1-8, 14, 24-25, 53, 54, & 59-60.
Secondary Sources:
(These available through electronic course reserves at Smathers Library
- ARES - or temporarily linked to this page.)
Robert Wilken, “The Christians as the Romans
(and Greeks) Saw Them,”
in Jewish & Christian Self-Definition, vol. 1, ed. E. P.
Sanders,
pp. 100-125 [ER]
MacMullen, CRE, chapters I-III, pp. 1-24.
R. Macmullen, “Two Types of Conversion to Christianity,” Vigiliae
Christianae 37 (1983): 174-192; reprinted in E. Ferguson, ed., Studies
in Early
Christianity
XI (New York: Garland,
1993),
26-44. [reserve]
Kreider, Change of Conversion,
Introduction & Chap. 1 (“The
Conversions of Justin and Cyprian”)
Rebecca Lyman, “The Politics of Passing: Justin Martyr’s Conversion
as a Problem of ‘Hellenization,’” in Conversion in Late Antiquity
and
the Early
Middle
Ages, ed. Kenneth
Mills and Anthony Grafton (Rochester, NY: University of Rochester
Press,
2003), pp. 36-60 [ER]
Recommended:
The Apology of Athenagoras, MacMullen/Lane, pp. 173-198
“Apologists, Apologies,” in E. Ferguson, et al eds., Encyclopedia
of Early Christianity
Robert Wilken, The Christians as the Romans Saw Them, 2nd
edition
(New Haven: Yale University Press, 2003) [expansion of earlier article
into a book]
Jacob Neusner and Ernest S. Frerichs, eds., “To See Ourselves as
Others See Us.” Christians, Jews, “Others” in Late Antiquity
(Chico,
Cal.: Scholars
Press, 1985) [several good
essays on Jewish & Christian definition and self-definition in
first
three centuries]
M.D. Jordan, “Philosophic ‘Conversion’ and Christian Conversion,” SC
5:2 (1985/6), 90-96.
Oskar Skarsaune, “The Conversion of Justin Martyr,” Studia Theologica
30 (1976): 53-73, reprinted in E.Ferguson, ed., Studies in Early
Christianity, vol.
11
(New York, 1993).
Arthur J. Droge, "Justin Martyr and the Restoration of Philosophy,"
Church History 56.3 (1987):
303-319, rerpinted in Studies in
Early Christianity,
vol. 7, ed. E. Ferguson,
et al. (New York, 1993),
pp., [on-line]
M.J. Edwards, "Justin's Logos and the Word of God," Journal of
Early
Christian Studies 3.3 (1995): 261-280.
T. Rajak, “Talking at Trypho: Christian Apologetic as Anti-Judaism
in Justin’s Dialogue with Trypho the Jew,” in M. Edwards, M. Goodman,
and
S. Price,
eds.,
Apologetics in the Roman
Empire: Pagans, Jews, and Christians (Oxford, 1999).
[Introduce areas of
interest for research paper]
Week 3: Jan.
20: Persecution and Martyrdom
(Please read carefully the updated instructions under Questions
& Assignments for this week.)
Background: Brown, WLA, 60-69
Primary Sources:
MacMullen/Lane pp.164-172: perceptions of Christians; 218-232, 234-239:
persecutions; and 198-201: Lactantius, Divine Institutes (also
on
persecutions)
Edicts
Against Christians
Martrydom
of Saints Perpetua & Felicity (on-line)
One other martyrdom account of your choice: e.g., Martyrdom
of Polycarp, Martyrs
of Lyons, Eusebius, Martyrs
of Palestine, etc. See the following website
for
other possibilities: http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/sbook3.html#ec2,
though better translations are available in Musurillo, ed. and trans.,
Acts
of the
Christian
Martyrs, which will
be on 2-hour reserve. Another possibility is
one of the Persian martydom accounts in Brock and Harvey, Holy Women of
the Syrian Orient. This book is on
2-hour reserve
for our course, but the library also has an electronic copy of the book
that anyone can access. (Just
look the title up in the
catalog, click on the electronic version, and follow directions.)
Tertullian,
Apology,
(selections) 50
Secondary Sources:
(Lane Fox is up; Salisbury should be
up soon on the electronic reserves page)
Lane Fox, "Persecution
and Martyrdom," chap. 9 in Pagans and
Christians,
419-492 (5 pts): Pt.1; Pt. 2; Pt. 3; Pt. 4; Pt. 5
[book on
2-hour
reserve]
Ste Croix, G.E.M. de. "Why Were the Early Christians Persecuted?" Past
and Present 26 (Nov 1963), 6-38. [JSTOR; ER] here
Rodney Stark, Rise of Christianity, chapter 8: “The Martyrs:
Sacrifice as Rational Choice,” 163-189
3-page paper due! -
Click here for specific assignment under Week 3.
Also, think about what topics or themes most interest you for your
final research paper. Check the list of potential topics
for papers.
[Break into groups
based on interest areas]
Week 4: Jan. 27: The Spread of Christianity Before Constantine: Modern Perspectives
Background:
Knut Schäferdiek, “Christian Mission and Expansion,” in Ian
Hazlett,
ed., Early Christianity. Origins and Evolution to AD 600
(London:
SPCK, 1991), 65-77 [Read to bottom of 72 for a geographical overview of
Christian expansion up to the era of Constantine]
Primary Sources:
Tertullian,
Apology,
chapters 1, 6-10, and 50
Eusebius,
History
of the Church, Book 8, chapters 1-17 (skim to get a sense of
Eusebius's
view of persecution and martyrdom)
Modern Perspectives
(Secondary Sources):
Macmullen, CRE, chapter IV, pp. 25-42
Kreider, Change of Conversion, chapters 2-3, pp.10-32
Rodney Stark, The Rise of Christianity, rest of book
H.A. Drake, "Models of Christian Expansion," in W.V. Harris, The Spread of Christianity in the First
Four Centuries (Leiden: Brill, 2005), 1-13.
A response to Stark in Journal of Early Christian Studies 6:2
(1998) [available on-line]: Keith
Hopkins, “Christian Number and its Implications,” 185-226.
If
you have time (either now
or later), you may want to skim the other two responses to stark in the
same issue of the journal--JECS
6:2 (1998):
Todd E. Klutz, “The Rhetoric
of Science in The Rise of Christianity: A Response to Rodney Stark’s
Sociological
Account of Christianization,” 162-184
Elizabeth Castelli, “Gender,
Theory, and The Rise of Christianity: A Response to Rodney Stark,”
227-257
and
Rodney
Stark, "E contrario," 259-267 [Stark’s response to the
responses.
Read this to get a sense of one scholarly debate!]
Recommended:
Martin Goodman, Mission and Conversion: Proselytizing in the
Religious
History of the Roman Empire (Oxford: Clarendon, 1996).
Due: Area of interest for paper topics; groups meet
Week 5: Feb. 3: Constantine the Great: Conversion & Controversy
2nd Half of Class (2:30-3:50): Hands-On Session on Research at Library West (Conf. Room West 211)
Primary Sources:
Eusebius, Church
History, Book IX.9.1-12
Lactantius,
On
the Death of the Persecutors [De mortibus persecutorum],
44; other pertinent selections in tr. J. L. Creed (Oxford: Clarendon,
1984),
pp. 3-17,
63-69, 75-77 (odd pages; Latin text omitted).
Eusebius, Life
of Constantine (excerpt on Constantine's conversion); whole
text
also available on-line: http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/basis/vita-constantine.html
Zosima, Historia Nova, Book II.29-34 (for an early 5th century
pagan perspective on Constantine) [in English tr., San Antonio, Tx:
Trinity
U. Press, 197),
pp.71-76 [ER]
Secondary Sources:
MacMullen, CRE, chapter V, pp.43-51
Kreider, Change of Conversion, chapter 4, pp. 33-37
**5 different
perspectives on Constantine’s “conversion”:
Jacob Burckhardt,
excerpts from The Age of Constantine the Great,
292-300, 301-302, 304-306; reprinted in Eadie, ed., The Conversion
of
Constantine, ed.
John W. Eadie (New York:
Holt, Rinehart, & Winston, 1971), pp.22-29. [ER]
N. Baynes, "Religiosisssimus Augustus," from “Constantine the Great
and the Christian Church” (1929); reprinted in Eadie, ed., The
Conversion
of
Constantine,
pp. 52-62. [ER]
Ramsey MacMullen, “Constantine and the Miraculous,” Greek, Roman, and
Byzantine Studies 9 (1968):81-96, reprinted in Studies in Early
Christianity,
Vol.11,
ed. Everett Ferguson (New
York: Garland, 1993), 155-170. [ER]
T.D. Barnes, “The Conversion of Constantine,” reprinted in T.D. Barnes,
From
Euesbius to Augustine (Variorum, 1994), 371-391. [ER]
Raymond Van Dam, “The Many Conversions of Emperor Constantine,” in
Conversion
in Late Antiquity and the Early Middle Ages. Seeing and
Believing, ed.
Mills & Grafton,
127-151.
[ER or webct]
Recommended:
H.A. Drake, Constantine and the Bishops. The Politics of Intolerance.
Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2000, chapters 5-7
T.D. Barnes, Eusebius and Constantine, chapters I-V
Alistair Kee, Constantine versus Christ (London: SCM, 1982),
especially chaps. 2-3, pp. 23-48.
[Definite statement of
paper topic due; Break into groups]
Week 6: Feb. 10 – Church & State: Conversion, Christianization, and Roman Law
General Background:
Brown, WLA 82-95 and 137-148 (?)
Primary Sources:
MacMullen/Lane pp.240-247 (aftermath of persecution in North Africa);
266-278, Julian
Ambrose-Symmachus
debate - Exchange of letters between Symmachus (pagan Roman
senator)
and Ambrose (Christian bishop) over whether the Altar of Victory
should be removed from the
Roman Senate. For fuller documentation of the debate in Brian
Croke
and Jill Harries, eds., Religious Conflict in
Fourth-Century Rome.
A Documentary Study (Syndey, Australia: Syndey University Press,
1982),
pp. 28-51.
Rufinus
on the destruction of the Serapeum (391)
Edicts
on religion from the Theodosian Code ; see especially this
decree making Christianity the "official" religion of the empire
and
banning other religions.
Augustine,
City
of God on the "two cities" (short excerpt)
Secondary Sources:
[Plan to print out articles by Saturday
night since electronic resources might be unavailable for 24+ hours due
to the hurricane!]
Macmullen, CRE, chapters VI-VIII
Kreider, Change of Conversion, chapter 4, 38-42 and chapter
5.
Peter Brown, “Christianization: Narratives and Process,” and “The
Limits
of Intolerance,” in Aspects of Christianisation, 1-54? [report]
Michelle Salzman, "The Evidence for the Conversion of the Roman
Empire,"
Historia
42
(1993): 362-78. [report]
Ramsey MacMullen, “What Difference Did Christianity Make?” Historia
35 (1986), 322-343. [report]
Rita Lizzi, “Ambrose's Contemporaries and the Christianization of
Northern
Italy.” Journal of Roman Studies 80 (1990): 156-173 – [report]
Recommended:
Richard Lim, “Christian Triumph and Controversy,” in Late Antiquity:
A Guide to the Post-Classical World (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard
University
Press,
1999),
pp. 196-218.
David Hunt, "Christianising the Roman Empire: The Evidence of the
Code,"
in The Theodosian Code, ed. Jill Harries and Ian Wood (London,
1993),
pp.
143-58.
Bowersock, G.W. "From Emperor to Bishop: The Self-Conscious
Transformation
of Political Power in the Fourth Century A.D.," Classical Philology 81
(1986):
298-307
Averil Cameron, Christianity and the Rhetoric of Empire. The
Development
of Christian Discourse (Berkeley: University of California Press,
1991),
chapter 4, pp.
120-154.
Richard Lim, Public Disputation, Power, and Social Order in Late
Antiquity (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1995).
Week 7: Feb. 17: Christianizing Society: Holy Men, Holy Women, Holy Land
Part I: Society
& the Holy
Part II:
Pilgrimage
& Sacred Space
Primary Sources
Life
of Symeon the Stylite (This short account by Evagrius is later than
the others, but it is available on line and will introduce you to this
fascinating saint)
Jerome,
Letter to Eustochium (At lesat skim this letter!)
Palladius,
Selections from The Lausiac
History
(Scroll down to read the accounts of women starting with chaper
XLVI on
Melania the Elder to the end.)
Susan Harvey, Holy Women of the Syrian Orient (intro & one
account)
Anonymous pilgrim of Bordeaux [short excerpt]
St. Nino &
conversion of Georgia (St. Nino, despite the sound of the name, is
a woman)
Egeria, Diary of a Pilgrim (excerpts)
Secondary Sources
Brown, WLA, 96-112
Brown, Aspects of Christianisation, Lecture 3 [report]
Anne Yarbrough, “Christianization in the Fourth Century: The Example
of Roman Women,” Church History 45 (1976), 149-165. [webct &
ER] [report]
Kate Cooper, “Insinuations of Womanly Influence: An Aspect of the
Christianization
of the Roman Aristocracy,” JRS 82 (1992), 150-164. [JSTOR & ER]
Michele Renee Salzman.
The Making of a Christian Aristocracy: Social
and Religious Change in the Western Roman Empire (Cambridge:
Harvard
University Press, 2002),
chapter 5. [This chapter may be scanned and on ER by Friday]
Robert Wilken, “At the
Very Spot,” chapter 6 of The Land Called Holy:
Palestine in Christian History and Thought, re-issue ed. (New
Haven:
Yale
University
Press, 1994),
pp.101-125.
[webct & ER]
R.A. Markus, “How on earth could places become holy? Origins of the
Christian idea of holy places,” JECS
2 (1994), 257-271. [report]
John M. Howe, “The Conversion of the Physical World. The Creation of
a Christian Landscape,” in Muldoon, ed., Varieties of Religious
Conversion, 63-78.
[report]
Recommended:
Peter Brown, “The Rise and Function of the Holy Man in Late Antiquity”
(1971) reprinted in his Society and the Holy in Late Antiquity
(Berkeley,
Cal.:
University of California
Press, 1982), pp.103-152; also the update in 1997 JECS update
Elizabeth Clark, “Holy Women, Holy Words: Early Christian Women, Social
History, and the ‘Linguistic Turn’,” JECS 6/3 (1998): 413-430.
Beatrice Ceaseau, “Sacred Landscapes,” in Late Antiquity: A Guide
to the Post-Classical World (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University
Press,
1999), pp.
21-59.
Week 8: Feb. 24 - No Class!
Each student will meet
with me individually to discuss research paper.
Please arrive promptly for the 15-minute time slot for which you signed
up.
(Click here
for further information on your paper topic statement.)
Book Reviews due in my office on Friday, Feb. 26 by 4:00 pm. Please read and follow basic guidelines provided on this book review page.
Background:
Brown, “Tempora Christiana: Christian Times,” chapter 3 in idem, The
Rise of Western Christendom. Triumph and Diversity, A.D. 200-1000,
2nd ed.
(Blackwell Publishing, 2003)
[brief but very good review of changed situation of fourth century;
contextualizes
Augustine]
Primary Sources:
Augustine's account of his own conversion in Confessions, Bk.
8 (on-line version available here);
if you’ve never read Confessions, try to read at least Bks.
6-8.
Secondary Sources:
McMullen, CRE, chapters 9 & 10
Kreider, Change of Conversion, chapter 6
Karl F. Morrison, “Augustine of Hippo’s Confessions,” Conversion
and Text. The Cases of Augustine of Hippo, Herman-Judah and Constantine
Tsatsos (Charlottesville:
University of Virginia Press, 1992), 1-38. [ER = ARES] [report]
Frederick
H. Russell, “Augustine. Conversion by the Book,” in James
Muldoon, ed., Varieties of Religious Conversion in the Middle Ages
(Gainesville, Fl.:
University of Florida Press,
1997), 13-30. [report]
Karl F. Morrison, chapter 1: "Posing the Question: Perspectives
from a Historian's Desk," Understanding
Conversion (Charlottesville: Univeristy of Virginia
Press, 1992), 1-26. [webct] -
strongly recommended!
Recommended:
Peter Brown, “St. Augustine’s Attitude to Religious Coercion,” Journal
of Roman Studies 54 (1964): 107-16?
Peter Brown, “Augustine the Bishop in the Light of New Documents,”
http://www.ctinquiry.org/publications/reflections_volume_4/brown.htm
(This very recent on-line “reflection” will give you a personal picture
of Augustine’s post-Confessions career as a preacher and bishop in
Roman
North Africa in what was clearly far from a “Christian” society.
It will also give you a taste of P. Brown’s marvelous biography of
Augustine—which
you should by all means read over break!)
Maureen Tilley, Donatist Martyr Stories. The Church in Conflict
in Roman North Africa (Liverpool: Liverpool University Press,
1996)
Peter Brown, “Religious Coercion in the Later Roman Empire: The Case
of North Africa,” History 48 (1963): 283-305.
SPRING BREAK:
March 6-14 - Do reading
for Week 10 and continue work on papers!
Week 10: March 17: A Christian Civilization? Conversion, Christendom, & Pagan Survival
Background:
Brown, WLA 172-187
Primary Sources:
MacMullen/Lane, pp. 279-289
Brief accounts of conversion of nations or peoples:
Agathangelos, Gregory
the Illuminator & the conversion of Armenia, selections
Rufinus, on the conversion
of Georgia (The short text follows some introductory material; note
that "Iberia" here refers to a region of Georgia, not Spain)
Rufinus, on Axum/Ethiopia
[from Rufinus, Ecclesiastical History, 10.9-10] - The second
short
text is Rufinus's account of the Christianization of Axum, but
feel free to read them all.
John of Ephesus, Christianization
of Nubia (modern southern Egypt & northern Sudan)
Gregory of Tours, on the
conversion
of Clovis & the Franks, from History of the Franks
Bede, on the conversion
of England (not including the last section on the synod of Whitby)
Secondary Sources
(Required; please bring with you to class!):
Kreider, Change of Conversion, chapters 7 and 8 (up to p. 98)
Christopher Haas, "Mountain Constantines: The
Christianization of Aksum and Iberia," Journal of Late Antiquity 1.1
(Spring, 2008):101–126 [Muse]
John Curran, "The Conversion of Rome Revisited," in Stephen Mitchell
and Geoffrey Greatrex, eds., Ethnicity
and Culture in Late Antiquity. Duckworth,
2000, 1-12
[webct]
Pierre Chuvin, A Chronicle of the Last Pagans, chapters 8-9,
pp.131-148 [webct]
Recommended:
Cordula Nolte, “Gender and Conversion in the Merovingian Era,” in
Muldoon,
ed., Varieties of Religious Conversion, pp. 81-99. [on
2-hour
reserve]
Walter Goffart, "The Conversions of Avitus of Clermont, and Similar
Passages in Gregory of Tours," in "To See Ourselves as Others See
Us":
Christians,
Jews,
"Others" in Late Antiquity,
ed. J. Neusner & E. S. Frerichs (Chico, Cal.,
1985), 473-497.
[on conversion of Jews in 6th-cent. Gaul - webct]
Ramsey Macmullen, Christianity and Paganism in the Fourth to Eighth
Centuries (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1997)
W.H.C. Frend, “The Winning of the Countryside,” Journal of
Ecclesiastical
History 18, No. 1 (1967): 1-14.
Richard Lim, “Converting the Un-christianizable: The Baptism of Stage
Peformers in Late Antiquity,” Conversion in Late Antiquity and the
Early
Middle
Ages, pp. 84-126.
[groups meet if time]
Week 11: March
24: Writing workshop 1
Week 12: March
31: Writing workshop 2
Weeks 13 – 15: Panel Presentations...
Session and Paper
Titles TBA by students
Week 13: April. 7
Week 14: April 14
Week 15: April 21