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Las Primacías Eclesiásticas En Hispania Durante El Siglo IV
POLIS. Revista de ideas y formas políticas de la Antigüedad Clásica 10, 1998, pp. 269-285. LAS PRIMACÍAS ECLESIÁSTICAS EN HZSPA2VIA DURANTE EL SIGLO IV* Josep 'VUella Masana Universidad de Barcelona La historia del cristianismo antiguo está orgánicamente vinciolada a la del Imperio romano, en el que nace, se desarrolla y se convierte en institución. Entre ambos se ftagua una relación que, con el paso de los años, se hace cada vez más unívoca, recíproca. Con el fracaso del régimen instaurado por Diocleciano y el apoyo al cristianismo por parte de Constantino 1, tiene lugar el paso del Imperio pagano al Imperio cristiano. Lo más novedoso no es la finalización de las persecuciones —que ya hacía años que no se producían en muchas zonas— sino el hecho de que se legisle a fevor de los cristianos — sobre todo de los eclesiásticos— y que prácticas cristianas de laiga tradición alcancen categoría de ley^ De modo parecido sucedió con * Este estudio se ha realizado en el marco de los proyectos y grupos de investigación PB97- 0891 y 1997SGR 357. El presente texto corresponde a nuestra qxjrtación al coloquio internacional dedicado a "Paciano y la Hispania cristiana del siglo IV", celebrado en Barcelona del 8 al 9 de marzo de 1996 y en Lyón del 28 al 30 de octubre del mismo año. 269 Josep Vilella Masana disposiciones de orden organizativo que el episcopado establece al convertirse en un estamento público y privilegiado. Sería éste el caso de algunos aspectos que, en el 325, re¿amenta el concilio de Nicea^. En Nicea se establece la agrupación de los obispos de una misma provincia bajo la presidencia del obispo de la capital provincial, denominado metropolitano. -
Farming in Mediterranean France and Rural Settlement in The
Farming in mediterranean France and rural settlement in the Late Roman and early Medieval periods : the contribution from archaeology and environmental sciences in the last twenty years Aline Durand, Philippe Leveau To cite this version: Aline Durand, Philippe Leveau. Farming in mediterranean France and rural settlement in the Late Roman and early Medieval periods : the contribution from archaeology and environmental sciences in the last twenty years. Miquel BARCELÓ; François SIGAUT. The Making of Feudal Agricultures ?, BRILL, pp.177-253, 2004, The transformation of the Roman World, 90-04-11722-9. halshs-01052529 HAL Id: halshs-01052529 https://halshs.archives-ouvertes.fr/halshs-01052529 Submitted on 28 Jul 2014 HAL is a multi-disciplinary open access L’archive ouverte pluridisciplinaire HAL, est archive for the deposit and dissemination of sci- destinée au dépôt et à la diffusion de documents entific research documents, whether they are pub- scientifiques de niveau recherche, publiés ou non, lished or not. The documents may come from émanant des établissements d’enseignement et de teaching and research institutions in France or recherche français ou étrangers, des laboratoires abroad, or from public or private research centers. publics ou privés. Article published in BARCELÓ M. et SIGAUT F., (eds.), The Making of Feudal Agricultures ?, Boston-Leiden, Brill editor, coll. The transformation of the Roman World, vol. 14, 2004, p. 177-253. BARCELÓ M. et SIGAUT F., (eds.), The Making of Feudal Agricultures ?, Boston-Leiden, Brill editor, coll. The transformation of the Roman World, vol. 14, 2004, p. 177-253. Aline DURAND ([email protected]) Philippe LEVEAU ([email protected]) FARMING IN MEDITERRANEAN FRANCE AND RURAL SETTLEMENT IN THE LATE ROMAN AND EARLY MEDIEVAL PERIODS: THE CONTRIBUTION FROM ARCHAEOLOGY AND ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES IN THE LAST TWENTY YEARS Introduction From the end of the 19th C, French historiography has studied the period spanning the 5th - 10th C essentially along political and institutional lines. -
Calendar of Roman Events
Introduction Steve Worboys and I began this calendar in 1980 or 1981 when we discovered that the exact dates of many events survive from Roman antiquity, the most famous being the ides of March murder of Caesar. Flipping through a few books on Roman history revealed a handful of dates, and we believed that to fill every day of the year would certainly be impossible. From 1981 until 1989 I kept the calendar, adding dates as I ran across them. In 1989 I typed the list into the computer and we began again to plunder books and journals for dates, this time recording sources. Since then I have worked and reworked the Calendar, revising old entries and adding many, many more. The Roman Calendar The calendar was reformed twice, once by Caesar in 46 BC and later by Augustus in 8 BC. Each of these reforms is described in A. K. Michels’ book The Calendar of the Roman Republic. In an ordinary pre-Julian year, the number of days in each month was as follows: 29 January 31 May 29 September 28 February 29 June 31 October 31 March 31 Quintilis (July) 29 November 29 April 29 Sextilis (August) 29 December. The Romans did not number the days of the months consecutively. They reckoned backwards from three fixed points: The kalends, the nones, and the ides. The kalends is the first day of the month. For months with 31 days the nones fall on the 7th and the ides the 15th. For other months the nones fall on the 5th and the ides on the 13th. -
Urbanisme En De Koloniesteden Van Gallia N Narbonensis
Alfonso Medinilla Urbanisme en de koloniesteden van Gallia Narbonensis Een analyse van het stedelijk weefsel op basis van de veteranenkolonies: Narbonne, Arles, Fréjus, Orange en Béziers Scriptie voorgelegd tot het bekomen van de graad licentiaat in de archeologie Promotor: Prof. Dr. Frank Vermeulen Universiteit Gent, faculteit letteren en wijsbegeerte Academiejaar 2006 – 2007 Alfonso Medinilla 2de licentie Archeologie Urbanisme en de koloniesteden van Gallia Narbonensis Een analyse van het stedelijk weefsel op basis van de veteranenkolonies: Narbonne, Arles, Fréjus, Orange en Béziers Scriptie voorgelegd tot het bekomen van de graad licentiaat in de archeologie Promotor: Prof. Dr. Frank Vermeulen Universiteit Gent, faculteit letteren en wijsbegeerte Academiejaar 2006 – 2007 1 Dankwoord1 Mijn dank gaat uit naar mijn promotor Professor Frank Vermeulen, voor de begeleiding bij het uitwerken van het concept van deze scriptie, maar ook naar Dr. Patrick Monsieur voor de last-minute raadgevingen in Porto Recanati. Dieter De Meulemeester, een taalwetenschapper van formaat, dank ik voor de vele verbeteringen die hij tot het laatste moment is blijven doorgeven, en mijn moeder Gerd Wille voor de praktische ondersteuning. Mijn oneindige dank gaat tenslotte uit naar mijn vriendin Nel de Mûelenaere, die heel het wordingsproces van deze eindverhandeling van dichtbij heeft moeten meemaken. 1 Afbeelding voorpagina: op basis van Talbert R.J.A. (ed.), Barrington Atlas of the Greek en Roman World, Princeton University Press, Princeton, 2000, kaart 15. 2 -
(NE MEDITERRANEAN) (Two Volumes) SEID
1 MICROPALAEONTOLOGICAL STUDIES OF RECENT SEDIMENTS FROM THE CILICIA BASIN (N. E. MEDITERRANEAN) (Two Volumes) SEID NOOREDDIN ALAVI, M.Sc. Thesis Submitted for the Degree Doctor of Philosophy of the University of London June, 1980 Department of Geology, Royal School of Mines, Prince Consort Road, London, S.W.7. 2 ABSTRACT The paraecology of dead assemblages of Foraminifera, Ostracoda and planktic molluscs (Pteropoda and Heteropoda) in 142 grab and core- top samples from the surface sediments of the Cilician Basin, recovered at 128 oceanographic stations ranging from a depth of 10 to about 2200m, have been studied. Four samples from the bottom of the Akyatan Lagoon and seven from parts of a piston core from station 1073 were also analysed. Altogether 405 species and varieties of Foraminifera (22 of planktic) and 50 genera of ostracodes have been identified. A list of identified pteropods is also given. Twenty five species of benthic Foraminifera belonging to 23 genera are left in open nomenclature. One ostracod species, tentatively assigned to Phlyctenophora sp., is believed •to be new. Most of the Foraminifera and some ostracodes are illustrated by S.E.M. photographs. Faunal abundance and diversity of the benthic Foraminifera and the abundance of ostracodes and planktic molluscs are mapped and their variation is discussed in terms of the productivity of the surface waters and bottom sediments and the rate of sedimentation. It Is concluded that the planktic/benthic foraminiferal ratio is a more reliable environmental indicator than Ostracoda/benthic Foraminifera ratio. The faunal poverty of the deep-water environment in the basin is discussed in the context of the geological and palaeo-oceanographical history of the E. -
Ancient Perspectives: Maps and Their Place in Mesopotamia, Egypt
seven Putting the World in Order: Mapping in Roman Texts Benet Salway The scanty survival of genuinely contemporary cartographic artifacts from Roman antiquity thrusts the simple textual description of geography into the limelight. While there is no denying the existence and public display of the grand carto- graphic visualizations discussed in the previous chapter, the dearth of surviving maps and diagrams frequently forces us to rely upon the examination of purely textual sources for evidence of “worldview,” whether explicitly expressed by them or embedded in their structure. Indeed, the paucity of direct evidence for visual mapping has led some modern scholars to downplay the role of graphic illustra- tion in the description of geographic information by the Romans. Such a view is encouraged by the prominence of itinerary lists in the surviving literature, giving rise to the idea that the Romans’ perception of the world was primarily linear, organized as so-called hodological space. However, the use of itineraries to record or present routes for travel need not be incompatible with the consultation of maps, map- based thinking, or general “map consciousness” in other contexts. This chapter sets out to examine a wide range of texts from Roman antiquity (in Greek and Latin) both for signs of map consciousness and for evidence of its nature. Specifi cally, the descriptive logic of the texts will be examined for evidence of the sort of picture of the world that the educated Roman carried around in his or her head. For example, on what was it centered? In which direction was it orientated? Was a cartographic image of the world even common at all? Obvi- ously the answers to these questions will have been diff erent at diff erent times and locations across Roman history. -
Greek and Latin Classics Iii
Blackwell rare books GREEK AND LATIN CLASSICS III Blackwell Rare Books 48-51 Broad Street, Oxford, OX1 3BQ Direct Telephone: +44 (0) 1865 333555 Switchboard: +44 (0) 1865 792792 Email: [email protected] Fax: +44 (0) 1865 794143 www.blackwell.co.uk/ rarebooks Our premises are in the main Blackwell bookstore at 48-51 Broad Street, one of the largest and best known in the world, housing over 200,000 new book titles, covering every subject, discipline and interest, as well as a large secondhand books department. There is lift access to each floor. The bookstore is in the centre of the city, opposite the Bodleian Library and Sheldonian Theatre, and close to several of the colleges and other university buildings, with on street parking close by. Oxford is at the centre of an excellent road and rail network, close to the London - Birmingham (M40) motorway and is served by a frequent train service from London (Paddington). Hours: Monday–Saturday 9am to 6pm. (Tuesday 9:30am to 6pm.) Purchases: We are always keen to purchase books, whether single works or in quantity, and will be pleased to make arrangements to view them. Auction commissions: We attend a number of auction sales and will be happy to execute commissions on your behalf. Blackwell online bookshop www.blackwell.co.uk Our extensive online catalogue of new books caters for every speciality, with the latest releases and editor’s recommendations. We have something for everyone. Select from our subject areas, reviews, highlights, promotions and more. Orders and correspondence should in every case be sent to our Broad Street address (all books subject to prior sale). -
From Romans to Goths and Franks
University of Texas Rio Grande Valley ScholarWorks @ UTRGV History Faculty Publications and Presentations College of Liberal Arts 2017 Shifting Ethnic Identities in Spain and Gaul, 500-700: From Romans to Goths and Franks Erica Buchberger The University of Texas Rio Grande Valley, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.utrgv.edu/hist_fac Part of the History Commons, and the Medieval Studies Commons Recommended Citation Buchberger, E. (2017). Shifting Ethnic Identities in Spain and Gaul, 500–700: From Romans to Goths and Franks. Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press. doi:10.2307/j.ctt1pk3jrb This Book is brought to you for free and open access by the College of Liberal Arts at ScholarWorks @ UTRGV. It has been accepted for inclusion in History Faculty Publications and Presentations by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks @ UTRGV. For more information, please contact [email protected], [email protected]. Shifting Ethnic Identities in Spain and Gaul, 500-700: From Romans to Goths and Franks Erica Buchberger 1 Contents Acknowledgements ......................................................................................................................... 5 Introduction .................................................................................................................................... 7 Scholarly Tradition ...................................................................................................................... 8 Applying This Method .............................................................................................................. -
Placuit Apostolicae (Ep. 1) of Zosimus of Rome and the Ecclesiastical Reorganization of Gaul
Placuit apostolicae (Ep. 1) of Zosimus of Rome and the Ecclesiastical Reorganization of Gaul GEOFFREY D. DUNN Around the beginning of the fifth century the praetorian prefect for Gaul and the governor of Viennensis relocated their headquarters from Trier and Vienne respectively to Arles, which created a dispute between the bishops of Vienne and Arles as to whom should be metropolitan of the province of Viennensis. While the synod of Turin had proposed dividing the province in two ecclesias- tically, problems emerged in 417 when Zosimus, bishop of Rome, within the first week of his election, asserted in his Epistula 1 (JK 328) that the bishop of Arles was to be metropolitan not only of Viennensis but over several provinces in the civil diocese of Septem Provinciae as well (depriving the bishops of Marseille, Vienne, and Narbonne of their metropolitan status) and thereby making him virtual papal vicar in the exercise of Roman prerogatives. This new arrangement created enormous religious conflict, as a further seven letters and synod in Rome in September 417 attest, including the efforts of Zosimus to declare the synod of Turin invalid. Ralph Mathisen investigated this episode and concluded that Zosimus’s efforts to assert his own authority over Gaul resulted only in uniting the Gallic churches against him. This paper seeks to analyse Zosimus’s involvement in Gaul and argues that this was not really his plan but rather that of the bishop of Arles. It also seeks to ask whether or not Zosimus anticipated the resultant conflict, as well as the authority by which he sought to make these changes. -
Self-Portrait in Ree Colors
Self-Portrait in !ree Colors Gregory of Nazianzus’s Epistolary Autobiography Bradley K. Storin UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA PRESS University of California Press Oakland, California © "#$% by Bradley K. Storin Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Names: Storin, Bradley K., author. Title: Self-portrait in three colors : Gregory of Nazianzus’s epistolary autobiography / Bradley K. Storin. Description: Oakland, California : University of California Press, ["#$%] | Includes bibliographical references and index. | Identi&ers: '(() "#$%##*"*+ (print) | '(() "#$%##%%$+ (ebook) | ,-.) %/+#0"#%/"%1# () | ,-.) %/+#0"#*#1$*# (cloth : alk. paper) Subjects: '(-2: Gregory, of Nazianzus, Saint. Correspondence. | Gregory, of Nazianzus, Saint—Criticism and interpretation. Classi&cation: '(( 34*%%+.5/* (ebook) | '(( 34*%%+.5/* -/6 "#$% (print) | 77( ++6/.#$—dc"* LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/"#$%##*"*+ Manufactured in the United States of America "+ "/ "6 "0 "1 "* "" "$ "# $% $# % + / 6 0 1 * " $ '()*+)*, Acknowledgments vii Note on Translations ix !. An Epistolary Autobiography ! ". #e Architecture of the Letter Collection "# $. “#e Most Eloquent Gregory” !$! %. “Father of Philosophers” !"! &. “Basilist” !%& Epilogue !'( Abbreviations !)! Notes !)# Works Cited ""' Index of Gregory’s Epistulae "%# Index of Subjects "(( )*+,-./01230,45 !is book has been in the making for a decade now and has taken several forms. It began as a dissertation that includes not only a full-length critical analysis of Gre- gory of Nazianzus’s epistolary discourse and late antique epistolary culture writ large but also a translation of all the letters in Gregory’s collection. I came to realize near its completion, however, that I had not discussed in any detail the construction of the collection as a cohesive and coherent autobiographical text; indeed, this line of inquiry has been largely untapped in scholarship more broadly. -
The Lituus and Augustan Provincial Coinage1
Acta Ant. Hung. 55, 2015, 45–60 DOI: 10.1556/068.2015.55.1–4.3 VICTORIA GYŐRI THE LITUUS AND AUGUSTAN PROVINCIAL COINAGE1 View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by Repository of the Academy's Library Summary: This paper examines the importance of the lituus on Augustan provincial coinage. On local coins of some thirty cities in Africa and Asia, Augustus’ obverse portraits are accompanied by a lituus, the symbol of the augurs. One of Augustus’ most important priestly offices was that of an augur. Romulus’ most famous achievement as an augur was the foundation of Rome. When Augustus became an augur in 43 BC, it was particularly Romulus’ role as a founder that Augustus emulated the most. Augustus consid- ered himself to be the second founder of Rome, and also founded, re-founded, and reorganized numerous cities in the Roman provinces. I argue, then, that given the far-reaching evidence of the lituus on Augus- tan provincial coinage, the prominence of Augustus’ position as an augur is not only evident through his provincial (re)foundations, but also through his visual imagery. Key words: Africa, Asia, augur, Augustus, conditor, coins, (re)founder, (re)foundation, lituus, Roman provinces, Rome, Romulus 1 I would like to thank the organizers (Patricia Johnston, Attilio Mastrocinque, and Sophia Papa- ioannou) of the Symposium Veronese on the Age of Augustus held on June 18–20, 2014 for the oppor- tunity to participate and to thank all those who were present for their helpful comments. I would also like to thank László Takács for the publication of this conference proceedings. -
EPITAPHIC CULTURE and SOCIAL HISTORY in LATE ANTIQUE SALONA (Ca
Doctoral Dissertation EPITAPHIC CULTURE AND SOCIAL HISTORY IN LATE ANTIQUE SALONA (ca. 250 – 600 C.E.) by DORA IVANIŠEVIĆ Supervisor: Volker Menze Submitted to the Medieval Studies Department, Central European University, Budapest in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Medieval Studies CEU eTD Collection Budapest 2016 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS First and foremost, my thanks go to Volker Menze. The patience and support of my supervisor needs to be acknowledged publically. He has always had trust in me and given me the freedom to do things my way. I will be forever grateful for the words of compassionate encouragement that came when I needed them the most. Furthermore, a few other professors have left a lasting mark on me in various and wonderful ways: Alice, Cristian, and Niels. Dear Csilla, besides all the logistical help, thank you for your care and warmth. I would like to thank my dear colleague Mariana Bodnaruk, and my friends Željka Salopek and Reyhan Durmaz for their help with providing me with literature: they did plenty of scanning from Germany, Croatia, and US, and they did it with such ease and readiness that I was never shy or reluctant to ask for help. The online epigraphic databases of the international federation of Epigraphic Databases (EAGLE), as well as Clauss-Slaby, are impressive undertakings. I participated in the EpiDoc workshop and got a glimpse of the enthusiasm and vision that lie behind them, as well as of the painstaking technical and intellectual work and effort invested in them. These databases facilitate our research, enable us to conduct it from the comfort of our homes, at any hour of the day and night, speed it up and make it more sophisticated.