Rome in Late Antiquity: Everyday Life and Urban Change, AD 312-609
Rome in Late Antiquity: Everyday Life and Urban Change, AD 312-609
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Abstract
This is an account of life in ancient Rome from the end of the third century to the beginning of the seventh. At the beginning of the period Rome was an imperial power and the centre of a classical civilisation, albeit with a growing Christian minority. By its end, Rome was a Papal power, the centre of western Christianity – the Pantheon itself was being transformed into a church. The book charts the change in terms of its effect on the city and its environs (the destruction of temples, the building of St Peter’s), the nature and consequences of Vandal and Gothic invasions, the survival and conversion of the nobility and the plebes, and the long struggle between ancient religions and rituals and Christianity and its consequences for the social and physical fabric of the city. There are chapters on the family and life cycle, the changing measurement of time (a crucial cultural revolution), education, the final years of the games, and the early years of the papacy. The book provides a social history of the city of Rome during a period when its role as the centre of western civilisation was transformed yet, against considerable odds, maintained.
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Front Matter
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Introduction: The city between antiquity and the Middle Ages Mark Humphries
Bertrand Lançon andAntonia Nevill
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I Maiestas Quirini: The majesty of the Quirinal
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II Plebs patresque: Plebeians and patricians
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III Religio: Religion and religiosity
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IV Saeculum: Worldly concerns
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Life and death: Material civilisation and mental attitudes
Jo Barnes
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10
Transforming the calendar
Menno Fenger andPaul Henman
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11
Festivals and entertainments
Menno Fenger andPaul Henman
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12
Education and culture
Menno Fenger andPaul Henman
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13
The influence of Christian Rome
Menno Fenger andPaul Henman
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Conclusion
Menno Fenger andPaul Henman
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9
Life and death: Material civilisation and mental attitudes
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End Matter
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