Fr. 332.40

Almsgiving in the Later Roman Empire - Christian Promotion and Practice 313-450

English · Hardback

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Zusatztext This book is a success...it is highly readable, and can be recommended not just to classicists but to social and ecclesiastical historians of other periods...a superb study. Informationen zum Autor Richard Finn OP is Regent of Studies, Blackfriars, Oxford. Klappentext Richard Finn OP examines the significance of almsgiving in Churches of the later empire for the identity and status of the bishops, ascetics, and lay people who undertook practices which differed in kind and context from the almsgiving practiced by pagans. It reveals how the almsgiving crucial in constructing the bishop's standing was a co-operative task where honor was shared but which exposed the bishop to criticism and rivalry. Finn details how practices gained meaning from a discourse which recast traditional virtues of generosity and justice to render almsgiving a benefaction and source of honor, and how this pattern of thought and conduct interacted with classical patterns to generate controversy. He argues that co-operation and competition in Christian almsgiving, together with the continued existence of traditional euergetism, meant that, contrary to the views of recent scholars, Christian alms did not turn bishops into the supreme patrons of their cities. Zusammenfassung Richard Finn OP examines the significance of almsgiving in Churches of the later empire for the identity and status of the bishops, ascetics, and lay people who undertook practices which differed in kind and context from the almsgiving practised by pagans. It reveals how the almsgiving crucial in constructing the bishop's standing was a co-operative task where honour was shared but which exposed the bishop to criticism and rivalry. Finn details how practices gained meaning from a discourse which recast traditional virtues of generosity and justice to render almsgiving a benefaction and source of honour, and how this pattern of thought and conduct interacted with classical patterns to generate controversy. He argues that co-operation and competition in Christian almsgiving, together with the continued existence of traditional euergetism, meant that, contrary to the views of recent scholars, Christian alms did not turn bishops into the supreme patrons of their cities. Inhaltsverzeichnis 1: Introduction 2: Episcopal almsgiving 3: Almsgiving by monks and lay Christians 4: The promotion of Christian almsgiving 5: The meanings of Christian almsgiving 6: Christian and Classical 7: Concluding remarks ...

Product details

Authors R D Finn, R. D. Finn, Richard Finn, Richard Finn OP, Richard (Regent of Studies Finn Op
Publisher Oxford University Press
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 23.02.2006
 
EAN 9780199283606
ISBN 978-0-19-928360-6
No. of pages 320
Series Oxford Classical Monographs
Oxford Classical Monographs
Subject Humanities, art, music > Religion/theology > Christianity

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