A History of Christianity, Vol. 1: Beginnings to 1500

by Kenneth Scott Latourette

Hardcover, 1997

Status

Available

Collection

Description

The most useful survey of Christian history for the student or general reader, fully updated by a team of respected scholars.

Publication

Prince Press (1997), Edition: 1st, 724 pages

Rating

½ (29 ratings; 3.8)

User reviews

LibraryThing member kencf0618
Each paragraph of this classic brick-of-a-book has shelves devoted to it; the standard initial history, it thus forms the foundation of many a Christianity library. A great baseline.
LibraryThing member gmicksmith
Coptic Christianity is not attested to historically until the 4th Century
"In Egypt Christianity was late in winning many adherents among the non-Greek speaking elements of the population, the country folk whose tongue was the native Egyptian. Yet by the beginning of the fourth century parts of the
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Scriptures had been translated into more than one of the non-Greek vernaculars and the foundation had been laid of a native Egyptian (Coptic) church" (p. 77).

Likewise, the Eastern branch of Christianity, in contrast to the Roman, Latin strain, is not present until the 4th Century
"As we have suggested, it seems fitting that in carrying out our story into the period which follows the first five hundred years we should begin with that portion of the narrative which centers about Constantinople and which leads into an account of what may be designated as the Greek or Byzantine segment of Christianity. It was through the administrative structure which had its headquarters at Constantinople that the Roman Empire persisted without a break. Through it, accordingly, the relationship between Church and state which had its inception under Constantine continued its most characteristic development" (p. 278).
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