The End of Antiquity: Archaeology, Society and Religion in Early Medieval Western Europe

by Jeremy Knight

Paperback, 2007

Status

Available

Call number

940

Collection

Publication

NPI Media Group (2007), Paperback, 224 pages

Description

Presents a study of the transition from the Classical world to Medieval Europe.

User reviews

LibraryThing member AgedPeasant
We all learn at school that the Roman Empire fell, and that we then had the Dark Ages, in which nothing much happened for 500 years. In truth, of course, the Eastern Empire (Byzantium) went on in wealth and vigour till the 15th century, and the Western Empire didn't fall like a tree, but declined
Show More
and fragmented under a range of pressures and crises.

When the Dark Ages finish, we find a Europe dominated by the Catholic Church, or Church of Rome - a hegemony which lasts for another thousand years and more. How did the official religion of the late Roman Empire come to dominate post-Roman politics in the West?

Knight examines the developing role of the church infrastructure in the late Roman Empire, and traces how as the central imperial power loosens its grip, the church uses the pattern of Roman administration to spread across the former imperial territory, replacing the secular authority with a religious one. Thus a Roman empire based on power gives way to a Roman empire based on ideology.
Show Less

Language

Physical description

224 p.; 9.69 inches

ISBN

0752440829 / 9780752440828

Similar in this library

Page: 0.3659 seconds