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Postroman Transitions Christian And Barbarian Identities In The Early Medieval West Walter Pohl Gerda Heydemann

  • SKU: BELL-6623644
Postroman Transitions Christian And Barbarian Identities In The Early Medieval West Walter Pohl Gerda Heydemann
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Postroman Transitions Christian And Barbarian Identities In The Early Medieval West Walter Pohl Gerda Heydemann instant download after payment.

Publisher: Brepols
File Extension: PDF
File size: 9.36 MB
Pages: 594
Author: Walter Pohl; Gerda Heydemann
ISBN: 9782503543277, 9782503544205, 2503543278, 2503544207
Language: English
Year: 2013

Product desciption

Postroman Transitions Christian And Barbarian Identities In The Early Medieval West Walter Pohl Gerda Heydemann by Walter Pohl; Gerda Heydemann 9782503543277, 9782503544205, 2503543278, 2503544207 instant download after payment.

This volume looks at changing identities during the transition from the Roman empire to a political world defined by a different kingdoms and peoples in western Europe. It addresses 'ethnicity' in the context of alternative modes of identification, mainly Christianity and Romanness. To widen the horizon of current debates, it shows that the ancient dichotomy between barbarians and Romans is hardly helpful in understanding the complex transitions to a post-imperial age in the West. In a broad sweep of regional examples, from Spain and North Africa to Dalmatia and the British Isles, the book follows the unfolding of Christian and barbarian identities: How were both the Roman and the barbarian past used for the formation and legitimation of new identities?
The ‘scripts of Romanness’ changed in the early Middle Ages, and so did the significance of othering pagans, heretics, or barbarians. The contributions trace the tenacity and the ambiguity of traditional narratives and signs of distinction: manuscripts and material remains, costume and epigraphy, historiography and hagiography were used in creative ways to shape civic, local, or religious communities. Many of the contributions show the fundamental importance of Christian 'strategies of identification' for creating a stronger political role for ethnicity in the post-Roman kingdoms. As such, they follow a line of argument that has also been explored in the book’s companion volume in this series, Strategies of Identification: Ethnicity and Religion in Early Medieval Europe (CELAMA 13).

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