Ecclesiastical Empire
Title | Ecclesiastical Empire PDF eBook |
Author | Alonzo T. Jones |
Publisher | |
Pages | |
Release | 2016-06-01 |
Genre | |
ISBN | 9781614550433 |
Making Christian History
Title | Making Christian History PDF eBook |
Author | Michael Hollerich |
Publisher | Univ of California Press |
Pages | 331 |
Release | 2021-06-22 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 0520295366 |
Known as the “Father of Church History,” Eusebius was bishop of Caesarea in Palestine and the leading Christian scholar of his day. His Ecclesiastical History is an irreplaceable chronicle of Christianity’s early development, from its origin in Judaism, through two and a half centuries of illegality and occasional persecution, to a new era of tolerance and favor under the Emperor Constantine. In this book, Michael J. Hollerich recovers the reception of this text across time. As he shows, Eusebius adapted classical historical writing for a new “nation,” the Christians, with a distinctive theo-political vision. Eusebius’s text left its mark on Christian historical writing from late antiquity to the early modern period—across linguistic, cultural, political, and religious boundaries—until its encounter with modern historicism and postmodernism. Making Christian History demonstrates Eusebius’s vast influence throughout history, not simply in shaping Christian culture but also when falling under scrutiny as that culture has been reevaluated, reformed, and resisted over the past 1,700 years.
Catholic Vietnam
Title | Catholic Vietnam PDF eBook |
Author | Charles Keith |
Publisher | Univ of California Press |
Pages | 328 |
Release | 2012-10-18 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 0520272471 |
Keith explores the complex position of the Catholic Church in modern Vietnamese history. Much like the revolutionary ideologies and struggles in the name of the Vietnamese nation the revolution in Vietnamese Catholic life polarized the place of the new Church in post-colonial Vietnamese politics and society.
Ireland's Empire
Title | Ireland's Empire PDF eBook |
Author | Colin Barr |
Publisher | Cambridge University Press |
Pages | |
Release | 2019-10-31 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 1108764134 |
How did the Irish stay Irish? Why are Irish and Catholic still so often synonymous in the English-speaking world? Ireland's Empire is the first book to examine the complex relationship between Irish migrants and Roman Catholicism in the nineteenth century on a truly global basis. Drawing on more than 100 archives on five continents, Colin Barr traces the spread of Irish Roman Catholicism across the English-speaking world and explains how the Catholic Church became the vehicle for Irish diasporic identity in the United States, Australia, Canada, South Africa, New Zealand, Newfoundland, and India between 1829 and 1914. The world these Irish Catholic bishops, priests, nuns, and laity created endured long into the twentieth century, and its legacy is still present today.
Eusebius and Empire
Title | Eusebius and Empire PDF eBook |
Author | James Corke-Webster |
Publisher | Cambridge University Press |
Pages | 365 |
Release | 2019-01-10 |
Genre | Biography & Autobiography |
ISBN | 1108474071 |
Presents a radical new reading of how Christian history was rewritten in the fourth century to suit its circumstances under Rome.
Another Face of Empire
Title | Another Face of Empire PDF eBook |
Author | Daniel Castro |
Publisher | Duke University Press |
Pages | 247 |
Release | 2007-01-24 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 0822389592 |
The Spanish cleric Bartolomé de Las Casas is a key figure in the history of Spain’s conquest of the Americas. Las Casas condemned the torture and murder of natives by the conquistadores in reports to the Spanish royal court and in tracts such as A Short Account of the Destruction of the Indies (1552). For his unrelenting denunciation of the colonialists’ atrocities, Las Casas has been revered as a noble protector of the Indians and as a pioneering anti-imperialist. He has become a larger-than-life figure invoked by generations of anticolonialists in Europe and Latin America. Separating historical reality from myth, Daniel Castro provides a nuanced, revisionist assessment of the friar’s career, writings, and political activities. Castro argues that Las Casas was very much an imperialist. Intent on converting the Indians to Christianity, the religion of the colonizers, Las Casas simply offered the natives another face of empire: a paternalistic, ecclesiastical imperialism. Castro contends that while the friar was a skilled political manipulator, influential at what was arguably the world’s most powerful sixteenth-century imperial court, his advocacy on behalf of the natives had little impact on their lives. Analyzing Las Casas’s extensive writings, Castro points out that in his many years in the Americas, Las Casas spent very little time among the indigenous people he professed to love, and he made virtually no effort to learn their languages. He saw himself as an emissary from a superior culture with a divine mandate to impose a set of ideas and beliefs on the colonized. He differed from his compatriots primarily in his antipathy to violence as the means for achieving conversion.
Ecclesiastical History
Title | Ecclesiastical History PDF eBook |
Author | Sozomen |
Publisher | |
Pages | 472 |
Release | 1846 |
Genre | Arianism |
ISBN |