Beschreibung
The
of Eusebius took part in the cultural negotiations that attended the turn to a post-Constantinian Christianity. The immediate success of
indicates its success in legitimizing the change process, and in conferring upon the Christian readers a past in keeping with their own situation. This book pinpoints the more or less fragmented concepts of history and world implied in
and investigates what narrative(s) on the history of Christianity are contained in the work, and how Christianity and church are constructed as ideal entities. Differing from more conventional readings, where
would be read as a more or less reliable document concerning the history of early Christianity, the book primarily reads the work as a text, pointing towards the cultural system which the text is itself a part of, but to which our access is only partial.
Autorenportrait
Marie Verdoner finished her PhD studies at the University in Aarhus (Denmark), Faculty of Arts, in Ancient Christianity in 2007. In her research she has focused on cultural negotiations and the development of hybrid Roman-Christian identities in Early Christianity.
Leseprobe
Leseprobe
Inhalt
Contents: Early Christianity – Eusebius of Caesarea – History writing – Church history – Narrative – Collective memory – Grand narrative – Meta-chronological structures – Historical space – Imagined geography – Identity construction.