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Debating the saints' cult in the age of Gregory the Great

Dal Santo, Matthew(Edited by)
Part of the Oxford Studies in Byzantium series
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In Debating the Saints' Cults in the Age of Gregory the Great, Dal Santo argues that the Dialogues, Pope Gregory the Great's most controversial work, should be considered from the perspective of a wide-ranging debate about the saints which took place in early Byzantine society.

Like other contemporary works in Greek and Syriac, Gregory's text debated the nature and plausibility of the saints' miracles and the propriety of the saints' cult.

Rather than viewing theearly Byzantine world as overwhelmingly pious or credulous, the book argues that many contemporaries retained the ability to question and challenge the claims of hagiographers and other promoters of the saints' miracles.

From Italy to the heart of the Persian Empire at Ctesiphon, a healthy, sceptical, rationalismremained alive and well.

The book's conclusion argues that doubt towards the saints reflected a current of political dissent in the late East Roman or Byzantine Empire, where patronage of Christian saints' shrines was used to sanction imperial autocracy.

These far-reaching debates also re-contextualize the emergence of Islam in the Near East.

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£199.40
Product Details
Oxford University Press
0191626376 / 9780191626371
eBook (Adobe Pdf)
235.2
01/06/2012
England
English
399 pages
Copy: 10%; print: 10%