Urban and Religious Spaces in Late Antiquity and Early ByzantiumVariorum Jean-Michel Spieser ISBN: 0860788512 price: $117.95 hardcover
Professor Spieser deals here with a number of the transformations that took
place in the world of Late Antiquity - and early Christianity - focusing upon
notions of space. The first set of articles, opening with a newly-written
introductory essay, addresses the development of urban landscapes from the
Roman period up to the iconoclast era in Byzantium. In particular, he looks
at the consequences of christianisation, and argues that the changing fortunes
of the town cannot be attributed to a few causes, such as war or natural
disaster, but resulted from a complex interplay between the economy and
ideology, religion and politics. A second group, concerned with the relationship
of 'late antique' man with his surroundings, and therefore his perception of
space, sets out to explain how the decoration of churches - on apses, for
example, or on doors - reflects new senses of how religious spaces should
be organised. Six of these studies have been translated into English for this
volume, and it ends with an important section of additional notes and comment.
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