A New Eusebius

A New Eusebius
Author: JAMES STEVENSON
Publsiher: SPCK
Total Pages: 559
Release: 2020-05-21
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 9780281082384

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A source book for students of the patristic period and a companion volume to "Creeds, Councils and Controversies" and "Doctrine and Practice in the Early Church" This updated edition incorporates vital documents that were not available when the original collection was compiled.

A New Eusebius

A New Eusebius
Author: James Stevenson
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 460
Release: 1968
Genre: Christian literature, Early
ISBN: UOM:39015026949456

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A New Eusebius

A New Eusebius
Author: J. Stevenson,W. H. C. Frend
Publsiher: Baker Books
Total Pages: 490
Release: 2013-07-01
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 9781441237798

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This sourcebook of primary texts illustrates the history of Christianity from the first century to the death of Constantine. It covers all major persons and topics in early Christian life and thought and includes Gnostic texts and anti-Christian polemic. Now available to a wider North American audience, it remains a standard after fifty years in print.

Making Christian History

Making Christian History
Author: Michael Hollerich
Publsiher: Univ of California Press
Total Pages: 331
Release: 2021-06-22
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780520295360

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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.

Christianity and the Transformation of the Book

Christianity and the Transformation of the Book
Author: Anthony Grafton,Megan Williams
Publsiher: Harvard University Press
Total Pages: 384
Release: 2009-07-01
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780674037861

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When early Christians began to study the Bible, and to write their own history and that of the Jews whom they claimed to supersede, they used scholarly methods invented by the librarians and literary critics of Hellenistic Alexandria. But Origen and Eusebius, two scholars of late Roman Caesarea, did far more. Both produced new kinds of books, in which parallel columns made possible critical comparisons previously unenvisioned, whether between biblical texts or between national histories. Eusebius went even farther, creating new research tools, new forms of history and polemic, and a new kind of library to support both research and book production. Christianity and the Transformation of the Book combines broad-gauged synthesis and close textual analysis to reconstruct the kinds of books and the ways of organizing scholarly inquiry and collaboration among the Christians of Caesarea, on the coast of Roman Palestine. The book explores the dialectical relationship between intellectual history and the history of the book, even as it expands our understanding of early Christian scholarship. Christianity and the Transformation of the Book attends to the social, religious, intellectual, and institutional contexts within which Origen and Eusebius worked, as well as the details of their scholarly practices--practices that, the authors argue, continued to define major sectors of Christian learning for almost two millennia and are, in many ways, still with us today.,

A New Eusebius

A New Eusebius
Author: Beresford James Kidd,James Stevenson
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 427
Release: 1970
Genre: Christian literature, Early
ISBN: OCLC:462710264

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Constantine and Eusebius

Constantine and Eusebius
Author: Timothy David Barnes
Publsiher: Harvard University Press
Total Pages: 472
Release: 1981
Genre: History
ISBN: 0674165314

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Here is the fullest available narrative history of the reigns of Diocletian and Constantine, and a new assessment of the part Christianity played in the Roman world of the third and fourth centuries.

A New Eusebius

A New Eusebius
Author: James Stevenson
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 464
Release: 1957
Genre: Christian literature, Early
ISBN: UOM:39015066432470

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