List of Maps. Preface. Introduction. Part I: Empire and Aftermath: AD 200 - 500: 1. 'The Laws of Countries': Prologue and Overview2. Christianity and Empire. 3. Tempora Christiana: Christian Times. 4. Virtutes sanctorum . strages gentium: +ACI-Deeds of Saints . Slaughter of Nations+ACI-. 5. On the Frontier: Noricum, Ireland, and Francia. Part II: Divergent Legacies: AD 500 - 750: 6. Reverentia, rusticitas: Caesarius of Arles to Gregory of Tours. 7. Bishops, City, and Desert: East Rome. 8. Regimen animarum: Gregory the Great. Part III: The End of Ancient Christianity: AD 600 - 750: 9. Powerhouses of Prayer: Monasticism in Western Europe. 10. The Making of a Sapiens: Religion and Culture in Continental Europeand in Ireland. 11. Medicamenta paenitentiae: Columbanus. 12. Christianity in Asia and the Rise of Islam. 13. +ACI-The Changing of the Kingdoms+ACI-: Christians under Islam. 14. Christianities of the North: Ireland. 15. Christianities of the North: The Saxons of Britain. 16. Micro-Christendoms. Part IV: New Christendoms: AD 750-1000: 17. The Crisis of the Image: The Byzantine Iconoclast Controversy. 18. Closing the Frontier: Frisia and Germany. 19. +ACI-To Rule the Christian People+ACI-: Charlemagne. 17. In gear gagum: +ACI-In Days of Yore+ACI-: Northern Christendom and its Past. Notes. Coordinated Chronological Tables. Bibliography: Primary Sources+ADs- Secondary Sources. Index.
Peter Brown is Rollins Professor of History at Princeton University. He is a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the British Academy and the Royal Historical Society. His previous books include Augustine of Hippo: A biography (1967, 2nd Revised Edition, 2000); Society and the Holy in Late Antiquity (1982); The Body and Society: men, women and sexual renunciation in Early Christianity (1989); Power and Persuasion in Late Antiquity: towards a Christian Empire (1992) and Poverty and Leadership in the Later Roman Empire (2001).
"Most scholars would have been content to let a book as fine as the
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laurels. Not so Peter Brown. He has taken note of the recent
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richer work, which, with its extended notes and bibliography, will
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"[The first edition] was a historical masterpiece before. But the
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the light of more recent work, and, especially, has made it very
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