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Citizens of the Earth presents the first comprehensive account of Augustine's engagement with traditional Roman religion. A multifaceted case-study in the Christianization of the Roman Empire, it anchors Augustine's works in their intellectual and social context, narrating political and intellectual renegotiation of the public cults of North Africa from the 390s until after Augustine's death in 430. At the same time, it tests modern conceptions of the role of religious conviction and religious difference in late antique society against the ideas of one of the most influential late Roman thinkers.Approaching Augustine simultaneously as thinker, practical preacher, and observer of his North African world, Citizens of the Earth synthesizes Augustine's ideas about religion from sermons and treatises, describes how his polemical approach to the Roman gods developed across his career, and reconstructs competing ideas developed by his interlocutors. It emphasizes pagan conviction and lay religiosity, argues that we should see Augustine's polemics as attempts at practical outreach and persuasion, and stresses the importance of conversion for understanding the pagan-Christian boundary.The book closes with both historical and theoretical conclusions. After proposing that the Vandalic conquest of Carthage (439) marked a final ending point for traditional, public religiosity in North Africa, it considers how Augustine's contributions can still inform modern approaches to late antique religion.
Mattias P. Gassman is Assistant Professor of Humanities at the University of Florida and the author of Worshippers of the Gods: Debating Paganism in the Fourth-Century Roman West.
IntroductionPart I: Rethinking Religious Difference in Augustine's World1: A Late Antique Model of Religion2: Between Pagan and Christian3: Debating Traditional ReligionPart II: A Pivotal Decade4: Navigating the Retreat of Public Cult5: Charting a Place for Rome's Religion Before City of GodPart III: The Gods and the City of God6: Rethinking Rome After 4107: Rethinking the Nature of the Gods8: Skirting the Edge of EuhemerismPart IV: Historical Epilogue and Conclusion9: The End of Roman Religion in North AfricaConcluding Reflections
Michael Bland Simmons, Auburn University Montgomery) Simmons, Bishop Michael Bland (Distinguished Research Professor, Department of History, Distinguished Research Professor, Department of History
Lucy Grig, Gavin Kelly, University of Edinburgh) Grig, Lucy (Lecturer in Classics, Lecturer in Classics, University of Edinburgh) Kelly, Gavin (Lecturer in Classics, Lecturer in Classics
Jennifer V. Ebbeler, Austin) Ebbeler, Jennifer V. (Associate Professor of Classics, Associate Professor of Classics, University of Texas, Jennifer Ebbeler
Jaś Elsner, Jesús Hernández Lobato, Oxford) Elsner, Jas (Humfrey Payne Senior Research Fellow, Humfrey Payne Senior Research Fellow, Corpus Christi College, Spain) Hernandez Lobato, Jesus (Lecturer in Latin Language and Literature, Lecturer in Latin Language and Literature, University of Salamanca, Jaś Elsner, Ja& Elsner
Philip Wood, University of Cambridge) Wood, Philip (College Lecturer in Early Medieval History, Sidney Sussex College, College Lecturer in Early Medieval History, Sidney Sussex College
Johannes Wienand, Johannes Wienand, Germany) Wienand, Johannes (Assistant Professor of Ancient History and Classics, Assistant Professor of Ancient History and Classics, Heinrich-Heine-Universitat Dusseldorf
Jan Willem Drijvers, University of Gronigen.) Drijvers, Jan Willem (author Associate Professor of Ancient History, author Associate Professor of Ancient History