Skip to product information
1 of 1
Regular price £30.99 GBP
Regular price £32.99 GBP Sale price £30.99 GBP
Sale Sold out
Free UK Shipping

Freshly Printed - allow 10 days lead

Saints and Church Spaces in the Late Antique Mediterranean
Architecture, Cult, and Community

This book looks at the architecture of early Christian churches of the Mediterranean.

Ann Marie Yasin (Author)

9781107411630, Cambridge University Press

Paperback / softback, published 29 November 2012

362 pages
24.4 x 17 x 1.9 cm, 0.58 kg

'Yasin has a deft command of too-often forgotten places with their difficult archaeologies, especially those from North Africa. She sensitively draws conclusions from tricky evidence from old excavations or now inaccessible sites, and the book provides excellent plans and photographs of buildings which should now become as familiar as Ravenna and Rome … She avoids simply reinterpreting familiar sites, but carefully sets out the evidence for the sophisticated ways in which late Romans constructed the sacred in church buildings.' Caroline Goodson, Early Medieval Europe

This book explores the intersection between two key developments of the fourth through seventh centuries CE: the construction of monumental churches and the veneration of saints. While Christian sacred topography is usually interpreted in narrowly religious terms as points of contact with holy places and people, this book considers church buildings as spatial environments in which a range of social 'work' happened. It draws on approaches developed in the fields of anthropology, ritual studies, and social geography to examine, for example, how church buildings facilitated commemoration of the community's dead, establishment of a shared historical past, and communication with the divine. Surveying evidence for the introduction of saints into liturgical performance and the architectural and decorative programs of churches, this analysis explains how saints helped to bolster the boundaries of church space, reinforce local social and religious hierarchies, and negotiate the community's place within larger regional and cosmic networks.

Introduction
1. Churches before architecture: approaches to sacred space in the early Christian world
2. Commemorative communities: the dead in early Christian churches
3. Topographies of honor and piety: praying for the Christian benefactor
4. At the center of it all? Framing space with saints
5. What saints do in church, part I: focusing communal prayer
6. What saints do in church, part II: community connections.

Subject Areas: Church history [HRCC2], History of religion [HRAX], Ancient history: to c 500 CE [HBLA]

View full details