Skip to main content
Publications | Persons | Institutes | Projects
[ report an error in this record ]basket (0): add | show Print this page

Historiography and space in Late Antiquity
Van Nuffelen, P. (Ed.) (2019). Historiography and space in Late Antiquity. Cambridge University Press: Cambridge. ISBN 978-1108481281; e-ISBN 978-1108686686. x, 218 pp. https://dx.doi.org/10.1017/9781108686686

Author  Top 
  • Van Nuffelen, P., editor, more

Abstract
    The Roman Empire traditionally presented itself as the centre of the world, a view sustained by ancient education and conveyed in imperial literature. Historiography in particular tended to be written from an empire-centred perspective. In Late Antiquity, however, that attitude was challenged by the fragmentation of the empire. This book explores how a post-imperial representation of space emerges in the historiography of that period. Minds adapted slowly, long ignoring Constantinople as the new capital and still finding counter-worlds at the edges of the world. Even in Christian literature, often thought of as introducing a new conception of space, the empire continued to influence geographies. Political changes and theological ideas, however, helped to imagine a transferral of empire away from Rome and to substitute ecclesiastical for imperial space. By the end of Late Antiquity, Rome was just one of many centres of the world.

All data in the Integrated Marine Information System (IMIS) is subject to the VLIZ privacy policy Top | Author