Tác giả | : | Brown, Peter |
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Nơi xuất bản | : | U.S.A.: University of California Press, 1982 |
Thông tin trách nhiệm | : | Peter Brown |
Mô tả vật lý | : | vii, 347 pgs hardcover, illustrations 23cm |
Tóm tắt/ chú giải | : | In this collection of essays, Peter Brown examines a phenomenon characteristic of the first millennium of Christianity, the belief in the tangible presence of the holy. Austere holy men dispensed rough justice in the country sides of the early Christian Near East. Pilgrims flocked to the relic shrines housed in the great basilicas of Gaul. As far apart as Ireland, Constantinople, and Novgorod, artist strained to render visible those points where the believer stood in the direct presence of the holy. With the mixture of art and learning that is the hallmark of his work, Peter Brown examines the person, sites, and artifacts at which the holy impinged on the day-to-day life of Late Antique society. |
Đề mục | : | |
Ngôn ngữ | : | Eng |
DDC | : | 270.2 / B877-P48 |
SĐKCB | : |
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Sách cùng tác giả
Sách cùng khung phân loại
Christian Attitude Towards the Emperor in the Fourth Century
U.S.A: AMS, 1967
Christianity and Paganism in The Fourth to Eighth Centuries
U.S.A.: Yale University Press, 1997
Private Worship, Public Values, and Religious Change in Late Antiquity
U.S.A.: Cambriged University Press, 2008