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Constantine and the Bishops: The Politics of Intolerance (Ancient Society and History)
 
 
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Constantine and the Bishops: The Politics of Intolerance (Ancient Society and History) [Hardcover]

Professor H. A. Drake PhD (Author)
4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)


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Book Description

Ancient Society and History December 14, 1999

Historians who viewed imperial Rome in terms of a conflict between pagans and Christians have often regarded the emperor Constantine's conversion as the triumph of Christianity over paganism. But in Constantine and the Bishops, historian H. A. Drake offers a fresh and more nuanced understanding of Constantine's rule and, especially, of his relations with Christians.

Constantine, Drake suggests, was looking not only for a god in whom to believe but also a policy he could adopt. Uncovering the political motivations behind Constantine's policies, Drake shows how those policies were constructed to ensure the stability of the empire and fulfill Constantine's imperial duty in securing the favor of heaven.

Despite the emperor's conversion to Christianity, Drake concludes, Rome remained a world filled with gods and with men seeking to depose rivals from power. A book for students and scholars of ancient history and religion, Constantine and the Bishops shows how Christian belief motivated and gave shape to imperial rule.


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Editorial Reviews

Review

"A refreshingly original and powerfully argued re-conception of the issues and the forces at work in this period of the conversion not of Constantine, but of Christianity... With laser-keen insight, bold thinking, and also a large measure of wry humor, Drake has presented a plausible and powerful interpretation of this formative moment in Western history... A riveting story, and masterfully told. Anyone who rejoices in our Founding Fathers' constitutional conviction that church must be kept separate from state will read Constantine and the Bishops with deepest appreciation; and perhaps those who long for the opposite should read it, too. The lessons of late antiquity remain pertinent, alas, to the politics of religion in our own day." -- Paula Fredriksen, New Republic



"If you read one book on late antiquity this year, read this one. If you read one book on politics this year, read this one again... A work of visionary brilliance." -- Virginia Quarterly Review



"The strength of this work is Drake's skillful use of a wide range of scholarship... This is a stimulating book, with a persuasive thesis." -- Nathan Howard, Journal of Church and State



"In its scholarship and size Constantine and the Bishops is clearly a work to benefit scholars, but the clarity of its explanations make it accessible to the enterprising undergraduate as well." -- Ronald J. Weber, History: Reviews of New Books



"Compelling... His overarching thesis provides a persuasive new paradigm." -- David Brakke, Journal of Religion



"A well organized, well documented, and well written study." -- Richard A. Lebrun, H-Catholic, H-Net Reviews



"This is a learned, broadly based, and carefully elaborated argument. It is also racily written, interesting, and hard to put down." -- Stuart G. Hall, Journal of Theological Studies



"A thoughtful and erudite book that breaks the mold... A powerful study with a strong, coherent thesis, Constantine and the Bishops is animated by a fresh vision of the early fourth century. It skillfully incorporates major historical themes in unexpected and rewarding ways." -- Richard Lim, Speculum

About the Author

H. A. Drake is a professor of history at the University of California, Santa Barbara.


Product Details

  • Hardcover: 632 pages
  • Publisher: The Johns Hopkins University Press (December 14, 1999)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0801862183
  • ISBN-13: 978-0801862182
  • Product Dimensions: 8.8 x 8.8 x 1.7 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.9 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #494,931 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

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58 of 59 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An Excellent Political History of 4th Century Christianity, July 23, 2000
By 
Thomas J. Brucia "Tom B" (Houston, TX United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Constantine and the Bishops: The Politics of Intolerance (Ancient Society and History) (Hardcover)
A book on the fourth century that cites Saul Alinsky and Richard Nixon is not a typical history! The reason is that "Constantine and the Bishops" is as much about political science as history. Using the usual traditional sources, Drake goes further and examines agendas; the people he reveals are refreshingly understandable. In fact, I kept finding myself thinking: "Of course!", and "That reminds me of [name]", and "That's the same kind of mistake I might have made", etc. Constantine comes across as a very believable person trying desperately to bring peace and order to an empire plagued by special interests and external challenges (so what else is new! ). For example, regards special interests, Drake points out that Constantine briefly transferred some legal functions to the bishops. The reason was corruption in the legal profession mirroring today's problems in the legal system (i.e. money buying favorable decisions). How contemporary! ----- In terms of history, this work excels because it offers reasonable perspectives within which events take place. Instead of a mountain of facts, Drake selects currents within which they make sense. The "Big Events" of this period were: The Great Persecution (303-313) by Emperor Diocletian , the reign of Constantine (324-337), the brief counter-revolution of Emperor Julian "the Apostate" (361-263), and the final conquest of power by the Christian bishops under Emperor Theodosius I (379-395). The history in this book is however very detailed. It reaches back to the decline of the Roman Senate under Augustus Caesar three centuries before, and looks ahead to the ratification of the Theodosian Code in 438. Even without much knowledge of the fourth century, a reader will finish with an excellent grounding in the period. Over 51 pages of footnotes, a list of 118 primary sources and 43 PAGES of secondary sources (!), are backed up by an excellent index. The enquiring reader will have no shortage of further reading to pursue! ----- One interesting thought that Drake comes back to repeatedly is that "the ancient state was built on the premise that organized human activity was needed to ensure that [divinity] remained benevolent to the community." He points out another fact that was brushed under the carpet in later times: many pagans were monotheists before the final victory of Christianity, and that Constantine may well have been a monotheist well before he accepted Christianity. Drake shows that the failure of the Great Persecution was due in part to the fact that pagan and Christian neighbors usually got along rather well, contrary to myth. Constantine had no desire to fail (as had Diocletian) by encouraging conflict; Constantine's challenge was to keep the Christian church from tearing itself apart. Within the church, a centralized bureaucracy had not yet emerged, and the bishops reined supreme. Some (not all!) were obsessed with a search for "heretics". Once Christianity "became popular" a flood of new converts, many with little religious motivation, threatened to swamp the church. For those who had suffered under Diocletion the stampede of opportunists was - at best - a mixed blessing! Constantine constantly came down against the exclusionists, favoring an inclusive approach. In fact the evolution of Christianity into an intolerant movement, Drake points out, was not inevitable: internal conflicts had more to do its intolerance (later projected outward) than anything else. Julian's brief counter-revolution just fed internal paranoia and strengthened the hand of the extremists within Christianity. (How familiar! Radicalization of a movement due to unsuccessful external persecution combined with internal "purges" of deviants!) This is an excellent volume. If I were to recommend a "first read" for those wanting to understand fourth century Christianity, this would be The Book!
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38 of 39 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Reconsidering Constantine, July 21, 2000
By 
Thomas Sizgorich (Santa Barbara, CA USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Constantine and the Bishops: The Politics of Intolerance (Ancient Society and History) (Hardcover)
Drake has taken on and called into serious question some of the most deeply-entrenched notions current among scholars of late antiquity concerning not only the first Christian emperor, but also the very nature of early Christianity as a whole. Even as modern scholarship has moved away from the notion of a "life or death" struggle between pagans and Christians in the fourth and fifth centuries A.D., there has remained an assumption even among careful scholars that the religious intolerance which came to prevail in the later fourth and fifth centuries A.D. as the Roman empire became a Christian empire was in some sense native to Christianity as a faith system. It therefore follows from this dangerous assumption that outcroppings of intolerance and violence committed by members of the late antique Christian community need no further explanation than the faith of the perpetrators. Drake takes this assumption and its implications to task and argues that Christian intolerance in late antiquity has a specific historical and political basis, and that the Christianity Constantine envisioned upon his "conversion" was an inclusive one which was to have created a comparatively neutral public space with regard to religion, and which demanded only worship of a single benevolent creator, a notion very much in keeping with elite pagan religious and intellectual trends. This vision, however, was sublimated to a separate and distinct agenda advanced by such Christian hardliners as the historians and panegyrists Eusebius and Lactantius, for whom the history of the Christian community was an unceasing struggle against the "error" of paganism, and in whose eyes the defining traits of a "good Christian emperor" not only included all the traditional virtues of a Good Roman Emperor, but came to include also a militant advocacy of "orthodox Christianity," and an unwillingness to fully tolerate any other religious expression. Drake's book is an impressive pulling apart of time-worn and, as he frequently proves through careful consideration of primary source documentation, ill-founded ideological constructs upon which many modern notions of Constantine are based. Indeed, Constantine and the Bishops is a subtle, quietly profound study in subject formation and rhetorical determinacy which is nevertheless simply stated throughout and accessible to readers of every background.
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23 of 24 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Fine Study on When Christianity Became a Political Power, January 14, 2002
By 
This review is from: Constantine and the Bishops: The Politics of Intolerance (Ancient Society and History) (Hardcover)
Drake's "Constantine and the Bishops" is a fine study of the politicial, sociological and theological currents at the time when Christianity became a political power within the Roman Empire. Focusing on the reign of Constantine, but ranging from the persecution of Diocletian to the time of Theodosius, it offers a much more complicated view of both Christianity and Constantine's efforts to integrate Christianity into the structure of the Roman Empire. In particular, the book appreciates the variety of Christian practices and beliefs that existed throughout the (huge) empire and the constant struggle among many Christian groups to define Christianity along their own beliefs. We tend to see that variety only through the very colored lens of heresy and its suppresion. Constantine comes out rather well in this book; he is a far more sympathetic, complex and impressive person than represented in the writings of Eusebius, where he frequently appears as little more than a puppet of God. Where the book is weakest is in Drake's argument on how official Christianity became more intolerant. It certainly did after Constantine, but whether a Constantine could have avoided this result is not proven in the book. Where the book is strongest is in demonstrating that Constantine, while he might be considered a "Christian" emperor (he didn't receive baptism until he was on his deathbed), he still saw and ruled the Roman Empire with a keen knowledge of the Classical heritage. The book is also provides an excellent counterbalance to the impressions we might get from the writings of Eusebius and Athanasius, the winners in the Christian theological wars of that period. Overall, the book is very well-written (if in a leisurely fashion) and has superb notes and bibliography (the notes are as interesting as the text). It is not light reading, but if you are interested in the late Classical period or in the foundations of Christianity, this book is well worth reading.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
Early in November of the year 335, a remarkable meeting took place in Constantinople, the glittering new capital built by Constantine on the shores of the European Bosphorus. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
senatorial values, thirtieth jubilee, true belief cannot, pagan orators, variant beliefs, ancient thinking, late empire, civic elites, single bishop
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Eusebius of Caesarea, Eusebius of Nicomedia, Council of Nicaea, Great Persecution, Marcus Aurelius, Edict of Milan, Rational Actor, Edward Gibbon, Van Dyck, Council of Arles, Council of Tyre, Eastern Provincials, Hebrew Bible, John Chrysostom, Pliny the Younger, Maximin Daza, Sol Invictus, The Divine Institutes, Theodosian Code, Ammianus Marcellinus, Church of the Holy Sepulchre, Jacob Burckhardt, Peter Brown, Vision of the Cross, Bishop Alexander
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