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    Authority and Asceticism from Augustine to Gregory the Great

    Authority and Asceticism from Augustine to Gregory the Great by Leyser, Conrad;

    Series: Oxford Historical Monographs;

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      • Publisher's listprice GBP 212.50
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    95 943 Ft

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    Product details:

    • Publisher Clarendon Press
    • Date of Publication 5 October 2000

    • ISBN 9780198208686
    • Binding Hardback
    • No. of pages236 pages
    • Size 224x146x17 mm
    • Weight 395 g
    • Language English
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    Short description:

    When barbarians invaded the Roman Empire in the years around 400 AD, Christian monks hid in their cloisters - or so it is often assumed. Conrad Leyser shows is that monks in the early medieval West were, in fact, pioneers in the creation of a new language of moral authority. He describes the making of this tradition over two centuries from St Augustine to St Benedict and Gregory the Great.

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    Long description:

    Conrad Leyser examines the formation of the Christian ascetic tradition in the western Roman Empire during the period of the barbarian invasions, c.400-600. In an aggressively competitive political context, one of the most articulate claims to power was made, paradoxically, by men who had renounced 'the world', committing themselves to a life of spiritual discipline in the hope of gaining entry to an otherworldly kingdom. Often dismissed as mere fanaticism or open hypocrisy, the language of ascetic authority, Conrad Leyser shows, was both carefully honed and well understood in the late Roman and early medieval Mediterranean. Dr Leyser charts the development of this new moral rhetoric by abbots, teachers, and bishops from the time of Augustine of Hippo to that of St Benedict and Gregory the Great.

    Breaks new and important ground in the study of episcopal and monastic authority in late antiquity ... this is an important book for historians of late antiquity, church historians, ascetical theologians, historians of monasticism, and historians of Christian thought. In every respect, this is a superlative study by a scholar whose work is significant.

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