Artigo Revisado por pares

The invention of history in the later Roman world. The conversion of Isauria in The Life of Conon

2009; Cambridge University Press; Volume: 59; Linguagem: Inglês

10.1017/s0066154600000922

ISSN

2048-0849

Autores

Philip Wood,

Tópico(s)

Byzantine Studies and History

Resumo

Abstract The historiography of the later Roman Empire has emphasised the centripetal results of Christianisation, in which the new religion completed the earlier Hellenisation and destroyed independent languages, histories and notions of identity in Anatolia and much of Syria. However, the discourse of ethnic origins, drawn from Christian stories as well as the Classical past, allowed different kinds of cultural independence to survive this process on the edges of the Empire. While more famous cases are provided by the Armenians, Suryoye and Goths, here I examine an ultimately unsuccessful attempt at historical invention and cultural independence, that of the Isaurians from the end of the fifth century. I begin by discussing the stereotypes employed by a Roman élite to distinguish themselves from ‘barbarians’, both within and outside the empire, before examining the attempts of Isaurians to contest this in history and hagiography.

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