Week 2: Tuesday
HIST 203
Syllabus
Weekly lecture Outlines
Some primary sources for research papers
Videos:
Meet the Romans with Mary Beard: All Roads Lead to Rome (1 of 3; 59:06 min.):
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=osRb5yXmF5g
THE ORIGINS AND SPREAD OF CHRISTIANITY
c. 4 BCE – 30 CE | Lifetime of Jesus in Judaea |
c. 50 – 150 CE |
27 canonical texts of New Testament written:
|
66-70 | Jewish revolt in Judaea put down by Romans; Temple destroyed |
2nd cent. | Roman Empire at its height |
3rd cent. | Roman Empire in crisis (250s: persecution of Christians) |
284-305 | Diocletian (see Week 1) reorganizes Empire; persecutes Christians (leading to DONATISM) |
312-337 | Constantine (see Week 1) legalizes the practice of Christianity within the Empire (EDICT OF MILAN, 313) convenes the church Council of Nicaea in 325 (which rejects ARIANISM and produces the NICENE CREED) |
Early Christian concepts shared with pagan mystical religions include:
- baptism
- eternal salvation
- death and resurrection of a savior-god
- sacramental meal
- human brotherhood under a divine father
Early Christian concepts shared with Judaism include:
- monotheism: one eternal, omnipotent, unseen god
- messiah
- prophets
- angels
- miracles
- sacredness of Hebrew Bible
- importance of prayer, alms, tithing, fasting, pilgrimage to Jerusalem
- ritual use of bread and wine
Early Christian concepts not shared with Judaism or pagan mystical religions include:
- Trinity (one god, with three divine, co-equal, consubstantial, co-eternal persons: Father, Son, Holy Spirit)
original sin - Eucharist (Holy Communion)
- sacramental powers of priests (7 sacraments: baptism, confirmation, penance, Eucharist (communion), marriage, extreme unction, ordination)
- sacredness of New Testament
- administrative hierarchy: laypeople, parish priests, bishops, archbishops, patriarchs (bishops of Rome, Alexandria, Antioch, and, later, Constantinople)
Thursday:
The fourth and fifth centuries:
c. 375 – 600 | Germanic migrations into Western Empire (many tribes convert to Arianism) |
Late 300s – early 400s |
3 “Latin Doctors” of the Church:
|
391 | Emperor Theodosius I makes Christianity the Roman state religion |
395 | Death of Theodosius I; final division of empire into Eastern and Western halves |
410 | Sack of Rome by Visigoths (prompts St. Augustine of Hippo to write City of God) |
415 | Murder of Hypatia of Alexandria (click on the trailer for movie Agora [2010], or on this 10-minute documentary, with film clips, which is the end of a 50-minute documentary on Alexandria) |
455 | Sack of Rome by Vandals |
476 | End of Western Roman Empire with deposition of last Western emperor (Romulus Augustulus) by barbarian general Odovacer |