Constantine, Divine Emperor of the Christian Golden Age

Constantine, Divine Emperor of the Christian Golden Age

Author: Jonathan Bardill

Publisher: Cambridge University Press

Published: 2012

Total Pages: 471

ISBN-13: 0521764238

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"Constantine was the first Roman emperor to convert to Christianity. The book explores the emperor's image as conveyed through literature, art, and architecture, and shows how Constantine reconciled the tradition of imperial divinity with his monotheistic faith. It demonstrates how the traditional themes and imagery of kingship were exploited to portray the emperor as the saviour of his people and to assimilate him to Christ. This is the first book to study simultaneously both archaeological and historical information to build a picture of the emperor's image and propaganda. It is extensively illustrated" --Provided by publisher.


The Emperor Constantine

The Emperor Constantine

Author: Hans A. Pohlsander

Publisher: Psychology Press

Published: 2004

Total Pages: 148

ISBN-13: 9780415319386

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First Published in 2004. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company.


Constantine and Eusebius

Constantine and Eusebius

Author: Timothy David Barnes

Publisher: Harvard University Press

Published: 1981

Total Pages: 472

ISBN-13: 9780674165311

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Here is the fullest available narrative history of the reigns of Diocletian and Constantine, and a new assessment of the part Christianity played in the Roman world of the third and fourth centuries.


Constantine the Great

Constantine the Great

Author: G. P. Baker

Publisher: Cooper Square Press

Published: 2001-08-09

Total Pages: 385

ISBN-13: 1461732085

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Roman Emperor Constantine is one of the most momentous figures in the history of Christianity, a ruler whose conversion turned the cult of Jesus into a world religion. Classical scholar Baker tells of the changing Roman world in which Constantine rose to power—an empire where feudalism was replacing the old senatorial government and the lands of the empire were split into two regions. It was also a place where customs from the East were replacing the old Roman values, preparing the way for the Byzantine Empire. Baker describes Constantine's unique conversion (which apparently did not prevent him from sacrificing to idols), his wars to control first the Roman army and then the Germans and the lands of Asia Minor, and finally the founding of Constantinople and the establishment of the monarchial system that dominated Europe for over a thousand years.


The Age of Constantine the Great (1949)

The Age of Constantine the Great (1949)

Author: Jacob Burckhardt

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2018-12-14

Total Pages: 388

ISBN-13: 0429870213

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Republished in 1949, Jacob Burckhardt’s brilliant study, first published in Germany in 1852, has survived all its critics and presents today perhaps a more intelligible and a more valid picture of events, their nexus, and their relevance than any later study. This English version is apt to the moment. No epoch of remote history can be so relevant to modern interests as the period of transition between the ancient and the medieval world, when a familiar order of things visibly died and was supplanted by a new. Other transitions become apparent only in retrospect; that of the age of Constantine, like our own, was patent to contemporaries. Old institutions, in the sphere of culture as of government, had grown senile; economic balances were altered; peoples hitherto on the peripheries of civilization demanded attention, and a new and revolutionary social doctrine with an enormous emotional appeal was spread abroad by men with a religious zeal for a new and authoritarian cosmopolitanism and with a religious certainty that their end justified their means. For us, contemporary developments have made the analogy inescapable, but Jacob Burckhardt’s insight led him to a singularly clear apprehension of the meaning of the transition almost a century ago, and the analogy implicit in his book is the more impressive as it was unpremeditated.


Constantine and the Conversion of Europe

Constantine and the Conversion of Europe

Author: A. H. M. Jones

Publisher: Read Books Ltd

Published: 2011-03-23

Total Pages: 235

ISBN-13: 1446547051

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Constantine the Great was Roman Emperor from 306 to 337 AD. As emperor, Constantine enacted many administrative, financial, social, and military reforms to strengthen the empire. The government was restructured and civil and military authority separated. A new gold coin, the solidus, was introduced to combat inflation. It would become the standard for Byzantine and European currencies for more than a thousand years.