Rhydcymerau, Llandeilo,
CARMARTHESHIRE,
UNITED KINGDOM
$45.72
Add this copy of Death of Classical Paganism Smith, John Holland to cart. $45.72, Sold by Gareth Roberts rated 5.0 out of 5 stars, ships from Rhydcymerau, Llandeilo, CARMARTHESHIRE, UNITED KINGDOM, published 1977 by Geoffrey Chapman (An imprint of Cassell).
Publisher:
Geoffrey Chapman (An imprint of Cassell)
Published:
1977
Language:
English
Alibris ID:
17054481658
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Seller's Description:
Reader copy. Ex-library, hardback with D/J and plastic jacket, usual stamps/markings. 1976 publication by Geoffrey Chapman Publishers with 280 pages. Slight shelf wear/bump damage to the boards, slight lean to the spine, page edges little grubby otherwise a clean copy. Ready for immediate dispatch from UK. 24F*
Add this copy of The Death of Classical Paganism to cart. $54.00, good condition, Sold by Ancient World Books rated 5.0 out of 5 stars, ships from Toronto, ON, CANADA, published 1976 by Geoffrey Chapman Publishers.
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Seller's Description:
Very Good in Very Good dust jacket. 0225660970. Shelfwear book and dustjacket. Rounding to top of spine. Light pencil underlining on a few pages.; It is a study of the Roman world in the first five centuries after Christ, and it tells the story of the historically improbable oddity of how a religious cult centered on an obscure construction worker living in the backwaters of a great Empire supplants the sophisticated Classical European religious worldview that had been embraced for thousands of years. Of particular interest to me was the story of Julian the Apostate, the last Roman emperor to openly embrace paganism. The author generously devotes an entire chapter to this remarkable personage. Although Julian was a nephew of Emperor Constantine and was raised as a Christian, he renounced the "new" religion when he became an adult and embraced the gods of his fathers. Because Julian ruled the Empire for a scant three years, he had insufficient time to turn back the tide of religious history, and we are left to wonder how things might have been different if he had ruled for 30 years instead. The author's sympathetic portrayal of this little-known Emperor lent a touching air of wistfulness to the sad story of the clash of Christianity with Paganism.; 280 pages.