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E-raamat: Episcopal Elections 250-600: Hierarchy and Popular Will in Late Antiquity [Oxford Scholarship Online e-raamatud]

(Teacher at the Dragon School, Oxford)
  • Oxford Scholarship Online e-raamatud
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Peter Norton covers a topic of great relevance to students of early Church history and late antiquity alike. He challenges the conventional view that after the adoption of Christianity by the Roman empire the local community lost its voice in the appointment of bishops, and argues that this right remained in theory and practice for longer than is normally assumed. Given that bishops became important to the running of the empire at the local level, a proper understanding of how they came into office is essential for our understanding of the later empire.
Abbreviations x
Introduction
1(17)
Legislation and theory
18(34)
The electorate: local communities and public disorder
52(29)
Imperial intervention
81(37)
Provinces and patriarchs: organizational structures
118(27)
The metropolitan system in the West
145(17)
The Eastern metropolitans
162(15)
Corruption, constraint, and nepotism
177(38)
Three disputed elections
215(24)
Conclusion
239(7)
Appendix: Greek and Latin texts of canons relating to episcopal elections 246(14)
Bibliography 260(1)
Primary Sources 260(2)
Secondary literature 262(5)
Index 267


Peter Norton teaches at the Dragon School, Oxford.