Margins and Peripheries in Christian History: Volume 61

Peter Marshall editor David Ceri Jones editor Charlotte Methuen editor

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Cambridge University Press

Publishing:31st Aug '25

£65.00

This title is due to be published on 31st August, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

Margins and Peripheries in Christian History: Volume 61 cover

This volume explores Christianity's past by considering it in relation to various aspects that have been considered marginal or peripheral.

This volume explores Christianity's past by considering it in relation to, and from the perspective of, a variety of aspects that have been considered marginal or peripheral; these are in many cases geographical margins and peripheries but also include social, cultural or theological marginalization or historiographical neglect.Studies in Church History 61 takes as its theme Margins and Peripheries in Christian History. For most of its existence, Christianity – a religion born on the eastern edge of the Roman Empire – has been influenced by its margins and peripheries. In the history of Christianity, as in other contexts, margins and peripheries are paradoxical concepts. To label something or somewhere as 'marginal' or 'peripheral' is to declare it to be of lesser significance or importance. Yet for Christian churches of differing complexions, supposed margins and peripheries have often been sources of experiment, innovation and renewal; places where essential traditions have been preserved; locations of encounter, conversion and resistance; and sites where meaning and worth are negotiated and defined. The volume's articles offer a fresh look at Christianity's past by considering it in relation to, and from the perspective of, a variety of aspects that have been considered marginal or peripheral.

ISBN: 9781009679404

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: unknown

664 pages