Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Writing Edessa into the Roman Empire*

View through CrossRef
The Syriac tradition presents an exceptional opportunity to investigate how the people of a late Roman frontier articulated local community affiliation against the backdrop of the larger Mediterranean and Near Eastern worlds. Over the last decade, Syrian/Syriac identity and Roman identity in late antique Syria-Mesopotamia have emerged as topics of increasing interest. In concentrating on ethnicity, however, studies of specifically local affiliations have generally left unexamined the other modes of group identification which may have been equally or more salient. This essay fills that gap by excavating non-ethnic means of constructing local and regional identity in three Syriac texts written in and about Edessa in the pivotal century around 500 CE: the Chronicle of Pseudo-Joshua the Stylite, the Chronicle of Edessa (540), and Euphemia and the Goth. Across their differences in date and genre, these three texts demonstrate a convergent set of strategies for reconciling Edessa and its neighbors to the Roman Empire at large. Crucially, all three project notions of local belonging which focus not on ethnic markers but on particular places: in the first instance, on the city. Drawing from cultural geography’s interdependent concept of “place,” the essay shows how in these texts local identity emerges from the interaction of city, church, and empire; Edessa’s connections to the wider Roman world serve not to negate but to articulate its specificity as a community. Moreover, such place-based means of identification could be extended to frame larger regional communities too, as Ps.-Joshua does in its most distinctive moments.
University of California Press
Title: Writing Edessa into the Roman Empire*
Description:
The Syriac tradition presents an exceptional opportunity to investigate how the people of a late Roman frontier articulated local community affiliation against the backdrop of the larger Mediterranean and Near Eastern worlds.
Over the last decade, Syrian/Syriac identity and Roman identity in late antique Syria-Mesopotamia have emerged as topics of increasing interest.
In concentrating on ethnicity, however, studies of specifically local affiliations have generally left unexamined the other modes of group identification which may have been equally or more salient.
This essay fills that gap by excavating non-ethnic means of constructing local and regional identity in three Syriac texts written in and about Edessa in the pivotal century around 500 CE: the Chronicle of Pseudo-Joshua the Stylite, the Chronicle of Edessa (540), and Euphemia and the Goth.
Across their differences in date and genre, these three texts demonstrate a convergent set of strategies for reconciling Edessa and its neighbors to the Roman Empire at large.
Crucially, all three project notions of local belonging which focus not on ethnic markers but on particular places: in the first instance, on the city.
Drawing from cultural geography’s interdependent concept of “place,” the essay shows how in these texts local identity emerges from the interaction of city, church, and empire; Edessa’s connections to the wider Roman world serve not to negate but to articulate its specificity as a community.
Moreover, such place-based means of identification could be extended to frame larger regional communities too, as Ps.
-Joshua does in its most distinctive moments.

Related Results

Hubungan Perilaku Pola Makan dengan Kejadian Anak Obesitas
Hubungan Perilaku Pola Makan dengan Kejadian Anak Obesitas
<p><em><span style="font-size: 11.0pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman',serif; mso-fareast-font-family: 'Times New Roman'; mso-ansi-language: EN-US; mso-fareast-langua...
Crescimento de feijoeiro sob influência de carvão vegetal e esterco bovino
Crescimento de feijoeiro sob influência de carvão vegetal e esterco bovino
<p align="justify"><span style="color: #000000;"><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"><span><span lang="pt-BR">É indiscutível a import...
Edessa Mozaiklerindeki Mitolojik Unsurlar Üzerine Değerlendirme
Edessa Mozaiklerindeki Mitolojik Unsurlar Üzerine Değerlendirme
Edessa (Şanlıurfa, Türkiye) Seleukoslar tarafından kurulmuş bir kenttir. Seleukosların zayıfladığı dönemde İÖ 132 - İS 242 yılları arasında Oshroene bölgesinde hüküm süren Edessa K...
A Wideband mm-Wave Printed Dipole Antenna for 5G Applications
A Wideband mm-Wave Printed Dipole Antenna for 5G Applications
<span lang="EN-MY">In this paper, a wideband millimeter-wave (mm-Wave) printed dipole antenna is proposed to be used for fifth generation (5G) communications. The single elem...
Architecture of the Eastern Roman Empire
Architecture of the Eastern Roman Empire
The topic of architecture of the eastern parts in the Roman Empire is wide-ranging geographically and broad-ranging chronologically, including architecture that ranges from Greece ...

Back to Top