Why Rome Converted? - Rise of Christianity Explained

Dec 24, 2024Channel
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Invicta
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PublishedDec 24, 2024
Duration2:04:21
Video IDdgIHChlPs50
Languageen
CategoryEducation
PrivacyPublic
Made for KidsNo
Video TypeRegular Video

Performance Metrics

Views141.3K
Likes3.6K
Comments1.2K
Engagement Rate3.37%
Likes per 100 views2.54
Comments per 1K views8.30

Description

A historical discussion of how Christianity managed to take over the Roman Empire in such a short time? Try out Miro's infinite white board: https://miro.pxf.io/c/5922091/1391984/16613 We begin by asking the Why's of the situation behind the rise of Christianity. Why did it appeal to the masses? Why did it survive suppression? Why did the Emperors embrace it? Finding answers is difficult as we actually have little concrete evidence to go on for the history of early Christianity and especially the on-the-ground details of how things happened. In this video we seek to provide answers in several steps. In the first step we look at the high level milestones of the spread of Christianity. We then review some of the leading hypotheses which seek to explain why Christianity was successful. However these are all gross over simplifications based on a limited set of data. We therefore spend the bulk of the video discussing with a historian about what the complex transition was like from the ground level. Suggested readings from Kimble (https://www.reddit.com/user/tinyblondeduckling/): My first recommendation is Peter Brown’s The Rise of Western Christendom, 200-1000. First published in 1996, revised (and nearly doubled in page count) and republished in 2003 and then revised again in 2013, this broad level history of early Christianity is a classic for a reason. Over the course of his career, Brown has published widely on Late Antiquity and early Christianity - he was one of the first scholars to bring attention to Late Antiquity as a discrete period to begin with - and this book brings that expertise to bear. Brown’s writing is accessible to all audiences and covers an incredible range of material on the growth of early Christianity, including following it into the Medieval world. While Brown’s book is a bit more traditional in its coverage, I would also like to highlight in my second recommendation a totally different approach to thinking about the history of religion. Virginia Burrus’ Late Ancient Christianity works within a lived religion approach, telling the history of early Christians not from the perspective of top-level governments and institutions but rather takes as its starting point Christians’ beliefs and practices themselves. By exploring how early Christians thought about and defined themselves and went about their practice, Burrus gives a helpful complement to Brown’s narrative. Timestamps: 00:00 Intro 04:09 Key Dates 07:00 Major Hypotheses 10:58 Historical Interview 12:25 Religious Marketplace 24:52 Roman Religion 32:02 Mithraism 37:19 Judaism 40:08 Sol Invictus 43:16 Manichaeism 47:17 Christianity on the Local Level 50:24 What is the appeal? 59:04 Spread across the Empire 01:10:18 Material culture 01:19:13 Daily practices 01:27:06 Major Heresies 01:32:43 Christianity on the High Level 01:59:00 Conclusion #history #documentary #rome

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