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Women and Death Rituals in Late Antiquity

Forming the Christian Identity

Bod
Erschienen am 01.03.2012, Auflage: 1. Auflage
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Bibliografische Daten
ISBN/EAN: 9783846583739
Sprache: Englisch
Umfang: 164

Beschreibung

Widely scattered primary data from late antiquity confirm that Roman-Christian families managed the rituals for death, burial, and commemoration of the dead at the domestic level. Household worship was regulated by Roman law, which explains in large part the lack of any serious interest by the emergent church in funerary matters until the mid-eighth century. During the interim therefore, Christian women as the primary caregivers and ritual specialists of the 'familia' assisted the dying, prepared the corpse for burial, lamented the deadin song, poetry, music, drama, and dancehosted funerary banquets, and remembered deceased family at the tomb. Furthermore, women were patrons and administrators of cemeteries, catacombs, martyr-shrines, and voluntary associations that buried deceased members. It was not until ca.750 that the Frankish bishops requested the nuns at the abbey in Chelles to compile the rituals for Christian dying, death, and burial. The result was a sacramentary of funerary liturgy called the Vatican Gelasian, the forerunner of the sacrament 'extrema unctio'. This fascinating history begs the question: Just how much did women contribute to an early Christian identity?

Autorenportrait

Ms. Mogen returned to higher learning in 2005 after retiring from a long and successful career as a public school teacher. Intrigued by the lack of women's history in early Christianity, she completed a Master of Arts in Religious Studies at the University of Calgary (Canada) in 2011. Her current PhD research concerns women's performance of lament.

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