IPM Home
IPM Publisher List
Sign In
Shopping Cart
SEARCH
BROWSE
Titles A-Z
Authors A-Z
View Catalog
Forthcoming Titles
SUBJECTS
Architecture
Art
Biography/Autobiography
Body Mind Spirit
Business
Drama
Education
Fiction
Foreign Language Studies
Gardening
History
Juvenile Fiction
Language Arts
Literary Collections
Literary Criticism
Medical
Music
Nature
Performing Arts
Philosophy
Poetry
Political Science
Psychology
Reference
Religion
Science
Social Science
Sports
Travel
True Crime
Partners
Potomac Books
Capital Books
Dying To Live
Stylus Books

 
   
Pagan and Christian
Religious change in early medieval Europe
 
144 pages; 5 1/2" x 8 1/2"

Paperback
$24.00    $21.60
Available: September 2010
978-0-7156-3754-8

Description:

The conversion to Christianity was a key cultural process that saw the transformation of Europe from classical to medieval world. The growth of the Church has been closely linked with the development of other key institutions, such as the state. It has also been highlighted as a factor in changing attitudes to issues such as the body, time and landscapes. While the study of conversion in the early medieval world has increasingly become a focus for both historians and archaeologists, there has been a lack of engagement with the methodological and theoretical problems underpinning any attempt to explore the archaeology of belief. This book, illustrated with case studies and examples drawn from a range of sources, including the ‘Celtic’ west, Anglo-Saxon England, Scandinavia and Eastern Europe, tackles some of these important issues. In particular it explores two undertheorised aspects of conversion: the relationship between archaeology and belief, and an attempt to re-centre the ‘pagan’ as a key element in the conversion process.


About The Author:

David Petts is Lecturer in Archaeology, Durham University.