将埃德萨写入罗马帝国*

Q1 Arts and Humanities
John P. Kee
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引用次数: 0

摘要

叙利亚传统提供了一个特殊的机会来研究罗马晚期边境的人们如何在更大的地中海和近东世界的背景下表达当地社区的联系。在过去的十年中,叙利亚/叙利亚身份和罗马身份在古代晚期叙利亚-美索不达米亚已经成为越来越感兴趣的话题。然而,在集中研究种族问题时,对具体的地方关系的研究通常没有审查可能同样或更突出的群体认同的其他模式。这篇文章填补了这一空白,挖掘了在公元500年左右的关键世纪,写于埃德萨和关于埃德萨的三个叙利亚文本中构建地方和地区身份的非种族手段:《风格者伪约书亚编年史》、《埃德萨编年史》(540)和《尤菲米亚和哥特人》。尽管日期和体裁不同,这三篇文章展示了一套趋同的策略,使埃德萨及其邻国与整个罗马帝国和解。至关重要的是,这三个项目的本地归属概念都不关注种族标记,而是关注特定的地方:首先是城市。从文化地理学中相互依存的“地方”概念出发,本文展示了在这些文本中,地方身份是如何从城市、教堂和帝国的相互作用中产生的;埃德萨与更广阔的罗马世界的联系不是否定而是阐明了它作为一个社区的特殊性。此外,这种基于地点的识别方式也可以扩展到更大的区域社区,就像《约书亚记》在其最独特的时刻所做的那样。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Writing Edessa into the Roman Empire*
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.
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来源期刊
Studies in Late Antiquity
Studies in Late Antiquity Arts and Humanities-Classics
CiteScore
0.90
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0.00%
发文量
11
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