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A History of the Early Church, Vol 2

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Brilliantly written and documented, A History of the Early Church is a seminal work, important for laymen, indispensable for students. Hans Lietzmann's four-volume history of Christianity from its ...
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  • 01 June 1993
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Brilliantly written and documented, A History of the Early Church is a seminal work, important for laymen, indispensable for students. Hans Lietzmann's four-volume history of Christianity from its founding through the early Church Fathers and the origins of monasticism is published here in a new two-volume paperback edition. The whole work is complemented by a foreword and updated bibliography by W.H.C. Frend.
Volume 2 contains the third and fourth volumes of the original version: Part III: Constantine to Julian, and Part IV: The Era of the Church Fathers. Part II covers the period in which the Church, emerging from the persecution under Diocletian, found comparative security under Constantine. It also encompasses the stormy years of the Arian controversy and the short-lived attempt at a pagan revival under Julian the Apostate. Part IV concludes with treatment of the dramatic encounters between Ambrose and the Emperor Theodosius I; the account of Gregory of Nyssa, Gregory Nazianzus, Basil of Caesarea, and their formative influence on Eastern Orthodoxy; and an exhaustive final chapter on the origins of monasticism.
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Price: $34.95
Pages: 542
Publisher: Boydell & Brewer Inc.
Imprint: James Clarke
Series: Library of Ecclesiastical History
Publication Date: 01 June 1993
Trim Size: 5.98 X 8.98 in
ISBN: 9780227179291
Format: Paperback
BISACs: RELIGION / History, History of religion, RELIGION / General, Religion and beliefs
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Lietzmann's work stands on its own. It was the fruit of forty years' work, by an exceptionally gifted mind, on original sources connected with the progress of the early church. It is also a pioneering work in the interdisciplinary approach to this movement. . . . It remains a work for all students of the early centuries of the Christian era.
— W.H.C. Frend