Sacred Britannia The gods and rituals of Roman Britain

Miranda J. Aldhouse-Green

Book - 2018

Two thousand years ago, the Romans sought to absorb into their empire what they regarded as a remote, almost mythical island on the very edge of the known world - Britain. The expeditions of Julius Caesar and the invasion of AD 43 brought fundamental and lasting changes to the island. Not least among these was a pantheon of new Classical deities and religious systems, along with a clutch of exotic eastern cults including Christianity. But what of Britannia and her own home-grown deities? What cults and cosmologies did the Romans encounter and how did they in turn react to them? Under Roman rule, the old gods were challenged, adopted, adapted, absorbed and re-configured. In this fresh and innovative new account, Miranda Aldhouse-Green balanc...es literary, archaeological and iconographic evidence (and scrutinizes their shortcomings and how we interpret them) to illuminate the complexity of religion and belief in Roman Britain, and the two-way traffic of cultural exchange and interplay between imported and indigenous cults. Despite the remoteness of this period, on the threshold between prehistory and history, many of the forces, tensions, ideologies and issues of identity at work are still relevant today.

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Subjects
Published
London ; New York : Thames & Hudson 2018.
Language
English
Main Author
Miranda J. Aldhouse-Green (author)
Physical Description
256 pages, xv pages of plates : illustrations (some color), map ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 245-251) and index.
ISBN
9780500252222
  • Prologue: Introducing a Sacred Isle
  • Chapter 1. The Druids: Priesthood, power and politics
  • Chapter 2. Foreign Conquest and Shifting Identities: New cults and old traditions
  • Chapter 3. Marching as to War: Religion and the Roman army
  • Chapter 4. Town and Country: Urban devotions and rural rituals
  • Chapter 5. Cosmology in Roman Britain: Sky, earth and water
  • Chapter 6. Gut-Gazers and God-Users: Divination, curing and cursing
  • Chapter 7. Subverting Symbols: Beads, horns and seeing triple
  • Chapter 8. Candles in the Dark and Spice from the Orient: Mystery cults
  • Chapter 9. The Coming of Christ: From many gods to one
  • Chapter 10. Journey into Avernus: Death, burial and perceptions of afterlife
  • Chapter 11. Worshipping Together: Acceptance, integration and antagonism
  • Epilogue: Closing the Curtain: Reflecting on things past
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
  • Acknowledgments
  • Picture Credits
  • Index
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Aldhouse-Green (Bog Bodies Uncovered) presents an intricate collage of the various religions that collided in Britain from Claudius's conquest in 55 BCE to the early fifth century CE. During this period, disparate faiths met, shared space, and borrowed from one another after the Romans took control of England, which, at the time of their arrival, was a strange, wild space. Aldhouse-Green begins with a discussion of the Druids then covers the various religions that came along with the Roman empire. Not only did Rome bring its imperial Jupiter worship but it also imported soldiers and mercenaries from far-flung places. An auxiliary of Syrian archers, for example, built a temple to the Syrian goddess Cybele near Hadrian's wall. Aldhouse-Green considers what statues, relief carvings, and tombstones say about ancient peoples' faiths (her section on Roman-Gallic tombs and human sacrifice is particularly revealing). With careful, methodical precision, Aldhouse-Green will convince readers of the accuracy of the facts and the reliability of her timelines about the intermingling of faiths. This will be an invaluable book for anyone interested in the early mixing and hybridized of faith in the ancient world. (Aug.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

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