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- catalog contributor b3508815.
- catalog coverage "Rome (Italy) Church history.".
- catalog created "1913.".
- catalog date "1913".
- catalog date "1913.".
- catalog dateCopyrighted "1913.".
- catalog description "Appendices -- A. Chronological statement -- B. Aquila and Prisca or Priscilla -- C. The Pudens legend -- D. The family connexion of Clement the Bishop -- E. The tombs of the apostles St. Peter and St. Paul -- F. The cemeteries of Priscilla and Domitilla.".
- catalog description "Includes bibliographical references and indexes.".
- catalog description "Lecture I: Character of the theme -- The Rome of Claudius and of Nero -- Intercourse -- Population -- Slavery -- The 'Freedman' class -- Alien admixture -- The Jewish colony and its history -- Its privileges and characteristics -- Judaism attractive -- Proselytes and 'God-fearers' -- The synagogues -- Soil prepared for Christianity -- The Laureolus -- The Jews expelled by Claudius -- Aquila and Prisca at Corinth -- Their antecedents and position -- Their close intercourse with ST. Paul -- St. Paul at Ephesus -- His journey to Greece -- He writes to the Roman church from Corinth -- The Epistle to the Romans: an apologia -- St. Paul's proposed visit to Rome -- Three groups of Roman Christians addressed -- The impelling motive of the Epistle -- The Judaeo-Christians at Rome -- The salutations of Chap. xxvi. 1-223 -- Genuineness of the passage -- Criticism dealt with -- The church in the house of Prisca and Aquila -- Was the Ecclesia Domestica existent before 57 A.D.? -- The apostles Andronicus and Junias -- The households of Aristobulus and Narcissus -- The autobiographic passage Chap. xv. 14-29 -- 'Another man's foundation' -- Was the other man St. Peter?".
- catalog description "Lecture II: The Lukan authorship of the Acts -- Fragmentary character of the narrative -- The Acts written before 62 A.D. -- The closing verses of the Acts -- The Day of Pentecost -- The sojourning Romans -- The Twelve at Jerusalem -- The Hellenists and St. Stephen -- Consequences of St. Stephen's martyrdom -- Activity of St. Peter -- The vision at Joppa -- Conversion of Cornelius -- Missionaries at Antioch -- Barnabas sent to Antioch -- He seeks Saul -- The name Christiani -- Herod Agrippa persecutes the church -- St. Peter escapes from prison -- St. James and the brethren -- Value of tradition -- Oral tradition -- Early Christian written records -- Their destruction -- Apocryphal 'Acts' -- Criteria of authenticity -- Evidence for St. Peter's martyrdom at Rome -- 'Ascension of Isaiah' -- Clement of Rome -- Ignatius -- Dionysius of Corinth -- Irenaeus -- The Episcopal lists -- Eusebius of Caesarea -- Jerome -- The Petrine tradition universally accepted in East and West alike -- Archaeological evidence -- Portraits -- Sepulchral inscriptions -- Mosaics -- Frescoes -- The Petrine 'legends' based on fact -- The Preaching of Peter -- Local memories -- St. Peter at Rome -- The envoy of the Twelve -- Precedents of Samaria and Antioch -- Analogy of circumstances".
- catalog description "Lecture III: St. Peter encounters Simon Magus at Rome -- Eusebius on the story of Simon Magus -- His visit to Rome in Claudius' reign, and success -- Weighty evidence of Justin Martyr, of Irenaeus and Hippolytus -- The theories of Baur and Lipsius untenable -- Vogue of Oriental cults and teachers at Rome -- John Mark Peter's interpreter -- Origin of St. Mark's Gospel -- Its date -- Jerome's version of the Petrine tradition -- His sources of information -- Relations with Pope Damasus -- The Hieronymian tradition and that of the Liberian Catalogue -- The differences between them -- Chronological difficulties and discrepancies -- Attempted solution -- The Antiochean narrative [Acts xi and xii] examined -- Barnabas and Paul bear alms to Jerusalem, 46 A.D. -- They meet Peter on his return from Rome -- Peter makes Antioch the missionary centre of his work, 47-54 A.D. -- Peter with Barnabas at Corinth, 54 A.D. -- Testimony of the First Epistle to the Corinthians -- Accession of Nero -- Peter and Barnabas journey to Italy -- Evidence of Barnabas' missionary activity in Rome and North Italy -- No rivalry between St. Peter and St. Paul at Corinth -- Paul's delay in visiting Rome due to Peter's presence there, 54-56 A.D. -- First organisation of the Roman Church -- The trial of Julia Pomponia Graecina -- Inscription in the crypt of Lucina".
- catalog description "Lecture IV: Paul's visit to Jerusalem, Pentecost 57 A.D., and captivity at Caesarea -- Character of the administration of Felix -- Accuracy and trustworthiness of the Lukan narrative -- St. Paul's financial resources -- Indulgent treatment of St. Paul by Felix -- Influence of Drusilla -- Recall of Felix -- Elymas or Etoimos -- Attitude of Festus -- St. Paul's appeal to Caesar -- His motives in appealing -- St. Paul's journey from Puteoli to Rome -- He is delivered in charge to the Stratopedarch -- The favours accorded to him -- St. Paul invites the Jewish leaders to meet him -- His interviews with the chiefs of the synagogues -- The apostle's appeal to the Jews is fruitless -- The Epistles of the First Captivity -- The earlier groups -- Colossians, Ephesians, Philemon -- Their tone cheerful -- Release expected -- Many friends surround the Apostle -- Mark, the cousin of Barnabas, at Alexandria -- His visit to Rome and mission to Colossae -- The Epistle to the Philippians -- Changed situation -- Friends absent -- Issue of trial in doubt but Paul hopeful -- The letter of a friend to friends -- Discords at Philippi -- The 'true yoke-fellow' -- Clement -- Caesar's household -- St. Paul is set at liberty -- Probable course of the trial".
- catalog description "Lecture V: A high priestly embassy in Rome -- Growth of hostility between Jew and Christian -- The Christians accused of anarchism and secret crimes -- St. Peter's last visit to Rome in 63 A.D. -- The First Epistle of St. Peter -- It's genuiness -- The epistle written at Rome -- Its literary indebtedness to other New Testament writings -- St. Peter acquainted with the Epistle to the Romans and Ephesians -- mark and Silvanus with Peter at Rome -- The great fire of July 19, 64 A.D. -- Rumour attributes the fire to Nero -- Steps taken by Nero to efface the rumour -- The Pisonian conspiracy and is suppression -- The charges brought against the Christians -- The Tacitean account of their sufferings -- Character of the Neronian persecution -- The personal act of Nero -- Tigelinus, the active agent of Nero's cruelty -- The Christians not implicated in the burning of Rome -- Origin of the charge of incendiarism -- Apocalptic utterances -- Tigellinus and Apollonius of Ryana: a parallel -- Atheism, Thyestean feats, Oedipodean intercourse -- Hatred of the human race, 'Institutum Neronianum' -- 'Crimina adhaerentia Nomini' -- Christian contemporary evidence -- The spectacle in the Vatican Gardens -- The arrest of the great multitude, end of April 65 A.D. -- Comparison of evidence from Tacitus, Sustonius and Orosius fixes the date -- Persecution in the provinces".
- catalog description "Lecture VI: Deaths of St. Peter and St. Paul at Rome -- Their tombs piously preserved -- They were not martyred on the same day -- Manner of their deaths -- How the mistake as to a common date arose -- Statement of Prudentius -- The 'Quo Vadis?' story examined -- St. Peter's crucifixion in the early summer of 65 A.D. -- The Epistle to the Hebrews -- Addressed to Judaeo-Christians at Rome -- Internal and external evidence for this -- The Epistle never received as Pauline in Rome or the West -- Tertullian names Barnabas as the author -- Barnabas well qualified to write this epistle -- Sent to Rome, as an eirenicon -- The personal references support the Barnabean hypothesis -- The Pastoral Epistles -- St. Paul's second imprisonment at Rome -- His sense of desertion -- His death, 67 A.D. -- The Apocalypse written in 70 A.D. -- Statements of Irenaeus and Origen considered -- Eusebius' use of his authorities -- Evidence of Victorinus and Jerome -- The book reflects contemporary history -- Neronian persecution -- Events of 69 A.D. -- Burning of the Capitol -- Domitian in power, Jan. to June, 70 A.D. -- Nerva Consul, 71 A.D. -- Temple of Jerusalem still standing -- The number of the beast -- Nero Caesar -- The Apocalypse a Neronian document -- Nero is Anti-Christ -- The Nero legend -- Armageddon -- Impressions of an eye-witness -- Earthquakes and convulsions of nature -- The islands of Patmos and Thera".
- catalog description "Lecture VII: The first century episcopal succession of Rome -- The Jewish Synagogue and the Christian Ecclesia -- The official ministry in the early church -- Duties and position of episcopi -- Pastors and stewards with cure of souls -- They form an inner Presbyterate -- Its president the bishop -- Apostles, prophets, teachers and their functions -- The Didache an untrustworthy authority for the fist century -- The genuine Epistle of Clement to the Corinthians -- Not written in 96 A.D. but in beginning of 70 A.D. -- The recent examples of our own time -- The Neronian persecution fresh in memory -- The sudden and successive troubles and calamities of 69 A.D. -- Internal evidence of the Epistle to its early date -- Church organisation -- Christology -- New Testament quotations -- The daily sacrifice at Jerusalem had not ceased -- The Corinthian dissensions -- Predisposing circumstances, 66-68 A.D. -- Reference to the Phoenix -- Episcopal succession -- Apostolical regulations -- The disturbers of the peace at Corinth rebuked -- Force of the work apxalov -- The bearers of the Epistle to Corinth -- No allusion to Clement as the writer -- Authoritative position of Clement in 96 A.D. -- The epistle belongs to an earlier time -- Written by him as secretary to the Presbyterate -- Interesting inscription".
- catalog description "Lecture VIII: Attitude of the Flavian emperors to the Christians -- A quarter of a century of moderation -- Titus personally hostile -- 'The Shepherd' of Hermas: a Flavian writing -- Blunder of the Muratorion fragmentist -- The notice in the 'Liberian Catalogue' -- The Muratorian and Liberian statements derived from a common source -- Hermas confused with the presbyter pastor -- Patristic testimony supports the early date -- Irenaeus, Clement of Alexandria, Tertullian -- Unity of 'The Shepherd' -- It contains a real life story -- Hermas a contemporary of Clement of Rome -- Harnack's views discussed -- The book in three parts, but the period covered by it short -- Hermas' references to the Neronian persecution -- To the organisation of the church -- Its primitive character -- Signs of an evolutionary movement -- Contentions about precedence -- Growth of a monarchal episcopate -- The persecution of Domitian -- In its original fiscal -- The didrachma tax -- Many Christian of high position suffer -- Flavius Clemens put to death -- His wife Flavia Domitilla banished -- Flavius Sabinus, father and son -- Flavius Clemens the Consul and Clemens the bishop -- A third contemporary Clemens -- M. Arrecinus Clemens is consul 94 A.D. -- He is put to death by his relative Domitian -- The two Flavia Domitillas -- The 'Acts of Nereus and Achilles' -- Plautilla the sister of Clemens the Consul -- Relationship between the Flavian and Arrocinian families -- Is Clement the bishop brother of Arrecinus Clemens" -- The death of M' Acilius Glabrio -- The Acilian crypt in the cemetery of Priscilla -- Conclusion".
- catalog extent "xiii, 296 p. ;".
- catalog hasFormat "Church in Rome in the first century.".
- catalog identifier "0790519402 (microfiche)".
- catalog isFormatOf "Church in Rome in the first century.".
- catalog isPartOf "ATLA Historical Monographs Collection. Series 2 (1894-1923). net".
- catalog isPartOf "ATLA monograph preservation program ATLA fiche 1987-1940. div".
- catalog isPartOf "Bampton lectures ; 1913.".
- catalog isPartOf "The Bampton lectures for 1913".
- catalog issued "1913".
- catalog issued "1913.".
- catalog language "eng".
- catalog publisher "London ; New York : Longmans, Green,".
- catalog relation "Church in Rome in the first century.".
- catalog spatial "Rome (Italy) Church history.".
- catalog subject "BR45 .B3 1913".
- catalog subject "Church history Primitive and early church, approximately 30-600.".
- catalog subject "Church history Primitive and early church, ca. 30-600.".
- catalog tableOfContents "Appendices -- A. Chronological statement -- B. Aquila and Prisca or Priscilla -- C. The Pudens legend -- D. The family connexion of Clement the Bishop -- E. The tombs of the apostles St. Peter and St. Paul -- F. The cemeteries of Priscilla and Domitilla.".
- catalog tableOfContents "Lecture I: Character of the theme -- The Rome of Claudius and of Nero -- Intercourse -- Population -- Slavery -- The 'Freedman' class -- Alien admixture -- The Jewish colony and its history -- Its privileges and characteristics -- Judaism attractive -- Proselytes and 'God-fearers' -- The synagogues -- Soil prepared for Christianity -- The Laureolus -- The Jews expelled by Claudius -- Aquila and Prisca at Corinth -- Their antecedents and position -- Their close intercourse with ST. Paul -- St. Paul at Ephesus -- His journey to Greece -- He writes to the Roman church from Corinth -- The Epistle to the Romans: an apologia -- St. Paul's proposed visit to Rome -- Three groups of Roman Christians addressed -- The impelling motive of the Epistle -- The Judaeo-Christians at Rome -- The salutations of Chap. xxvi. 1-223 -- Genuineness of the passage -- Criticism dealt with -- The church in the house of Prisca and Aquila -- Was the Ecclesia Domestica existent before 57 A.D.? -- The apostles Andronicus and Junias -- The households of Aristobulus and Narcissus -- The autobiographic passage Chap. xv. 14-29 -- 'Another man's foundation' -- Was the other man St. Peter?".
- catalog tableOfContents "Lecture II: The Lukan authorship of the Acts -- Fragmentary character of the narrative -- The Acts written before 62 A.D. -- The closing verses of the Acts -- The Day of Pentecost -- The sojourning Romans -- The Twelve at Jerusalem -- The Hellenists and St. Stephen -- Consequences of St. Stephen's martyrdom -- Activity of St. Peter -- The vision at Joppa -- Conversion of Cornelius -- Missionaries at Antioch -- Barnabas sent to Antioch -- He seeks Saul -- The name Christiani -- Herod Agrippa persecutes the church -- St. Peter escapes from prison -- St. James and the brethren -- Value of tradition -- Oral tradition -- Early Christian written records -- Their destruction -- Apocryphal 'Acts' -- Criteria of authenticity -- Evidence for St. Peter's martyrdom at Rome -- 'Ascension of Isaiah' -- Clement of Rome -- Ignatius -- Dionysius of Corinth -- Irenaeus -- The Episcopal lists -- Eusebius of Caesarea -- Jerome -- The Petrine tradition universally accepted in East and West alike -- Archaeological evidence -- Portraits -- Sepulchral inscriptions -- Mosaics -- Frescoes -- The Petrine 'legends' based on fact -- The Preaching of Peter -- Local memories -- St. Peter at Rome -- The envoy of the Twelve -- Precedents of Samaria and Antioch -- Analogy of circumstances".
- catalog tableOfContents "Lecture III: St. Peter encounters Simon Magus at Rome -- Eusebius on the story of Simon Magus -- His visit to Rome in Claudius' reign, and success -- Weighty evidence of Justin Martyr, of Irenaeus and Hippolytus -- The theories of Baur and Lipsius untenable -- Vogue of Oriental cults and teachers at Rome -- John Mark Peter's interpreter -- Origin of St. Mark's Gospel -- Its date -- Jerome's version of the Petrine tradition -- His sources of information -- Relations with Pope Damasus -- The Hieronymian tradition and that of the Liberian Catalogue -- The differences between them -- Chronological difficulties and discrepancies -- Attempted solution -- The Antiochean narrative [Acts xi and xii] examined -- Barnabas and Paul bear alms to Jerusalem, 46 A.D. -- They meet Peter on his return from Rome -- Peter makes Antioch the missionary centre of his work, 47-54 A.D. -- Peter with Barnabas at Corinth, 54 A.D. -- Testimony of the First Epistle to the Corinthians -- Accession of Nero -- Peter and Barnabas journey to Italy -- Evidence of Barnabas' missionary activity in Rome and North Italy -- No rivalry between St. Peter and St. Paul at Corinth -- Paul's delay in visiting Rome due to Peter's presence there, 54-56 A.D. -- First organisation of the Roman Church -- The trial of Julia Pomponia Graecina -- Inscription in the crypt of Lucina".
- catalog tableOfContents "Lecture IV: Paul's visit to Jerusalem, Pentecost 57 A.D., and captivity at Caesarea -- Character of the administration of Felix -- Accuracy and trustworthiness of the Lukan narrative -- St. Paul's financial resources -- Indulgent treatment of St. Paul by Felix -- Influence of Drusilla -- Recall of Felix -- Elymas or Etoimos -- Attitude of Festus -- St. Paul's appeal to Caesar -- His motives in appealing -- St. Paul's journey from Puteoli to Rome -- He is delivered in charge to the Stratopedarch -- The favours accorded to him -- St. Paul invites the Jewish leaders to meet him -- His interviews with the chiefs of the synagogues -- The apostle's appeal to the Jews is fruitless -- The Epistles of the First Captivity -- The earlier groups -- Colossians, Ephesians, Philemon -- Their tone cheerful -- Release expected -- Many friends surround the Apostle -- Mark, the cousin of Barnabas, at Alexandria -- His visit to Rome and mission to Colossae -- The Epistle to the Philippians -- Changed situation -- Friends absent -- Issue of trial in doubt but Paul hopeful -- The letter of a friend to friends -- Discords at Philippi -- The 'true yoke-fellow' -- Clement -- Caesar's household -- St. Paul is set at liberty -- Probable course of the trial".
- catalog tableOfContents "Lecture V: A high priestly embassy in Rome -- Growth of hostility between Jew and Christian -- The Christians accused of anarchism and secret crimes -- St. Peter's last visit to Rome in 63 A.D. -- The First Epistle of St. Peter -- It's genuiness -- The epistle written at Rome -- Its literary indebtedness to other New Testament writings -- St. Peter acquainted with the Epistle to the Romans and Ephesians -- mark and Silvanus with Peter at Rome -- The great fire of July 19, 64 A.D. -- Rumour attributes the fire to Nero -- Steps taken by Nero to efface the rumour -- The Pisonian conspiracy and is suppression -- The charges brought against the Christians -- The Tacitean account of their sufferings -- Character of the Neronian persecution -- The personal act of Nero -- Tigelinus, the active agent of Nero's cruelty -- The Christians not implicated in the burning of Rome -- Origin of the charge of incendiarism -- Apocalptic utterances -- Tigellinus and Apollonius of Ryana: a parallel -- Atheism, Thyestean feats, Oedipodean intercourse -- Hatred of the human race, 'Institutum Neronianum' -- 'Crimina adhaerentia Nomini' -- Christian contemporary evidence -- The spectacle in the Vatican Gardens -- The arrest of the great multitude, end of April 65 A.D. -- Comparison of evidence from Tacitus, Sustonius and Orosius fixes the date -- Persecution in the provinces".
- catalog tableOfContents "Lecture VI: Deaths of St. Peter and St. Paul at Rome -- Their tombs piously preserved -- They were not martyred on the same day -- Manner of their deaths -- How the mistake as to a common date arose -- Statement of Prudentius -- The 'Quo Vadis?' story examined -- St. Peter's crucifixion in the early summer of 65 A.D. -- The Epistle to the Hebrews -- Addressed to Judaeo-Christians at Rome -- Internal and external evidence for this -- The Epistle never received as Pauline in Rome or the West -- Tertullian names Barnabas as the author -- Barnabas well qualified to write this epistle -- Sent to Rome, as an eirenicon -- The personal references support the Barnabean hypothesis -- The Pastoral Epistles -- St. Paul's second imprisonment at Rome -- His sense of desertion -- His death, 67 A.D. -- The Apocalypse written in 70 A.D. -- Statements of Irenaeus and Origen considered -- Eusebius' use of his authorities -- Evidence of Victorinus and Jerome -- The book reflects contemporary history -- Neronian persecution -- Events of 69 A.D. -- Burning of the Capitol -- Domitian in power, Jan. to June, 70 A.D. -- Nerva Consul, 71 A.D. -- Temple of Jerusalem still standing -- The number of the beast -- Nero Caesar -- The Apocalypse a Neronian document -- Nero is Anti-Christ -- The Nero legend -- Armageddon -- Impressions of an eye-witness -- Earthquakes and convulsions of nature -- The islands of Patmos and Thera".
- catalog tableOfContents "Lecture VII: The first century episcopal succession of Rome -- The Jewish Synagogue and the Christian Ecclesia -- The official ministry in the early church -- Duties and position of episcopi -- Pastors and stewards with cure of souls -- They form an inner Presbyterate -- Its president the bishop -- Apostles, prophets, teachers and their functions -- The Didache an untrustworthy authority for the fist century -- The genuine Epistle of Clement to the Corinthians -- Not written in 96 A.D. but in beginning of 70 A.D. -- The recent examples of our own time -- The Neronian persecution fresh in memory -- The sudden and successive troubles and calamities of 69 A.D. -- Internal evidence of the Epistle to its early date -- Church organisation -- Christology -- New Testament quotations -- The daily sacrifice at Jerusalem had not ceased -- The Corinthian dissensions -- Predisposing circumstances, 66-68 A.D. -- Reference to the Phoenix -- Episcopal succession -- Apostolical regulations -- The disturbers of the peace at Corinth rebuked -- Force of the work apxalov -- The bearers of the Epistle to Corinth -- No allusion to Clement as the writer -- Authoritative position of Clement in 96 A.D. -- The epistle belongs to an earlier time -- Written by him as secretary to the Presbyterate -- Interesting inscription".
- catalog tableOfContents "Lecture VIII: Attitude of the Flavian emperors to the Christians -- A quarter of a century of moderation -- Titus personally hostile -- 'The Shepherd' of Hermas: a Flavian writing -- Blunder of the Muratorion fragmentist -- The notice in the 'Liberian Catalogue' -- The Muratorian and Liberian statements derived from a common source -- Hermas confused with the presbyter pastor -- Patristic testimony supports the early date -- Irenaeus, Clement of Alexandria, Tertullian -- Unity of 'The Shepherd' -- It contains a real life story -- Hermas a contemporary of Clement of Rome -- Harnack's views discussed -- The book in three parts, but the period covered by it short -- Hermas' references to the Neronian persecution -- To the organisation of the church -- Its primitive character -- Signs of an evolutionary movement -- Contentions about precedence -- Growth of a monarchal episcopate -- The persecution of Domitian -- In its original fiscal -- The didrachma tax -- Many Christian of high position suffer -- Flavius Clemens put to death -- His wife Flavia Domitilla banished -- Flavius Sabinus, father and son -- Flavius Clemens the Consul and Clemens the bishop -- A third contemporary Clemens -- M. Arrecinus Clemens is consul 94 A.D. -- He is put to death by his relative Domitian -- The two Flavia Domitillas -- The 'Acts of Nereus and Achilles' -- Plautilla the sister of Clemens the Consul -- Relationship between the Flavian and Arrocinian families -- Is Clement the bishop brother of Arrecinus Clemens" -- The death of M' Acilius Glabrio -- The Acilian crypt in the cemetery of Priscilla -- Conclusion".
- catalog title "The church in Rome in the first century an examination of various controverted questions relating to its history, chronology, literature and traditions : eight lectures / preached before the University of Oxford in the year 1913 on the foundation of the late Rev. John Bampton, M.A., Canon of Salisbury, by George Edmundson.".
- catalog type "Church history. fast".
- catalog type "text".