ABSTRACT

This volume considers “lived space” as a scholarly approach to the past, showing how spatial approaches can present innovative views of the world of Late Antiquity, integrating social, economic and cultural developments and putting centre stage this fundamental dimension of social life.

Bringing together an international group of scholars working on areas as diverse as Britain, the Iberian Peninsula, Jordan and the Horn of Africa, this book includes burgeoning fields of study such as lived spaces in the context of ships and seafaring during this period. Chapters investigate the history, function and use of different spaces in their own right and identify the social and historical logic presiding over continuity and/or change. They also explore the fluidity of lived space in both its physical and conceptual dimensions, analysing issues like agency and intentionality as well as meaning and social relations. Space is the fundamental dimension of social life, the arena where it unfolds and the stage where social values and hierarchies are represented; analysis of space allows us to understand history through different means of shaping, occupying and controlling space. Considering Late Antiquity through a spatial perspective offers a complex and stimulating picture of this pivotal period, and this volume provides avenues for the development of further research and discussion in this area.

Lived Spaces in Late Antiquity is a fascinating resource for students and scholars interested in space and spatiality in the late antique world, as well as archaeology, classical studies and late antique studies more generally.

chapter 1|11 pages

Introduction

Lived spaces in Late Antiquity

part 1|83 pages

Visualising late antique spaces

chapter 3|14 pages

Suburban saints

Space, place and environment in Theodoret's Religious History

chapter 5|16 pages

Shipshape and Roman fashion

Space at sea in Late Antiquity

part 2|88 pages

Place-making and emplacement

chapter 6|19 pages

Space(s) in transition

The impact of early Christianity on the late antique Horn of Africa

chapter 7|30 pages

Making space in the Visigothic Kingdom

Church founders in sixth- and seventh-century Iberian epigraphy

chapter 8|21 pages

Holy objects on the move

Relics in Constantinople between city centre and urban periphery

chapter 9|16 pages

Space and place 1

Late antique churches and place remaking

part 3|69 pages

Space and meaning

chapter 12|19 pages

From Theoria to Pilgrimage

Ships, shores and sacred travel travel around the Mediterranean Sea in Late Antiquity

part 4|82 pages

Changing spaces

chapter 13|23 pages

Clean death or messy resilience?

Forum Traiani and Forum Romanum as activity spaces during the sixth century

chapter 15|17 pages

"Places of continuity"

Before, around, and after the end of the Roman villas in Central Italy

chapter 16|23 pages

Lived space and social change in late antique Rome

The Campus Martius 1