PALLADINO, Adrien. Subverting Objects, Values, and Ideas: Material Transformations of the Cult of Saint across Late Antique Afro-Eurasia. In Lecture Series RomanIslam: Empowering the Sacred Spaces. 2023.
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Basic information
Original name Subverting Objects, Values, and Ideas: Material Transformations of the Cult of Saint across Late Antique Afro-Eurasia
Authors PALLADINO, Adrien.
Edition Lecture Series RomanIslam: Empowering the Sacred Spaces, 2023.
Other information
Original language English
Type of outcome Requested lectures
Field of Study 60401 Arts, Art history
Country of publisher Germany
Confidentiality degree is not subject to a state or trade secret
WWW URL
Organization unit Faculty of Arts
Keywords in English Cult of saints; relics; reliquaries; Spain; Italy; North Africa; Late Antiquity; Prudentius; cross-cultural
Tags International impact
Changed by Changed by: Alžběta Filipová, M.A., Ph.D., učo 203468. Changed: 12/1/2024 17:47.
Abstract
As remarked by Peter Brown, the “passing of secular opulence into the opulence of churches […] was a privileged moment in the alchemy of wealth,” highlighting “[…] how treasure on earth became treasure in heaven.” (Peter Brown, Through the Eye of a Needle, p. 300). This moment deeply impacted the new ideas, monuments, and artifacts linked with the cult of saints and their relics which flourished around late antique Afro-Eurasia from the fourth century CE onwards. Precious objects were replaced and removed from the system of exchange and ostentation for which they had been designed to be used within a new cult focused around sacred spaces dedicated to the special dead. At the same time, the symbolic and material values of the ancient Roman world were subverted by Christians. This applies, for example, to objects made of gold, ivory or silver, materials notably favored for ostentatious gifts, ornamental, and cosmetic uses among the aristocracy, which now went to the saints. In this lecture, I propose to analyze some remarkable surviving texts and artifacts which, from Prudentius to Augustine, help us to understand the modalities of this subversion and its social and cultural parameters.
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