The Monks of the Nag Hammadi Codices: Contextualising a Fourth-Century Monastic Community: Nag Hammadi and Manichaean Studies, cartea 107
Autor Paula Tuttyen Limba Engleză Hardback – 10 oct 2024
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9789004695740
ISBN-10: 9004695745
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0.62 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Seria Nag Hammadi and Manichaean Studies
ISBN-10: 9004695745
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0.62 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Seria Nag Hammadi and Manichaean Studies
Notă biografică
Paula Tutty, Ph.D. (2019), University of Oslo, is a freelance researcher and a former Visiting Research Fellow in the UiO Department of Theology. Her publications include several articles on early Christianity and Nag Hammadi.
Cuprins
Preface
Figures
Abbreviations
Prologue: Searching for the Footprints
1 Focus and Structure
2 Turning to the Source Material
3 Social Theories and Monks
1 Background to the Letters
1 Turning to the Letters
2 Reviewing the Evidence
3 Identifying Monastic Material—Problems and Solutions
2 Fourth-century monasticism
1 The Development of Monastic Terminology
2 Christians as Individuals
3 Types of Monastic Living
4 Monastic Norms
5 Monks and Deviancy
6 Looking the part
7 The Monks of the Letters
8 Individual Lives
3 The Monastic Landscape
1 Late Antique Egypt—Geography
2 Population Size
3 The Location of the Monastic Community
4 Evidence from the Find Site
5 Internal Clues in the Letters
6 Monasteries and their Material Remains
7 The Local Pachomian Monasteries
8 The Monasteries of the Western Desert
9 Monastic Dwelling Places
10 Pachomian Domestic Arrangements
11 Evidence for Monastic Foodstuffs
12 Jars and Storage
13 Monasteries, Monastics and Books
4 The Early Monastic Economy
1 Monks and their Labours
2 Weaving
3 Property Ownership
4 Gifts from Patrons
5 Medicine and Ritual Texts
6 Creating an Income
7 Agricultural Work
8 Monks as Scribes
9 Monastic Trade and Travel
10 Travels for the Sake of the Monastic Economy
11 Economic Dealings in the Nag Hammadi Letters
5 Egyptian Monasticism and its Social Context
1 Power and Identity in Late Antique Egypt
2 Social Networking in Egypt
3 The World of the Fourth-Century Alopex Family
4 Evidence from Chenoboskia
5 Evidence in the NHC Letters
6 Interconnections and Social Ties
6 Monastic Travels
1 Moving About in the Late Roman Empire
2 Travel to and from the Monastery
3 Monastic Tourism
4 Monks on the move
5 Authorised Travel
6 Moving Away—Travel to the Edges of Egypt and Beyond
7 Movement and Monastic Literature
7 A Monastic Manuscript Culture
1 Literacy in Early Monasteries
2 Material Evidence for Monastic Literacy and Education
3 Classical Education
4 Language Choice in the Letters
5 Codices as Material Artefacts
6 The Books of Fourth- and Fifth-Century Monks
7 Monastic Codices—the Archaeological Evidence
8 Dating Codices
9 Coptic Codices and their Owners
10 Evidence for Book Ownership in the Cartonnage
11 Monastic Book Production
Scriptoria
12 Bookbinding
13 Papyrus as a Commodity
14 Scribes of the Nag Hammadi Codices
Epilogue: Footprints Uncovered
Appendix1: Translations of Monastic and Christian letters from the Cartonnage Material
Bibliography
Index
Figures
Abbreviations
Prologue: Searching for the Footprints
1 Focus and Structure
2 Turning to the Source Material
3 Social Theories and Monks
1 Background to the Letters
1 Turning to the Letters
2 Reviewing the Evidence
3 Identifying Monastic Material—Problems and Solutions
2 Fourth-century monasticism
1 The Development of Monastic Terminology
2 Christians as Individuals
3 Types of Monastic Living
4 Monastic Norms
5 Monks and Deviancy
6 Looking the part
7 The Monks of the Letters
8 Individual Lives
3 The Monastic Landscape
1 Late Antique Egypt—Geography
2 Population Size
3 The Location of the Monastic Community
4 Evidence from the Find Site
5 Internal Clues in the Letters
6 Monasteries and their Material Remains
7 The Local Pachomian Monasteries
8 The Monasteries of the Western Desert
9 Monastic Dwelling Places
10 Pachomian Domestic Arrangements
11 Evidence for Monastic Foodstuffs
12 Jars and Storage
13 Monasteries, Monastics and Books
4 The Early Monastic Economy
1 Monks and their Labours
2 Weaving
3 Property Ownership
4 Gifts from Patrons
5 Medicine and Ritual Texts
6 Creating an Income
7 Agricultural Work
8 Monks as Scribes
9 Monastic Trade and Travel
10 Travels for the Sake of the Monastic Economy
11 Economic Dealings in the Nag Hammadi Letters
5 Egyptian Monasticism and its Social Context
1 Power and Identity in Late Antique Egypt
2 Social Networking in Egypt
3 The World of the Fourth-Century Alopex Family
4 Evidence from Chenoboskia
5 Evidence in the NHC Letters
6 Interconnections and Social Ties
6 Monastic Travels
1 Moving About in the Late Roman Empire
2 Travel to and from the Monastery
3 Monastic Tourism
4 Monks on the move
5 Authorised Travel
6 Moving Away—Travel to the Edges of Egypt and Beyond
7 Movement and Monastic Literature
7 A Monastic Manuscript Culture
1 Literacy in Early Monasteries
2 Material Evidence for Monastic Literacy and Education
3 Classical Education
4 Language Choice in the Letters
5 Codices as Material Artefacts
6 The Books of Fourth- and Fifth-Century Monks
7 Monastic Codices—the Archaeological Evidence
8 Dating Codices
9 Coptic Codices and their Owners
10 Evidence for Book Ownership in the Cartonnage
11 Monastic Book Production
Scriptoria
12 Bookbinding
13 Papyrus as a Commodity
14 Scribes of the Nag Hammadi Codices
Epilogue: Footprints Uncovered
Appendix1: Translations of Monastic and Christian letters from the Cartonnage Material
Bibliography
Index