Exegesis and Empire in the Early Byzantine Mediterranean

Junillus Africanus and the Instituta Regularia Divinae Legis

Exegesis and Empire in the Early Byzantine Mediterranean

Junillus Africanus and the Instituta Regularia Divinae Legis

€64.00*

available, immediately via download

If you require delivery outside DE, AT or CH, please use our contact form for an inquiry.

Junillus Africanus served the Byzantine emperor Justinian as chief legal minister from 542 to ca. 549. During this time he composed a treatise on basic principles of biblical exegesis, called the Instituta Regularia Divinae Legis. Michael Maas places Junillus' work in the context of the Three Chapters Controversy, showing that it conformed in every respect to Justinian's version of neo-Chalcedonian orthodoxy and that it bolstered Justinian's claim to be a legitimate interpreter of sacred texts. The authors show that the Instituta had no direct links to the work of Theodore of Mopsuestia and that Junillus' legal training influenced the structure and presentation of the Instituta. Edward G. Mathews' contribution reevaluates Junillus' debt to the school of Nisibis and to the Antiochene exegesis, as well as Junillus' biblical canon. This book reproduces the Latin text and offers a translation into English.

Born 1951; 1973 BA in Classics and Anthropology at Cornell University; 1982 Ph.D. in Ancient History and Mediterranean Archaeology at Berkeley; Professor of History and Director of the Program in Ancient Mediterranean Civilizations at Rice University, Houston.
ISBN 9783161586781
Article number 9783161586781
Media type eBook - PDF
Copyright year 2020
Publisher Mohr Siebeck
Length 292 pages
Language English
Copy protection Adobe DRM