Banishment in the Later Roman Empire, 284-476 CE

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A01=Daniel Washburn
ancient Christianity
ancient Roman law
Area's Importance
Area’s Importance
Augustal Prefect
Aulus Caecina
Author_Daniel Washburn
Banishment Process
Capital Punishment
Capitis Deminutio
Category=NHC
Cognitio Extra Ordinem
Constantine's Law
Constantine’s Law
early Christianity
Emperor Valentinian II
eq_bestseller
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
exile
exile and power
Exile's Position
Exile’s Position
Extra-legal Sources
Holy Man
imperial authority
Late Antique Christianity
late antiquity
Law's Tone
Law’s Tone
legal history
legal punishment
literary history
negotiation of pardon in antiquity
pardon
Patria Potestas
Pauli Sententiae
Perpetual Exilium
Praetorian Prefect
punishment
Roman Banishment
Roman law
Sectarian Banishment
Single Equivalent
State Secretary
Theodosian Code
Theodosius II
Urban Prefect

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415529259
  • Weight: 620g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 13 Nov 2012
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This book offers a reconstruction and interpretation of banishment in the final era of a unified Roman Empire, 284-476 CE. Author Daniel Washburn argues that exile was both a penalty and a symbol. It applied to those who committed a misstep or crossed the wrong person; it also stood as a marker of affliction or failure. Like other punishments, it articulated and cemented the power asymmetry between the punisher and the punished. Distinctively, it maneuvered the body of the banished in order to tell that tale. The process of banishment also operated as a form of negotiation between the party that exiled and the one banished. In so doing, the punishment offered the possibility for pardon, an event that glorified the pardoner and signaled submissiveness on the part of the restored.

In its sources, this work employs evidence from legal as well as literary materials to forge a complete picture of exile. To harvest all possible information from the period, it considers elements from the arenas of the early church and the Roman Empire. Methodologically, it situates ancient Christianity within the Roman world, while remaining sensitive to the distinct views and roles held by late antique bishops. While banishment played a major role in the history of the Later Empire, no work of scholarship has treated it as a topic in its own right.

Daniel Washburn is an Instructor of Humanities at the Matteo Ricci College of Seattle University, USA.

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