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Religious Mobility in the Roman Empire*
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 16 July 2012
Abstract
The spread of religions throughout the Roman world may be explained partly as a consequence of the movements of peoples, partly in terms of the emergence of new elective cults. Understanding these processes entails exploring the kinds of contacts and exchanges established between individual worshippers, and the contexts — local and imperial — within which they took place. These developments culminated in the emergence of new cults that spilled over the boundaries of the Roman Empire to create the first global religions.
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Footnotes
This article originated as a Conférence Michonis at the Collège de France on 5 November 2010. The original lecture (delivered in French) can be heard at http://www.college-de-france.fr/site/john-scheid/Conference_du_5_novembre_2010_.htm. I am indebted to John Scheid for the invitation, which enabled me to tackle a topic that has long been on my mind. I am grateful also to members of the audience for their questions and comments, to the Editorial Committee of the Journal, and to Mary Beard who added the finishing touches to the final version. I have also learned much from John North, Lucia Nixon and Peter Hainsworth.
References
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40 Mobile individuals could always make do with private worship of the cult into which they had been initiated, as is shown by the significant proportion (c. 15 per cent) of Mithraic reliefs that are too small for a communal space: R. L. Gordon, ‘Small and miniature reproductions of the Mithraic icon: reliefs, pottery, ornaments and gems’, in Martens and De Boe, op. cit. (n. 5), 259–83.
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59 As discussed in RoR i, 245–312.
60 Annals 15.44.
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62 The best starting points are: Millar, F., ‘Dura-Europos under Parthian rule’, in Wieshöfer, J. (ed.), Das Partherreich und seine Zeugnisse, Historia Supp. 122 (1998), 473–92Google Scholar, reprinted in his The Greek World, the Jews, and the East (2006), 406–31; Kaizer, T., ‘Religion and language in Dura-Europos’, in Cotton, H., Hoyland, R. G., Price, J. J. and Wasserstein, D. J. (eds), From Hellenism to Islam. Cultural and Linguistic Change in the Roman Near East (2009), 235–53CrossRefGoogle Scholar; idem, ‘Patterns of worship in Dura-Europos: a case study of religious life in the Classical Levant outside the main cult centres’, in Bonnet, C., Pirenne-Delforge, V. and Praet, D. (eds), Les religions orientales dans le monde grec et romain cent ans après Cumont (1906–2006): Bilan historique et historiographique (2009), 153–72Google Scholar; idem, ‘Dura-Europos under Roman rule’, in J. M. Cortés Copete, F. Lozano Gomez and E. Muñiz Grijalvo (eds), Ruling through Greek Eyes. Interactions between Rome and the Greeks in Imperial Times (forthcoming).
63 Kaizer, op. cit. (n. 62; ‘Religion and language’), 235.
64 The excavators' map shows 456 houses. My estimate assumes five people per house; cf. Price, S., ‘Estimating ancient Greek populations: the evidence of field survey’, in Bowman, A. K. and Wilson, A. (eds), Settlement, Urbanisation and Population, Oxford Studies in the Roman Economy 2 (2011), 17–35CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Will, E., ‘La population de Doura-Europos: une évaluation’, Syria 65 (1988), 315–21CrossRefGoogle Scholar, accepts a higher estimate, which generates a total of 5,000–6,000.
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66 Key Fowden, E., The Barbarian Plain: Saint Sergius between Rome and Iran (1999), 1–5, 72–6Google Scholar, on pastoralism; Ruffing, K., ‘Dura Europos: a city on the Euphrates and her economic importance in the Roman era’, in Sartre, M. (ed.), Productions et échanges dans la Syrie grecque et romaine, Topoi Supp. 8 (2007), 399–411Google Scholar, on local economy.
67 As the document (P. Dura 20) was written in the village of Paliga, 50 km upstream, at the confluence of the Chabur and the Euphrates, the region must have extended at least that far; it presumably extended downstream at least as far as Anath, whose religious importance we have just noted.
68 Sarcophagus inv. 2677 b 8982. For depictions of camels at Palmyra, see Will, E., Les Palmyréniens: la Venise des sables (1992), 99–101Google Scholar. On the caravan trade through Palmyra, see Millar, F., ‘Caravan cities: the Roman Near East and long-distance trade by land’, in Austin, M., Harries, J. and Smith, C. (eds), Modus Operandi: Essays in Honour of Geoffrey Rickman, BICS Supp. 71 (1998), 119–37Google Scholar, reprinted in his The Greek World, the Jews, and the East (2006), 275–99, at 291–6.
69 Kaizer, op. cit. (n. 62; ‘Religion and language’), 245–6.
70 Kilpatrick, G. D., ‘Dura-Europos: the parchments and the papyri’, Greek, Roman and Byzantine Studies 5 (1964), 215–25Google Scholar; Kaizer, op. cit. (n. 62; ‘Religion and language’), 236. By contrast, the ties of the Christian church at Dura were to the Greek-speaking world.
71 Dirven, L., The Palmyrenes of Dura-Europos: A Study of Religious Interaction in Roman Syria, RGRW 138 (1999)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
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73 Palmyra, with its massive temples of the Roman period, differs from Dura because the city has a quite different history, being formed from local tribal groups, and also because of the impact of Roman traditions.
74 Note also the magnificent ‘temple’ at Gorneae, Garni in Soviet Armenia, perhaps the tomb of a second-century Romanized client king (Cornell, T. and Matthews, J., Atlas of the Roman World (1982), 155Google Scholar).
75 The fictive nature of the Persian origins was first exposed by Gordon, R. L., ‘Franz Cumont and the doctrines of Mithraism’, in Hinnells, J. R. (ed.), Mithraic Studies (1975), i, 215–48Google Scholar. The dramatic paintings at the Mithraic sanctuary at Hawarte (Syria) might show fusion with local traditions, or they might embody learning from the East, but in any case they date to the fourth century a.d. Cf. Gawlikowski, M., ‘The mithraeum at Hawarte and its paintings’, Journal of Roman Archaeology 20 (2007), 337–61CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
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77 On ‘locative’ and ‘utopian’ religions, see Smith, J. Z., Map is not Territory (1978), 88–103, 104–28, 172–89Google ScholarPubMed, and Drudgery Divine (1990), 121–2Google Scholar.
78 cf. RoR i, 295.
79 Belayche, op. cit. (n. 1), 256 claims that in the third century this claim is dropped, but U. Bianchi in Bellelli, G. M. and Bianchi, U. (eds), Orientalia sacra urbis Romae: Dolichena et Heliopolitana: recueil d'études archeologiques et historico-religieuses sur les cultes cosmopolites d'origine commagénienne et syrienne (1996), 599–603Google Scholar, has evidence for the conjunction of IOMD and deus paternus Commagenus, suggesting that the ancestral aspects of the cult were not forgotten.
80 Relevant considerations on the complexity of ‘ethnicity’ are raised by Beard, M., ‘The Roman and the foreign: the cult of the “Great Mother” in imperial Rome’, in Thomas, N. and Humphrey, C. (eds), Shamanism, History and the State (1994), 164–9Google Scholar. She argues that, in the case of the cult of Cybele in Rome, there was a contested interface between an elective, a ‘traditional’ Roman and an explicitly foreign, ethnic cult. In fact, she suggests, that the striking ‘ethnicity’ of the cult is in part a construction of internal ‘Roman’ discourse.
81 Tacitus, Histories 5.5; Dio 67.14. Cf. RoR i, 276.
82 RoR ii, 57–8.
83 Richardson, P., Israel in the Apostolic Church (1969), 22–5CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Lieu, J. M., Christian Identity in the Jewish and Graeco-Roman World (2004), ch. 8, especially 259–66CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Buell, D. K., Why this New Race? Ethnic Reasoning in Early Christianity (2005)CrossRefGoogle Scholar. G. G. Stroumsa, ‘Barbarians or heretics? Jews and Arabs in the mind of Byzantium (fourth–eighth centuries)’ (forthcoming), explores the development of these ideas in Late Antiquity.
84 Pseudo-Cyprian (de pascha computus 17) says casually: ‘we are the third race’ (‘tertium genus sumus’).
85 Nero 16.2.
86 1.8; cf. 1.20; accusation of crowd in circus in Scorpiace 10.
87 Vermaseren, M. J. and van Essen, C. C., The Excavations in the Mithraeum of the Church of Santa Prisca in Rome (1965), 179–84Google Scholar, translated in RoR ii, 319.
88 Gardner, I. and Lieu, S. N. C., Manichaean Texts from the Roman Empire (2004), 111CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
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90 Gardner, I., ‘The Manichaean community at Kellis: a progress report’, in Mirecki, P. and BeDuhn, J. (eds), Emerging from Darkness: Studies in the Recovery of Manichaean Sources (1997), 161–75Google Scholar; Gardner and Lieu, op. cit. (n. 88) includes the texts in translation. Manichaeaism originated in a Syriac-speaking world, but translated texts into Greek, and into Coptic at least as early as Christianity, and into languages outside the Empire long before Christianity.
91 Gardner and Lieu, op. cit. (n. 88), 109, 265–8, two parallel versions, in Coptic and Middle Persian.
92 Simon Price died on the 14 June 2011. A tribute to his contributions to the Roman Society and to this Journal was published at the beginning of JRS 99 (2009) to mark his early retirement on grounds of ill health. A volume of essays in his honour, Historical and Religious Memory in the Ancient World (2012), edited by B. Dignas and R. R. R. Smith, has just appeared. It includes a paper by him and a bibliography of his published work. Simon is much missed. We are very grateful that he offered us this article shortly before his death, and are conscious of how much more he might have contributed to the debate he surveys here.
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