When Rural Resilience Came to the City: Libanios on Villagers Moving through Fourth-Century Antioch

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When Rural Resilience Came to the City: Libanios on Villagers Moving through Fourth-Century Antioch. / Wöller, Florian.

In: Acta ad Archaeologiam et Artium Historiam Pertinentia, Vol. 34, 2024, p. 79-89.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Wöller, F 2024, 'When Rural Resilience Came to the City: Libanios on Villagers Moving through Fourth-Century Antioch', Acta ad Archaeologiam et Artium Historiam Pertinentia, vol. 34, pp. 79-89. https://doi.org/10.5617/acta.11143

APA

Wöller, F. (2024). When Rural Resilience Came to the City: Libanios on Villagers Moving through Fourth-Century Antioch. Acta ad Archaeologiam et Artium Historiam Pertinentia, 34, 79-89. https://doi.org/10.5617/acta.11143

Vancouver

Wöller F. When Rural Resilience Came to the City: Libanios on Villagers Moving through Fourth-Century Antioch. Acta ad Archaeologiam et Artium Historiam Pertinentia. 2024;34:79-89. https://doi.org/10.5617/acta.11143

Author

Wöller, Florian. / When Rural Resilience Came to the City: Libanios on Villagers Moving through Fourth-Century Antioch. In: Acta ad Archaeologiam et Artium Historiam Pertinentia. 2024 ; Vol. 34. pp. 79-89.

Bibtex

@article{aa3b927991054b33a43a930342aed256,
title = "When Rural Resilience Came to the City: Libanios on Villagers Moving through Fourth-Century Antioch",
abstract = "In the fourth century AD, the relation between the city of Antioch and its hinterland underwent significant change. In response both to environmental transformation and the consequences of human intervention, resilient rural communities in the Amuq plain north-east of the city took on new political, economic, and religious significance. From a distinctively urban perspective, the sophist Libanios criticized and deplored this development, most famously in his oration 47 from around the year 390 with regard to the emerging political and judicial independence of larger villages in the Antiochene. The same phenomenon was addressed roughly 50 years later by the Christian author Theodoret of Kyrrhos, who, however, appreciated the new rural self-confidence as a religious revival spearheaded by holy men. But just as the late antique realities of villagers and city-dwellers rarely met, neither physically nor intellectually or culturally, also the contrasting perspectives represented by Libanios and Theodoret remained largely disconnected. In one instance, however, Libanios related an account of hinterland representatives that moved through Antioch{\textquoteright}s urban space, confronted the city with a specifically Antiochene type of rural resilience, and challenged, according to Libanios, much of what Antioch stood for. As such, this episode highlights the importance of mobility in city-hinterland relations and, pointedly, its significance for the study of rural resilience in late antiquity.",
author = "Florian W{\"o}ller",
year = "2024",
doi = "10.5617/acta.11143",
language = "English",
volume = "34",
pages = "79--89",
journal = "Acta ad Archaeologiam et Artium Historiam Pertinentia",
issn = "0065-0900",
publisher = "L'Erma di Bretschneider",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - When Rural Resilience Came to the City: Libanios on Villagers Moving through Fourth-Century Antioch

AU - Wöller, Florian

PY - 2024

Y1 - 2024

N2 - In the fourth century AD, the relation between the city of Antioch and its hinterland underwent significant change. In response both to environmental transformation and the consequences of human intervention, resilient rural communities in the Amuq plain north-east of the city took on new political, economic, and religious significance. From a distinctively urban perspective, the sophist Libanios criticized and deplored this development, most famously in his oration 47 from around the year 390 with regard to the emerging political and judicial independence of larger villages in the Antiochene. The same phenomenon was addressed roughly 50 years later by the Christian author Theodoret of Kyrrhos, who, however, appreciated the new rural self-confidence as a religious revival spearheaded by holy men. But just as the late antique realities of villagers and city-dwellers rarely met, neither physically nor intellectually or culturally, also the contrasting perspectives represented by Libanios and Theodoret remained largely disconnected. In one instance, however, Libanios related an account of hinterland representatives that moved through Antioch’s urban space, confronted the city with a specifically Antiochene type of rural resilience, and challenged, according to Libanios, much of what Antioch stood for. As such, this episode highlights the importance of mobility in city-hinterland relations and, pointedly, its significance for the study of rural resilience in late antiquity.

AB - In the fourth century AD, the relation between the city of Antioch and its hinterland underwent significant change. In response both to environmental transformation and the consequences of human intervention, resilient rural communities in the Amuq plain north-east of the city took on new political, economic, and religious significance. From a distinctively urban perspective, the sophist Libanios criticized and deplored this development, most famously in his oration 47 from around the year 390 with regard to the emerging political and judicial independence of larger villages in the Antiochene. The same phenomenon was addressed roughly 50 years later by the Christian author Theodoret of Kyrrhos, who, however, appreciated the new rural self-confidence as a religious revival spearheaded by holy men. But just as the late antique realities of villagers and city-dwellers rarely met, neither physically nor intellectually or culturally, also the contrasting perspectives represented by Libanios and Theodoret remained largely disconnected. In one instance, however, Libanios related an account of hinterland representatives that moved through Antioch’s urban space, confronted the city with a specifically Antiochene type of rural resilience, and challenged, according to Libanios, much of what Antioch stood for. As such, this episode highlights the importance of mobility in city-hinterland relations and, pointedly, its significance for the study of rural resilience in late antiquity.

U2 - 10.5617/acta.11143

DO - 10.5617/acta.11143

M3 - Journal article

VL - 34

SP - 79

EP - 89

JO - Acta ad Archaeologiam et Artium Historiam Pertinentia

JF - Acta ad Archaeologiam et Artium Historiam Pertinentia

SN - 0065-0900

ER -

ID: 253082126