Perpetua of Carthage
Portrait of a Third-Century Martyr
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About the Book
This is a study of the life and times of Saint Perpetua, Saint Felicity and their companions, all martyred at Carthage in A.D. 203. Unlike most early Christian saints, whose lives are often shrouded in legend and myth, Perpetua left an authentic prison diary, later completed by an anonymous eyewitness to her execution, that is now considered a classic of Christian, Latin and feminist literature. Perpetua was also unusual in that she was wealthy, educated, married, and a young mother. The book includes the first English translations of French archaeological scholarship covering the discovery of the martyrs’ tombs.
About the Author(s)
Bibliographic Details
William Farina
Format: softcover (6 x 9)
Pages: 276
Bibliographic Info: appendices, maps, notes, bibliography, index
Copyright Date: 2009
pISBN: 978-0-7864-3713-9
eISBN: 978-0-7864-8263-4
Imprint: McFarland
Table of Contents
Overview 1
PART I. PERSUASION AS COURAGE
1. “I was not to fight with beasts, but against the devil” 11
2. The Christian Aeneid 20
3. A Middle Road for Martyrs? 27
4. Africa Conquers Rome 34
5. “Their courage astonished the pagans” 41
6. A Family Feud 48
7. Blood of Martyrs Became Seed of the Church 55
PART II. PERSUASION AS JUSTICE
8. “What victory a more glorious than this?” 63
9. Jewish Apocalypse 70
10. The Great Leveler 78
11. Universal Divine Favor 87
12. Empire within Empire 95
13. Guarded by Poverty and Ignorance 103
14. “Injustice acknowledged justice” 110
PART III. PERSUASION AS HOPE
15. “As I was merry in the flesh, so I am still merrier here” 117
16. Yearning for Metamorphosis 124
17. Saint Augustine, Male Chauvinist? 131
18. The Illusion of Prosperity 138
19. “Pleased to play, as children will” 144
20. Contempt for the Gods 151
21. “The flower of perpetual felicity” 159
PART IV. TOLERANCE AS VIRTUE
22. The Weapon of Empathy 167
23. Guilty of Inflexible Obstinacy 174
24. The Montanist Heresy 181
25. Religious Laissez-Faire, or Agreeing to Disagree 187
26. Vandal Plunder and Byzantine Extortion 193
27. A Devout Persecution 200
28. “My prison suddenly became a palace to me” 208
Summation 215
Appendix I: Christian Archeology in Carthage 221
Appendix II: A Guide to Pagan Worship in Roman Carthage 230
Appendix III: Tunisian Historical and Religious Timeline 233
Appendix IV: Maps 236
Chapter Notes 241
Bibliography 259
Index 263