The Final Pagan Generation
About the Author
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction
1. Growing Up in the Cities of the Gods
2. Education in an Age of Imagination
3. The System
4. Moving Up in an Age of Uncertainty
5. The Apogee
6. The New Pannonian Order
7. Christian Youth Culture in the 360s and 370s
8. Bishops, Bureaucrats, and Aristocrats under Gratian, Valentinian II, and Theodosius
9. Old Age in a Young Man’s Empire
10. A Generation’s Legacy
Bibliography
Index
Reviews
— Foreword Reviews"A fantastic slice of classical history."
— Library Journal"Well researched and proficient . . . awash with well-organized historical information."
— Bryn Mawr Classical Review"Accessible and engaging for students and general readers."
— Journal of Late Antiquity"Watts builds his case through literary evidence such as letters, orations, poems, and contemporary historical accounts. What emerges is a vivid account of the final pagan generation and a detailed view of their social and professional environment."
— Journal of Early Christian Studies"Accessible to non-specialists and useful as an undergraduate text in courses...an absorbing, erudite, and highly useful book from which anyone studying late antiquity or early Christianity will profit."
— National Review"Edward Watt's The Final Pagan Generation is among the best works of academic history I've ever read."
— National Review"Edward Watta's The Final Pagan Generation is among the best works of academic history I've ever read."
— The Classical Journal"Watts demonstrates his mastery of both primary and modern sources . . . The text is virtually flawless."
"The Final Pagan Generation offers an innovative, beautifully written, and meticulously up-to-date social and political history of the fourth century."— Phoenix, Journal of the Classical Association of Canada
— PopMatters"Watts undertakes a forensic examination . . . seeking to understand what it was like to live through a moment of profound social and political transformation that leaves your world an entirely different place by the end of your life. It's a question with profound implications for the present. . . . a fascinating chronicle."
— Journal of Church and State"Its carefully detailed and intriguing exploration of generational perspectives toward and within a major cultural shift makes the study a historiographical tour de force. . . .everything comes together so well in this book in a way that is as bold in its uniqueness as beautiful in its exposition."
"Edward Watts has produced a scintillating portrait of the transformative fourth century of the Roman Empire. He employs the creative device of looking at the history of an era through the eyes of its own generation—like our Woodstock generation or Gen X—to show how its men and women witnessed, experienced, and engaged with the big and little events of their day. The results are variously quotidian and startling, ordinary and surprising, but never banal or entirely as expected. Understanding the oceanic changes in belief and behavior of the 'last pagan generation' in real time helps readers see that world from the perspective of the persons who lived it and not, as we often do, as if in some cosmic rear-view mirror. A real page turner!"—Brent D. Shaw, Andrew Fleming West Professor in Classics at Princeton University
"Edward Watts is a leading authority on the intellectual history of the later Roman Empire. Deeply nuanced and profoundly humane, this book shows what it meant to live through the Roman Empire's initial transition to Christianity. In clear and eloquent prose, Watts introduces us to a wide range of persons who responded to the Emperor Constantine’s conversion in widely different ways, from hostility or distaste to excitement and profound life changes. Watts provides a fresh and exciting vision of one the great generations of Mediterranean history, whose choices shaped the legacy of antiquity and the future of Christianity. This is a book that should be of interest to anyone who wants to understand the rich variety of religious experience."—David Potter, Francis W. Kelsey Collegiate Professor of Greek and Roman History at the University of Michigan
Awards
- 2015 Phi Alpha Theta Best Subsequent Book Award 2013, Phi Alpha Theta History Honor Society