Helena Augusta Helena Augusta
Women in Antiquity

Helena Augusta

Mother of the Empire

    • $529.00
    • $529.00

Descripción editorial

In the middle of the third century, a girl was born on the north-eastern frontier of the Roman empire. Eighty years later, she died as Flavia Iulia Helena, Augusta of the Roman world and mother of the first Christian emperor Constantine, without ever having been married to an emperor herself. In Helena Augusta: Mother of the Empire, Julia Hillner traces Helena's story through her life's peaks, which generated beautiful imperial artwork, entertaining legends as well as literary outrage. But Helena Augusta also pays careful attention to the disruptions in Helena's life course and in her commemoration--disruptions that were created by her nearest male relatives.

Hillner shows that Helena's story was not just determined by the love of a son or the rise of Christianity. It was also--like that of many other late Roman women--defined by male violence and by the web of changing female relationships around her, to which Helena was sometimes marginal, sometimes central and sometimes ancillary. Helena Augusta offers unique insight into the roles of imperial women in Constantinian self-display and in dynastic politics from the Tetrarchy to the Theodosian Age, and it also reminds us that the late Roman female life course, even that of an empress, was fragile and non-linear.

GÉNERO
Religión y espiritualidad
PUBLICADO
2022
15 de noviembre
IDIOMA
EN
Inglés
EXTENSIÓN
256
Páginas
EDITORIAL
Oxford University Press
VENDEDOR
The Chancellor, Masters and Scholars of the University of Oxford trading as Oxford University Press
TAMAÑO
21.9
MB
Perpetua Perpetua
2018
Hypatia Hypatia
2017
Theodora Theodora
2015
Sulpicia Sulpicia
2026
Octavia Octavia
2026
Poppaea Sabina Poppaea Sabina
2025