Home Classical, Ancient Near Eastern & Egyptian Studies Memory, Ritual, and Identity in Prudentius, Peristephanon and Paulinus of Nola, Natalicia
Chapter
Licensed
Unlicensed Requires Authentication

Memory, Ritual, and Identity in Prudentius, Peristephanon and Paulinus of Nola, Natalicia

  • Philip Hardie

    Philip Hardie is a Fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge, and Emeritus Honorary Professor of Latin in the University of Cambridge. He is the author of many books and articles on Latin literature and its reception, including Classicism and Christianity in Late Antique Latin Poetry (2019).

Become an author with De Gruyter Brill

Abstract

In Christian Latin, memoria is used to refer to the tomb of an apostle, martyr, or saint; and, in a wider sense, to the whole shrine in which their body or relics are deposited, and where their life and death are ritually celebrated. This paper examines textual memorials of the lives and deaths of martyrs and saints, Prudentius’ Peristephanon, and Paulinus of Nola’s Natalicia. These poems use historical memory, and ritual and artistic commemoration, in order to construct the identity of a community of Christian worshippers, a community that, through its martyrs and saints, extends to the limits of the horizontal axis, on earth, and spans the distance between earth and heaven. Christian identity is defined in opposition to the beliefs and practices of pagan persecutors, and through the appropriation and correction of key texts, by Vergil, Horace, and others, central to the self-definition of the non-Christian Roman world.

Abstract

In Christian Latin, memoria is used to refer to the tomb of an apostle, martyr, or saint; and, in a wider sense, to the whole shrine in which their body or relics are deposited, and where their life and death are ritually celebrated. This paper examines textual memorials of the lives and deaths of martyrs and saints, Prudentius’ Peristephanon, and Paulinus of Nola’s Natalicia. These poems use historical memory, and ritual and artistic commemoration, in order to construct the identity of a community of Christian worshippers, a community that, through its martyrs and saints, extends to the limits of the horizontal axis, on earth, and spans the distance between earth and heaven. Christian identity is defined in opposition to the beliefs and practices of pagan persecutors, and through the appropriation and correction of key texts, by Vergil, Horace, and others, central to the self-definition of the non-Christian Roman world.

Chapters in this book

  1. Frontmatter I
  2. Acknowledgments
  3. Contents VII
  4. Abbreviations
  5. List of Figures XIII
  6. Introduction 1
  7. Part I Ritual, Poetics, and the Past: Greece
  8. Into the Woods: Reading the Iliad with Boeotian Cult 17
  9. Epinician Rituals in Pindar’s Fourth and Fifth Olympians: Shaping and Preserving Identities in Song 35
  10. Repeat, Remember: Ritual and Literature (Horace; Sappho, Alcaeus; Homer, Sophocles, Epicurus, Callimachus, Vergil) 47
  11. Ritual, Meter, and Cultural Memories of Megatheism: A New Case for Sarapis as the God of Hyssaldomos’ Verse-Inscription from Mylasa 71
  12. Part II Ritual, Poetics, and the Past: Rome
  13. Georgics 4: Vergil on the Rites of Poetry and Philosophy at the Dawn of a New Era 97
  14. Horace’s Ritual Song in Augustan Rome: The Sacred Poet as an alter princeps 119
  15. Divining Identity in Seneca’s Oedipus 139
  16. Part III Performing Identity
  17. Call the Witnesses: Athenian Citizenship Practice at the Crossroads of Memory, Ritual, and Identity 153
  18. Embodied Memory in the Panathenaia 169
  19. Ritual Against Memory: Managing the Ancestors in Ancient Rome 195
  20. Part IV Trauma and Memory
  21. Aeneas’ tropaeum: Collective Trauma and Commemoration in Vergil’s Aeneid 213
  22. Broken Hospitality and Traumatic Memory in the Funerals of Vergil’s Pallas and Valerius Flaccus’ Cyzicus 237
  23. Memory, Ritual, and Identity in Prudentius, Peristephanon and Paulinus of Nola, Natalicia 271
  24. Part V Women, Ritual and Memory
  25. Remembering Female Names: Crisis, Ritual, and Collective Identity Formation in Ancient Greek Epic Poetry 289
  26. Ritual Lament, Memory, and Identity in Euripides’ Trojan Trilogy 307
  27. Memory, Ritual, and the Politics of Closure in Tacitus, Ann. 3.76 323
  28. Part VI Places
  29. Treasuries, Identity, and Politics 337
  30. Ancient Greek Construction Rituals, Tradition, and the Articulation of Communal Identities 355
  31. Ritual, Memory, and Identity: The Case of Theoriae 385
  32. Pomponius Mela’s Hercules: Preserving Phoenician Ritual Memory and Identity 405
  33. List of Contributors 423
  34. Index Rerum
  35. Index Locorum
Downloaded on 19.12.2025 from https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/9783111197456-014/html
Scroll to top button