Frankfurter, 'Hellenic Religion and Christianization, c. 370-529', Bryn Mawr Classical Review 9502
URL = http://hegel.lib.ncsu.edu/stacks/serials/bmcr/bmcr-9502-frankfurter-hellenic.html
@@@@95.2.15, Trombley, Hellenic Religion and Christianization
Frank R. Trombley, Hellenic Religion and Christianization, c.
370-529. 2 vols. Religions in the Graeco-Roman World 115.
Leiden: E.J. Brill, 1993-94. Pp.
xiii + 344 and xv + 430. $114.50 and $100.00. ISBN 90-04-09692-2.
Reviewed by David Frankfurter
-- Institute for Advanced Study
The fate of the native religions of the Mediterranean world
in late antiquity has long fascinated historians, stimulating
over a hundred years of both broad discussions, like Geffcken,
Kaegi, and Chuvin, regional studies like those of Ramsay and
Wilcken, and a large portion of the field of late antique
history. And in many ways Trombley's two volumes, fitting into
the "broad" category, provide an invaluable extension of and
improvement upon those of Geffcken and Chuvin in documenting both
the resilience and the individual christianizations of "pagan"
cults up through the fifth century CE. Whatever one might say
about his analysis Trombley has surely proven his point that
native religions were alive and well in many parts of the late
antique world, and we may thank him for the breadth of his
documentation.
But a work of this size one wants to be superb, a feat of
methodology, bibliography, and depth and economy of analysis, a
reference source on "late paganism" to which one can return
continually. And for these expectations Trombley's work is
disappointing on all counts, beginning with the very term
"Hellenic religion." Trombley intends it, perhaps, as a more
accurate form of "paganism" that translates literally the word by
which Christian ecclesiarchs referred to their native opponents.
But instead, applied as a general term to every instance of
native or non-Christian tradition in the eastern Mediterranean
world, "Hellenic religion" tends to give everything a classical
Athenian cast.
The organization is ambitious, and chapter headings whet
one's appetite. Volume One contains long chapters on "The Legal
Status of Sacrifice to 529" and "Christianization," followed by
briefer chapters on the religious transformations of Gaza and of
Athens/Attica, each with excursive "Appendices." Volume Two
contains chapters on Alexandrian philosophical "religion,"
Aphrodisias, Asia Minor, rural Syria (focusing on the activity of
Symeon Stylites), Egypt (Canopus, Philae, Panopolis,
Oxyrhynchus), and two additional studies of cultures on the
Syrian periphery of the empire.
In many ways the chapter on legislation against sacrifice is
the most useful in the volumes. Discussing the full sequence of
anti-"pagan" edicts through the sixth century in their historical
contexts, Trombley shows with little doubt that this legislation
was unenforcable locally, that the historical sequence of edicts
actually documents the continuity of native cults, and
that legislators consistently compromised on the edicts' wording
and enforcement and likewise ignored the local syncretisms that
allowed communities to maintain their traditions. Since the
imperium seems more often to have been motivated by fear than by
self-righteousness in promulgating these laws, a discussion of
anti-"sorcery" laws is integral to the issue of the plan and
effectiveness of the edicts, and it is a pity that Trombley did
not integrate his section on sorcery legislation into that on
"paganism" legislation. Here too one notices the first of what
will become a theme of bibliographical lapses: by Trombley's
accounting the concept of "sorcery" seems to have begun in the
fourth century and its object exclusively Roman haruspices. But
he ignores a much longer history of imperial fears of mantic
subversion and the attempts to legislate preemptively against the
subversive potential of traditional oracles (e.g., P.Yale 299, a
second-century attempt to proscribe traditional Egyptian oracle
cults; see Rea in ZPE 27:151-56).
The chapter on Christianization covers the familiar issues
of the transformation of native gods, sanctuaries, and rituals.
Gods become saints occasionally, demons more often. But rather
than speak precisely in terms of "demons," evil spirits, as
opposed to local gods or the typical capricious forces occupying
village environments Trombley chooses to preserve the
pre-Christian (or actually pre-Septuagint) ambiguity of Grk
daim_n throughout the discussion and the book to designate
the whole gamut of supernatural beings--local gods, Christian
demons, and other spirits and forces. This terminological choice
thus renders entirely incomprehensible the subtleties of
supernatural powers as conceived by various communities and
Christians in late antiquity. Trombley's examples of sanctuaries
and rituals (e.g., incubation) that Christians were taking over
demonstrate the view of Ramsay and various scholars before him
that folk Catholicism and Orthodoxy were mere whitewashed
paganism. In nuanced form this perspective has some merit, of
course, since local communities will perpetually "indigenize" new
religious idioms. But, to avoid the simplistic parroting of what
was originally an anti-Catholic polemic, the modern study of the
phenomenon requires copious reference to the abundant recent
archaeological and epigraphical work on local sanctuaries, work
that has sought precisely to test the concept of continuity.
Trombley does use such material for a brief discussion of the
destruction of the Palmyrene temple of Allat but elsewhere relies
entirely on the early twentieth-century classics (Ramsay,
Deichmann), highly suspect hagiographies and ecclesiastical
historians (Theodoret, Socrates, Rufinus), or his own excellent
article in HTR (78:327-52, which is cited on almost every
other page).
The tendency to rely on outdated scholarship and
uncritically literal readings of hagiography unfortunately
plagues the rest of the volumes. His discussion of Ephesian
religion and the image of Artemis is based on long-outdated
theories. Analysis of the potential "pagan" roots of Syrian
stylitism seems unaware of considerable scholarship on this
topic, including many reasoned rejections. His description of
the conversion of Gaza, which adheres strictly to the account of
Mark the Deacon, required a long supplementary defense of the
hagiographer's historical accuracy against the conclusions of
other scholars. A lengthy reconstruction of the fifth-century
Coptic abbot Shenoute's battles with Egyptian local cults springs
almost entirely from Johannes Leipoldt's 1903 book, restating in
even stronger terms Leipoldt's simplistic polarity between
educated Greek pagans and impoverished Coptic Christians (despite
Ewa Wipszycka's much more nuanced 1988 article [Aegyptus
68:117-65] on cultural aspects of Egyptian christianization,
unknown to Trombley). Several discussions of the destruction of
the Alexandrian Serapeum and the Isis-cult of Canopus in the
fourth and fifth centuries take Rufinus at face value even while
citing Fran_oise Thelamon's important analysis of his ideological
tendencies. Indeed, the notion that hagiographers might have
brought themes and devices to their accounts of local
religions does not seem to have occurred to Trombley. Such
materials do not deserve the total dismissal advocated by some
historians, but surely one must approach their reports with the
greatest caution.
Another irritation is Trombley's focus: while he seems to
want to work with local religions and cults his perpetual
inclination is to return to those intellectuals and philosophers
so intimately portrayed by the likes of Eunapius and Damascius
but entirely unrepresentative of traditional late antique
religion properly conceived. They were, to be sure,
devoted to the old cults, as Athanassiadi has recently emphasized
(JHS 113:1-29); but they were by no means representative
supplicants. To reconstruct that world of ordinary supplicants in
as many areas as Trombley covers one would have to delve into the
respective archaeological publications on Syria, Egypt, Asia
Minor, and Palestine, to keep abreast of the state of scholarship
for each late antique culture, and to maintain a clear, informed
model of what "religion" really involved in its local context.
Trombley is much more at home with Athenian and Greek
materials, and this chapter's wealth of obscure data for the
continuity of local traditions makes up for its methodological
problems. So also his discussion of the cult of Isis at Philae
(Upper Egypt), which stays close to the exhaustive epigraphical
study of _tienne Bernand, offers a convenient summary of the
issues of the temple's long life, which ended only under
Justinian. The extensive coverage of rural Syrian
christianization provides a convenient, if undigested,
introduction to the epigraphical corpus of this area as it stood
at the time of Butler and Tchalenko (the vital 1991 reassessment
by Georges Tate does not seem to have crossed Trombley's desk).
But for all these materials one wishes for more analysis, a
new (or at least consistent) framework for conceptualizing both
local religion and conversion, nuanced parallels and contrasts to
be drawn among the various cults, a sense of the different issues
involved in one community's choice of allegiance to Christianity
and another's refusal, a discussion of what "pagan/Christian
syncretism" really involved. Trombley cites Eliade extensively
in relationship to the persistence of sacred places; but surely
this is not the only problem in the subject of late antique
christianization on which scholars have written theoretically.
Trombley's understanding of social dynamics is unfortunately
epitomized in his attribution of Durkheim's term "collective
effervescence" to Malinowski (1:149).
Thus to the extent that Trombley has compiled documentation
for the continuity of many native cults into the sixth century
his volumes are a thorough success. But to the extent that they
develop critically the data on any particular culture (besides
Greece) and build upon recent scholarship on that culture they
leave much to be desired. Indeed, these volumes point to an
increasing need for some kind of encyclopedia of Mediterranean
religions in late antiquity, written by many experts who
can explain for particular cultures the continuity of traditional
religion in its historical and cultural context as well as the
dynamics of regional christianization.