Hydatius

Late Roman chronicles are little studied and greatly misunderstood. The purpose of this dissertation is to treat a Late Roman chronicler, Hydatius, as a living, breathing person and to use the chronicle as a means of revealing this individual: his beliefs, his interests, his fears, his attitudes, h...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Burgess, R, Burgess, R. W.
Format: Thesis
Language:Latin
English
Published: 1989
Subjects:
_version_ 1797079039768264704
author Burgess, R
Burgess, R. W.
author_facet Burgess, R
Burgess, R. W.
author_sort Burgess, R
collection OXFORD
description Late Roman chronicles are little studied and greatly misunderstood. The purpose of this dissertation is to treat a Late Roman chronicler, Hydatius, as a living, breathing person and to use the chronicle as a means of revealing this individual: his beliefs, his interests, his fears, his attitudes, his view of the Empire, and his abilities as an historian. Hydatius was a bishop in Gallaecia, writing in 468-9 amidst the Suevic depredations of Spain. As a result he is a unique source in that he is the earliest extant historian who wrote in a post- Roman (i.e. Mediaeval) world. His chronicle is the only detailed source for Spanish history in the fifth century and the only detailed source written about the fifth-century barbarian invasions and settlements. Though extremely isolated he had remarkable contacts with the outside world and his chronicle is a unique source for much non- Spanish information. It is also one of the most personal of all the Late Antique chronicles and therefore an excellent gateway for an examination of the Late Roman world as seen through the eyes of a contemporary. For these reasons, Hydatius' vivid and often emotive account of the sufferings of Gallaecia at the hands of the Sueves and Goths, framed by the parallel military, religious and imperial history of the Eastern and Western empires and set within the eschatological context of the imminent Apocalypse, deserves detailed study. The production of a new critical edition, based on only the third, complete, first-hand examination of the sole major manuscript (B) since 1615 and the first produced from all known manuscript evidence, complete with apparatuses on the manuscripts, chronology and orthography, was necessitated by the perverse <em>Sources chrétiennes</em> edition of 1974 and the discovery of new evidence from a careful study of manuscript B.
first_indexed 2024-03-07T00:39:57Z
format Thesis
id oxford-uuid:82b53777-b0d6-4720-bda9-4207d9bfa313
institution University of Oxford
language Latin
English
last_indexed 2024-03-07T00:39:57Z
publishDate 1989
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:82b53777-b0d6-4720-bda9-4207d9bfa3132022-03-26T21:39:16ZHydatiusThesishttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_db06uuid:82b53777-b0d6-4720-bda9-4207d9bfa313Empire, 30 B.C.-476 A.DRoman period, 218 B.C.-414 A.DHistoryRepublic, 265-30 B.CRomeGalicia (Spain : Region)SpainLatinEnglishPolonsky Theses Digitisation Project1989Burgess, RBurgess, R. W.Late Roman chronicles are little studied and greatly misunderstood. The purpose of this dissertation is to treat a Late Roman chronicler, Hydatius, as a living, breathing person and to use the chronicle as a means of revealing this individual: his beliefs, his interests, his fears, his attitudes, his view of the Empire, and his abilities as an historian. Hydatius was a bishop in Gallaecia, writing in 468-9 amidst the Suevic depredations of Spain. As a result he is a unique source in that he is the earliest extant historian who wrote in a post- Roman (i.e. Mediaeval) world. His chronicle is the only detailed source for Spanish history in the fifth century and the only detailed source written about the fifth-century barbarian invasions and settlements. Though extremely isolated he had remarkable contacts with the outside world and his chronicle is a unique source for much non- Spanish information. It is also one of the most personal of all the Late Antique chronicles and therefore an excellent gateway for an examination of the Late Roman world as seen through the eyes of a contemporary. For these reasons, Hydatius' vivid and often emotive account of the sufferings of Gallaecia at the hands of the Sueves and Goths, framed by the parallel military, religious and imperial history of the Eastern and Western empires and set within the eschatological context of the imminent Apocalypse, deserves detailed study. The production of a new critical edition, based on only the third, complete, first-hand examination of the sole major manuscript (B) since 1615 and the first produced from all known manuscript evidence, complete with apparatuses on the manuscripts, chronology and orthography, was necessitated by the perverse <em>Sources chrétiennes</em> edition of 1974 and the discovery of new evidence from a careful study of manuscript B.
spellingShingle Empire, 30 B.C.-476 A.D
Roman period, 218 B.C.-414 A.D
History
Republic, 265-30 B.C
Rome
Galicia (Spain : Region)
Spain
Burgess, R
Burgess, R. W.
Hydatius
title Hydatius
title_full Hydatius
title_fullStr Hydatius
title_full_unstemmed Hydatius
title_short Hydatius
title_sort hydatius
topic Empire, 30 B.C.-476 A.D
Roman period, 218 B.C.-414 A.D
History
Republic, 265-30 B.C
Rome
Galicia (Spain : Region)
Spain
work_keys_str_mv AT burgessr hydatius
AT burgessrw hydatius