‘And He Transformed Their Temple into a Church’: The Redefinition of Sacred Spaces in Libya in Late Antiquity †
Abstract
:1. Before Late Antiquity or Some Remarks before Late Antiquity
2. The Justinian Building Programme: The Physical and Spiritual Defence of Newly Recovered Libya, According to Procopius of Caesarea
3. Conversion to Christianity and New Religious Spaces: The Invocations of the Theotokos in Libya
4. Other Justinian Churches Dedicated to the Theotokos: Mount Gerizim and the Samaritan Revolts
adopted a more civilised standard of life. For not only have they espoused the Christian doctrine […] but the emperor Justinian also built a sanctuary of the Virgin in their land, and appointed priests for them, and thus brought it about that they learned thoroughly all the observances of the Christians; and the Abasgi immediately dethroned both their kings and seemed to be living in a state of freedom (Bell. VIII, 3, 21).
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
1 | Later on, there were many other martyrs: Montanus and Lucius and companions (c. 260); Agapius and Secundinus (both bishops) in Lambesa; Maximilian in Tebessa (295); and the centurion Marcellus in Tangiers (298), to whom should be added those martyred during the persecution of 303 (Bishop Felix in Thibiuca; the Abitinian Martyrs; Galonius and companions in Thimida Regia; Maxima, Secunda and Donatilla in Thibiuca; and Crispina in Theveste). Likewise, there are martyrs whose historicity is a moot point, including the massa candida of Carthage and, later on, the 20 martyrs of Hippo, to whom Augustine refers in his sermons. |
2 | On the worship of the Donatist martyrs, vid. (Frend 1951); Maier 1987; for a more general overview of religious conflicts in Africa: Gaddis 2005, chs. III-IV; (Shaw 2011). |
3 | Regarding the suppression of pagan spaces, the eminently archaeological vision of (Leone 2013) is interesting in that the author contends that this was not owing so much to religious strife as to economic reasons. On Leone, vid. the very critical review of (Fournier 2016). |
4 | For instance, superstitio, praecipitates, haeresis, haeretico etc. For interreligious dialogue in Late Antiquity and the controversial lexicon: (Torres Prieto 2021, pp. 87–118). |
5 | With respect to the account of Vandal excesses, González Salinero 2001 is essential. Regrettably, the archaeological excavations performed at the beginning of the twentieth century did not pay particular attention to possible destruction layers dating from this period: (Lancel 1989, p. 654). |
6 | Capreolus of Carthage, Epist. 1; Possidius of Calama, Vit. Aug. 28.5 and 8–10; Quodvultdeus, De temp. barb. II.1.2; Victor Vitensis, Hist. pers., I.1–12. |
7 | Cultural and especially religious ties must have been strengthened as a result of the disintegration of the Empire during the fifth century. With respect to this comparison: (Siniscalco 1986, pp. 203–4). |
8 | Vita Fulgentii, 1. The reuse of the basilica of St Monica is a case in point (Ennabli 1975, p. 49). The overlapping of Vandal elements not only occurred in religious buildings, but also in those devoted to public entertainment and spectacles (Gil Egea 1998, pp. 67–68). |
9 | The most obvious way of promulgating the chosen religious formula was to convene the rest of the community in the space devoted to public meetings (Rebillard 2012). |
10 | (Cecchelli 1993, pp. 129–30; Cecconi 1990, p. 56); for the Donatist martyr, vid. PCBE I Marculus; there are plenty of literary accounts: Optatus, Augustine and the Conference of Carthage in 411 all mention him, plus, of course, the Passio Marculi (Monceaux 1920, 60 and ff.); on the basilica of Vegesela: (Cayrel 1934, pp. 133–38). |
11 | In this respect, albeit exclusively restricted to Africa, vid. Pringle 1981—a critical review of the limes as conceived by (Diehl 1896) in the nineteenth century; (Durliat 1981; Duval 1983, pp. 149–204). |
12 | Specific studies of the information that De Aed. provides on Libya include the old, but very interesting, work by (Desanges 1963) on the building of walls in the area of the Aures and in the rest of Numidia; the long paper by Duval 1983, in which the author argues that many of the buildings were renamed after the Justinian refurbishment, appearing in Procopius’ work as new: (Traina 1990; Roques 1993; Reynolds 2000). It is notable that the opposite also occurred, with the building of cities supervised by the emperor, which are only known in light of the epigraphic evidence, but which are not mentioned in the De Aed. (Durliat passim.). |
13 | Proc. De Aed. VI.2.7. The now classic work by (Seston 1934) is indispensable. The monastery in Mandracium, near Carthage, could also be regarded as falling into this category (Proc. De Aed. VI.5.113). Although Procopius does not refer to it, there was also another fortified monastery in Proconsular Africa, viz. that of Tebessa, also from the sixth century (Diehl 1896, p. 430 and ff.). |
14 | As there is known to have been a Christian bishop (Marcus) in 362, it can be assumed that, at least from that moment on, Philae had a church. Despite this, and the fact that Theodosius I decreed the closure of pagan temples in 391, this centre of worship does not seem to have undergone any changes. The island continued to be a scared place where ancient Egyptian cults existed until the sixth century. This might have been down to the fact that the sanctuary was transregional, and served to strengthen ties with the Blemmyes, who were frequent visitors to the temple complex, with all that this implied at an economic and commercial level (Hahn et al. 2008). The closure of pagan temples between 535 and 537 was not only promoted by Justinian, but also by the patriarch of Alexandria, who lost no time in transforming the temple of Isis into a church dedicated to St Stephen (Merkelbach 2001, p. 330). This church was consecrated during the tenure of Theodorus of Philae who was bishop until 577. In addition to that of St Stephen, built in the pronaos of the temple of Isis, the archaeological record points to the existence of another five or six churches built between the sixth and eight centuries (Richter 2002, pp. 123–26). |
15 | Proc. Bell. Pers. I.19.35–37. It is surprising that this episode is not included in the De Aed., which would stress the idea that conversion was not the driving force behind the Justinian programme. |
16 | Something similar occurred after the anti-pagan unrest in Ephesus (Foss 1979, pp. 86–87). |
17 | Ammonia. |
18 | Tocra. |
19 | Benghazi. Additionally, the construction of baths. |
20 | Tolmeita. |
21 | VI.2.111, possibly present-day Tabilbé. |
22 | VI.4.112, present-day Libda, close to Al-Khums. |
23 | VI.5.113 very close to the palace; also porticoed streets and baths. |
24 | VI.6.114, present-day Susa. |
25 | Present-day Ras Kabudia. |
26 | Present-day Medinet el-Kedima. |
27 | Present-day Ain Jelloula. |
28 | ‘[…] Pentebagae and Florentianae and Badê and Meleum and Tamugadê, as well as two forts, Dabusis and Gaeana […] he walled two cities, Fricê and Sitifis [Setif]. At the cities situated in the rest of Numidia […] he set up impregnable defences: Laribuzuduôn, Paraturôn, Cilana, Siccaveneria [Keff], Tigisis [Ain el-Bordj], Lamfouaomba, Calamaa [Guelma], Medara [Haidra], Medela; besides these, two forts, Scilê and Foscala’ (De Aed. VI, 7, 115). The identification of some of these places is problematic to say the least. |
29 | Present-day Ceuta. |
30 | Present-day Ghadames. |
31 | Present-day Aujilah. |
32 | She was solemnly given the title of Theotokos at the Council of Ephesus in 431, in relation to the Christological dogma according to which Jesus was fully God and, in turn, fully human, as had been established at the Council of Nicaea in 325, and that his two natures were united and inseparable in a sole person born of Mary. |
33 | On the situation of Ceuta when the Byzantines arrived, vid. (Montenegro and Castillo 1997, pp. 70–88), who consider that the Vandals had lost control of the city to the Mauri; (Vallejo Girvés 2012, pp. 99–123). |
34 | In this respect, there is great deal of inconclusive literature, although it seems that the interesting cultural trinomial ‘Byzantine church/Aljama mosque/cathedral’ presented by (Bernal Casasola and Paredes 2020, p. 422), following the proposal of E. Gozalbes Cravioto, should be accepted as the most probable of all: ‘that the Byzantine basilica is located below the cathedral of Ceuta, in Africa Square, which was built on top of the Islamic Aljama mosque; which, in turn, according to Al-Bakri, was erected on top of “ancient” buildings’. The late Roman basilica must have already been abandoned by that time. |
35 | It is impossible to identify the saint to whom Procopius is referring, but it is interesting that he specifies that she was a local one and that, unlike the Theotokos, her church was located outside the palace complex, which, it is understood, was walled. He seems to be contrasting a central official cult with a local one that served to unite the population of the capital. Following the suggestion of P. Silvio Moreno, IVE—personal communication—St Prima might have belonged to the group of Saturninus and companions, the 49 Abitinian Martrys of 304 (Acta SS. Saturnini, Dativi et aliorum plurimorum martyrum in Africa, PL 8, 688 and ff.). Prima is also mentioned in the two lists of Mauritanian martyrs appearing in the Martyrologium Hieronymianum: 17 October and 2 November, but this is improbable given how distant Carthage was. |
36 | In all likelihood, the Byzantines simply reused the existing Vandal church on the hill of Byrsa, inside the Germanic palace complex. |
37 | Proc. De Aed. VI.4.112. The city’s decline coincided with the onslaught of the Austoriani in 364, according to Amm. Marc. 26.4.5; cf. 27.9.1; (Desanges 1990). |
38 | CIL VIII, 8 = CIL VIII, 9 = IRT 342 = LBIRNA 49 = LBIRNA 50 = IRT-S, 24 = AE 1926, 155 = AE 1949, 84 = AE 1951, 206 = AE 1952, +104 = AE 2018, +1864. |
39 | Coripp., Ioh., II.43.184; III.79.187; VII.384; VIII. 648. Regarding the Laguatans following the Islamic Conquest of the Maghreb: (de Felipe Rodríguez 2019). |
40 | Proc. Bell. Vand. II.21.1 and ff. |
41 | Proc. Bell. Vand. I.25.7, the awarding of insignias was regarded as a form of political recognition of territorial control; (Pringle 1981, pp. 9–16 and 23–50). |
42 | PLRE IIIb, Sergius 4, 1124–1128, the office of dux militis was reestablished after the reconquest in 534, according to CJ I.27.2, the incumbent having his seat in Leptis Magna, which must have led to friction with the local population, given the power vacuum of the Vandal period. |
43 | Coripp. Ioh. I.144,467; IV.48,85,629; V.171; VI.278; VII.535 (cult of Amon); VIII.434,474,501; (Modéran 1986, pp. 95–212). |
44 | Trad. A. Gateau, pp. 35–37. = Ibn ‘Abd-al-Hakam, Conquête de l’Afrique du Nord et de l’Espagne, A. Gateau (trad.), (Argel 1947). |
45 | For a necessary study of the dilemmas posed by the sources on this enclave, vid. (Modéran 2003, pp. 243–44). |
46 | De Aed. I.III.36 contains a description of the churches of Blaquernas, Pege (‘Both these churches were erected outside the city-wall, the one where it starts beside the shore of the sea, the other close to the Golden Gate, as it is called, which chances to be near the end of the line of fortifications, in order that both of them may serve as invincible defences to the circuit-wall of the city’) and Hieron. |
47 | I.VIII.43—restoration—together with two churches of St Michael the Archangel in Arnavutkoy, in the Bosporus Strait. |
48 | II.X.65. |
49 | III.IV.72, together with the reconstruction of monasteries in the present-day Turkish city of Erzurum, 40 miles from Dara. |
50 | V.VI.103. By building it at the highest point of the city, on top of a Jewish sacred space, Justinian apparently wanted to give it spatial pre-eminence (Murphy-O’Connor 2008, pp. 19–20, 83–84). This choice would not have been devoid of political motivations, although, for the Christian community of the period, it symbolised the supremacy of their creed and the victory of the Mother of God over Judaism, whose sacred mount had been abandoned (Tsafrir 2000). As to the subsequent superposition of buildings during the Islamic period, vid. Procopius, Buildings of Justinian, Trad. Aubrey Stewart, M.A., anot. C. W. Wilson, T. Hayter Lewis, London 1888, appendix II. |
51 | V.VII.105 in Nablus. |
52 | V.VIII.106 Jebel-el-Tur. |
53 | V.IX.106 reconstruction of the temple. |
54 | Id., it was not a church but a house of the Mother of God, perhaps a hospice. |
55 | The church of Balikli is especially interesting for, even though it must have been built outside the city walls, it controlled access to the city through the Golden Gate: (Janin 1964; more specifically, Mango 2000, pp. 173–88). |
56 | See Note 48. |
57 | VIII.106. |
58 | The first temple to be archaeologically confirmed on Mount Gerizim dates from the fifth century BC (Magen 2007, pp. 157 and ff., 183; on the most recent discoveries of Samaritan material culture: Dar 2010), at the same time when the Second Temple of Jerusalem was built (Gudme 2020, p. 73). Whereas the Jewish cult prevailed in this city, the Samaritan cult held sway on Mount Gerizim. Both religious communities had a common origin, although the rivalry between them led to the destruction of the Samaritan temple by the Jews during the second century (Flav. Jos. Ant. 13.3.4; Bourgel 2016, pp. 505–23, 2019, p. 628). By then, a thriving city had been established on the slopes of the mount, which would subsequently be raised to the ground by the Hasmoneans. Thanks to the testimony of Flavius Josephus, it is known that the walls surrounding the temple remained standing (Ibid. 14.6.2; 18.4.1; B.J. 3.7.32; as regards the colony in the Roman period: (Magen 2009). The emperor Hadrian built in the mount a temple of Zeus Hypsistos). There is also reference to this circuit-wall in the account of Eusebius of Caesarea (Eus. Ces. Onom. 214. 135; on the value of Eusebius’ work for gaining further insights into Christian Palestine: Groh 1985; Walker 1990; Freeman-Grenville et al. 2003). |
59 | Deut. 11.29–30. Other biblical references to the mount: Deut. 27.12; Jos. 8.33; Jue. 9.7; it is considered to be the place where Abraham raised the altar on which to sacrifice his son Isaac on God’s behest. |
60 | The uncompromising Christian Orthodoxy of Palestine, underpinned by Constantinople’s political discourse fraught with restrictions and prohibitions, as well as the constant opposition of the Jewish community, exacerbated the violent reaction of the Samaritans, whose main revolt broke out in 529. |
61 | Juan Malalas is not referring to a new building but to the reuse of the Samaritan synagogue (1831, pp. 382–83). The Samaritan sources also mention this, emphasising the importance of access to water (Alsaud 2018, p. 194). |
62 | On the church dedicated to the Theotokos, vid. (Schneider 1951, pp. 228–31; Bull 1968, pp. 58–72; Di Segni 1990, pp. 343–50; Hjelm 2010, p. 25; Zangenberg 2012, pp. 399–418). |
63 | PLRE II, Procopius 7. |
64 | The Samaritans were, in turn, under pressure from the Christians in the area, according to the account of the Palestinian monk Cyril of Scythopolis (Gray 1993; Adshead 1996; Rabello 1997). |
65 | S.v. ‘Julianus ben Sabar’, A Companion to Samaritan Studies…, 140. (Crown et al. 1993). |
66 | A practice already mentioned by Herodotus III, 97; Arrian. Peripl. Pont. Eux. 12; and also described in a later period by Steph. B. s. v. Σάννιγαι. |
67 | Vid. n. 40. |
68 | Vid. n. 56. |
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Sánchez Medina, E. ‘And He Transformed Their Temple into a Church’: The Redefinition of Sacred Spaces in Libya in Late Antiquity. Religions 2023, 14, 845. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14070845
Sánchez Medina E. ‘And He Transformed Their Temple into a Church’: The Redefinition of Sacred Spaces in Libya in Late Antiquity. Religions. 2023; 14(7):845. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14070845
Chicago/Turabian StyleSánchez Medina, Esther. 2023. "‘And He Transformed Their Temple into a Church’: The Redefinition of Sacred Spaces in Libya in Late Antiquity" Religions 14, no. 7: 845. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14070845
APA StyleSánchez Medina, E. (2023). ‘And He Transformed Their Temple into a Church’: The Redefinition of Sacred Spaces in Libya in Late Antiquity. Religions, 14(7), 845. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14070845