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This item is a print on demand title and will be dispatched in 1-3 weeks.

Paperback / softback

£45.99

Publisher: Oxford University Press
ISBN: 9780198785194
Number of Pages: 376
Published: 03/11/2016
Width: 15.8 cm
Height: 23.5 cm
This book is the first publication of a very early set of Christian monastic rules from Roman Egypt, accompanied by four preliminary chapters discussing their historical and social context and their character as rules. These rules were found quoted in the writings of the great Egyptian monastic leader Shenoute. Designed for a federation of monks and nuns who banded together about 360 CE--forming the so-called "White Monastery Federation"--the rules date back to the fourth and fifth centuries. New historical evidence is presented for the founding of the Federation. Providing almost the earliest evidence for Christian communal (cenobitic) monasticism, the rules depict many intimate aspects of ascetic practice. Details of monastic daily life are mentioned in passing in the rules, and the author uses these details to describe their picture of monastic life under five general topics: the monastery as a physical plant, the human makeup of the community, ascetic observances, the hierarchy of authority, and the daily liturgy. The book includes a clear English translation of the rules accompanied by the original Coptic text, amounting to five hundred and ninety-five entries.
I: THE NATURE OF THE RULES; II: CORPUS OF MONASTIC RULES

Bentley Layton (Professor of Religious Studies and Professor of Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations, Professor of Religious Studies and Professor of Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations, Yale University)

Bentley Layton's publication of a bilingual Coptic-English edition of excerpts from the canons of Shenoute is a welcome addition to the thriving studies on Egyptian monasticism in general and Shenoute's writings in particular. * Samuel Rubenson, Lund University, De Gruyter * the book is an extremely valuable addition to scholarship on Coptic Christianity in late antiquity. * H. Clifton Ward, Ancient Christians Studies *