How and to what extent were the imperial cult and emperor worship thought to preserve stability in the Roman world? Cover Image
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How and to what extent were the imperial cult and emperor worship thought to preserve stability in the Roman world?
How and to what extent were the imperial cult and emperor worship thought to preserve stability in the Roman world?

Author(s): Zsolt Magyar
Subject(s): Ethnohistory, Social history, Ancient World, Social Theory
Published by: Akadémiai Kiadó
Keywords: Imperial cult; emperor worship; Romanisation; apotheosis; Christians and the Roman state;

Summary/Abstract: The imperial cult played important role throughout the whole antique world. It reached Rome with Caesar. In the centuries following him the divinity of the emperors were accepted by the whole population of the empire. The cult – in the eyes of the Roman population – assured the wellbeing of the state and its inhabitants. The only exception were Christians (together with Jews), who on the bases of their faith regarded emperor worship as idolatry. This is why, they became, in the eyes of the contemporary Roman population, atheists and the enemy of the state. This paper deals with the new results of the research of the imperial cult of Rome and its relationship with Christians.

  • Issue Year: 60/2009
  • Issue No: 2
  • Page Range: 385-395
  • Page Count: 11
  • Language: English