Sep 5, 2024 9:23 PM
Jacob Burckhardt was a nineteenth-century Swiss historian who is mostly known today for his book The Civilization of the Renaissance in Italy where he was the first to really treat the Renaissance as both fundamentally different from the preceding medieval era and more-or-less founded the field of cultural history.
I had read one of his other books, The Greeks and Greek Civilization, before with a friend, and we both, along with one other person, decided to read Burckhardt's treatment of Constantine's conversion. The Greek book was interesting because, in a way quite distinct from contemporary historiography, which renders the past flat through its attempt to reconstruct things 'as they were,' Burckhardt's depiction of the Greeks was also an insight into the pressures of his own time. He identifies "ἀγών," or contest, as the driving force behind Greek culture and life: not only the Olympic, but also the Pythian, Nemean, and Isthmian Games; the Panathenaia where rhapsodes competed in their recitations of Homer; or the Dionysia, where playwrights composed their work in competition amongst themselves. Burckhardt's focus on ἀγών seems to reflect the rising swells of capitalism, in a Manchesterist formulation, that shaped his own age.
I think some of this was present in his discussion of Constantine, but to a much lesser degree. His approach to Constantine's conversion begins in sketching the lead-up to the crisis of the 4th century by recounting the trials of the various Roman Emperors from Marcus Aurelius onwards as they struggled to keep the empire together. Concomitant to the political crises that wracked the state, there was an ongoing disintegration of religious faith—Roman citizens began to import various other faiths found on the outskirts of the empire, and everything sort of congealed together into a mass of fungible deities. Some of what I saw in the Greeks book comes through here, as Burckhardt paints this as almost a marketplace of religions where Christianity managed to win out because it was, in a sense, a better product (hard to beat eternal salvation from your earthly troubles). Even external to Christianity, though, things were coalescing around monotheism, with Elagabalus made inroads on a monotheistic cult around an eponymous god brought in from Syria and the later advent of Mithraism. Neoplatonism is also making itself felt in the 3rd century and Burckhardt shows it too is tending towards monotheism. (There was also a lot of cool stuff about Neoplatonist conjurers who would curse people by using an elaborate set of magic tricks—this too testifies to the cultural exhaustion of the time, the death of true belief and reliance on gimmick, that made it ripe for Christianity to rise). Burckhardt is definitely trying to claim here that certain pagan practices/beliefs/rites were taken up in altered forms by Christianity, but I don't know enough about the historiography of Christianity to know if there is any actual intervention happening here.
We then get a run through of Diocletian's rise to power before finally getting to Constantine himself. Unfortunately, I again don't know too much about the state of late antiquity scholarship in the nineteenth century to say whether his privileging of Diocletian over Constantine in this section constitutes something new. There is, however, a point to be made about his treatment of the question of Constantine’s actual faith. He counterposes Diocletian’s supposed unwavering, albeit pagan, faith to Constantine’s politically-motivated, almost mercenary adoption of Christianity. From the perspective of an actual antiquarian, it could be interesting whether Constantine actually believed in Christianity, from the perspective of history, however, it seems not to matter: the role he plays in history is independent of his faith (or lack of it). The section on the shenanigans surrounding the Council of Nicaea and the back-and-forth between Athanasius and Eusebius was quite funny, though.
5 Comments
1 year ago
The YouTuber 'The Gnostic Informant' has a good take on Constantine, in that so many of the workers and laborers had become so influenced by the spread of Christianity that it seemed the natural strategic decision for Constantine to appeal to these new Christians that comprised a significant portion of the workforce by adopting it as the new state religion.
1 year ago
I also read The Greeks and Greek Civilization and thought it was great. Tempted to try his other books too.
1 year ago
I really need to read his Renaissance book. Was there anything particular you liked about his Greeks book?
1 year ago
I loved the style of the writing. I'm not a massive history nerd so I can't really comment on the actual historical accuracy of the content but the experience of simply reading the book was fun. It wasn't too dry and academic and I felt like I understood the culture as far as Burckhardt did. I love Johan Huizinga for the same reasons. His books on the middle ages are awesome.
1 year ago
Yeah his writing is quite solid. I've also never heard of Huizinga, but I might need to check him out—thanks!