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Papers by Erika Hermanowicz

Research paper thumbnail of African Ecclesiastical Wealth

Studies in Late Antiquity, 2022

Recent studies on African churches in Late Antiquity (especially Donatist and Catholic) have argu... more Recent studies on African churches in Late Antiquity (especially Donatist and Catholic) have argued for their robust wealth, especially after the Donatist church was forced to unify with the Catholics after the Conference of Carthage in 411. This paper employs archaeological, historical, and ecclesiastical scholarship to scrutinize assumptions about African ecclesiastical wealth from a number of different perspectives and probes the merits of how wealth is currently estimated, including tabulation and use of comparanda. Archaeological evidence to support the idea of massive church wealth, including evidence of involvement in manufacturing and basic collaboration or coordinated activity, is too thin to warrant credence. Once current assumptions about African church wealth have been critiqued, the paper turns to the role that the Roman administration played in African church finances. Archaeological and ecclesiastical studies on Africa identify the imperial court as the great financial supporter of the Catholic church, which became rich, it is argued, through the emperor's gifts and economic favoritism. This paper argues that, to the contrary, repeated threat of confiscation before 411 and, in particular, attempts by imperial personnel to coordinate church mergers in Africa after 411 promoted the dispersal and scattering of resources away from churches and into private hands. Institutional structures of the church and the imperial administration encouraged financial atomization and dispersal, not consolidation and accumulation.

Research paper thumbnail of The Council of Hippo in 427: The Donatists are Still Keeping Augustine Busy in the 420s

The Late (Wild) Augustine, 2020

Research paper thumbnail of Donatists, Catholics, and Appeals to the Law: 392–404

Possidius of Calama, 2008

Research paper thumbnail of Donatist Strategy and Catholic Response, 403–5

Possidius of Calama, 2008

Research paper thumbnail of Textual Adventures- A Brief History of the Theodosian Code

Research paper thumbnail of Possidius on Augustine

Augustine in Context, 2017

Research paper thumbnail of Book Six of Augustines De musica and the Episcopal Embassies of

Augustinian Studies, 2004

Research paper thumbnail of Augustine on Lying

Research paper thumbnail of Catholic Bishops and Appeals to the Imperial Court: A Legal Study of the Calama Riots in 408

Journal of Early Christian Studies, 2004

Book Reviews by Erika Hermanowicz

Research paper thumbnail of Augustine, the Trinity, and the Church: A Reading of the Anti-Donatist Sermons. By Adam Ployd . Oxford Studies in Historical Theology. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2015. xii + 225 pp. $74.00 cloth

Research paper thumbnail of Being Christian in Vandal Africa: The Politics of Orthodoxy in the Post-Imperial West by Robin Whelan (review)

Journal of Orthodox Christian Studies, 2020

Research paper thumbnail of Donatist church in an apocalyptic age by jesse a hoover

Journal of Church History, 2019

Research paper thumbnail of Peasant and Empire in Christian North Africa (review

Journal of Early Christian Studies, 2011

Research paper thumbnail of <i>Augustine and Catholic Christianization: The Catholicization of Roman Africa, 391–408</i> by Horace E. Six-Means (review)

The Catholic Historical Review, 2013

Research paper thumbnail of Christians and Their Many Identities in Late Antiquity, North Africa, 200–450 C.E. by Éric Rebillard

Journal of Early Christian Studies, 2013

Research paper thumbnail of Les Vandals et l'Empire romain by Yves Modéran (review

Journal of Early Christian Studies, 2016

Research paper thumbnail of Christianity in Roman Africa: The development of its practices and beliefs

Journal of the American Oriental Society, 2016

Research paper thumbnail of Space and Religion in North Africa

Research paper thumbnail of African Ecclesiastical Wealth

Studies in Late Antiquity, 2022

Recent studies on African churches in Late Antiquity (especially Donatist and Catholic) have argu... more Recent studies on African churches in Late Antiquity (especially Donatist and Catholic) have argued for their robust wealth, especially after the Donatist church was forced to unify with the Catholics after the Conference of Carthage in 411. This paper employs archaeological, historical, and ecclesiastical scholarship to scrutinize assumptions about African ecclesiastical wealth from a number of different perspectives and probes the merits of how wealth is currently estimated, including tabulation and use of comparanda. Archaeological evidence to support the idea of massive church wealth, including evidence of involvement in manufacturing and basic collaboration or coordinated activity, is too thin to warrant credence. Once current assumptions about African church wealth have been critiqued, the paper turns to the role that the Roman administration played in African church finances. Archaeological and ecclesiastical studies on Africa identify the imperial court as the great financial supporter of the Catholic church, which became rich, it is argued, through the emperor's gifts and economic favoritism. This paper argues that, to the contrary, repeated threat of confiscation before 411 and, in particular, attempts by imperial personnel to coordinate church mergers in Africa after 411 promoted the dispersal and scattering of resources away from churches and into private hands. Institutional structures of the church and the imperial administration encouraged financial atomization and dispersal, not consolidation and accumulation.

Research paper thumbnail of The Council of Hippo in 427: The Donatists are Still Keeping Augustine Busy in the 420s

The Late (Wild) Augustine, 2020

Research paper thumbnail of Donatists, Catholics, and Appeals to the Law: 392–404

Possidius of Calama, 2008

Research paper thumbnail of Donatist Strategy and Catholic Response, 403–5

Possidius of Calama, 2008

Research paper thumbnail of Textual Adventures- A Brief History of the Theodosian Code

Research paper thumbnail of Possidius on Augustine

Augustine in Context, 2017

Research paper thumbnail of Book Six of Augustines De musica and the Episcopal Embassies of

Augustinian Studies, 2004

Research paper thumbnail of Augustine on Lying

Research paper thumbnail of Catholic Bishops and Appeals to the Imperial Court: A Legal Study of the Calama Riots in 408

Journal of Early Christian Studies, 2004

Research paper thumbnail of Augustine, the Trinity, and the Church: A Reading of the Anti-Donatist Sermons. By Adam Ployd . Oxford Studies in Historical Theology. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2015. xii + 225 pp. $74.00 cloth

Research paper thumbnail of Being Christian in Vandal Africa: The Politics of Orthodoxy in the Post-Imperial West by Robin Whelan (review)

Journal of Orthodox Christian Studies, 2020

Research paper thumbnail of Donatist church in an apocalyptic age by jesse a hoover

Journal of Church History, 2019

Research paper thumbnail of Peasant and Empire in Christian North Africa (review

Journal of Early Christian Studies, 2011

Research paper thumbnail of <i>Augustine and Catholic Christianization: The Catholicization of Roman Africa, 391–408</i> by Horace E. Six-Means (review)

The Catholic Historical Review, 2013

Research paper thumbnail of Christians and Their Many Identities in Late Antiquity, North Africa, 200–450 C.E. by Éric Rebillard

Journal of Early Christian Studies, 2013

Research paper thumbnail of Les Vandals et l'Empire romain by Yves Modéran (review

Journal of Early Christian Studies, 2016

Research paper thumbnail of Christianity in Roman Africa: The development of its practices and beliefs

Journal of the American Oriental Society, 2016

Research paper thumbnail of Space and Religion in North Africa