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Book reviews for "Warnes,_Timothy" sorted by average review score:

Tertullian: A Historical and Literary Study
Published in Hardcover by Oxford Univ Pr (1997)
Author: Timothy David Barnes
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A lively, fascinating study which makes Tertullian live
Tertullian's thought and life come alive in this marvellous study. Written during the revisionist fashion in the 1960's, the book is still required reading. The text is very readable, and extremely detailed, containing more than enough references to take a newcomer to the critical literature. The starting point for any English speaker wanting to know about Tertullian, although not all of his views have found acceptance.

This book is the most important source for study Tertullian.
This book is a really treasure for everyone who wants to start seriously study Tertullian. It is full of new (provocative?) informationabout him(the opposite is f.e. "Tertullian. in: Bardenhewer, O.: Geschichte der altchristlichen Literatur. 2. Bd. 1913.) My question is: how can be possible, that this book is not available neither in Czech Republic (not only the translation of it, but even not an original), nor in Amazon bookstore?!


Ambrosia and the Coral Sun
Published in Paperback by Tug Press (1994)
Authors: Sherri L. Board, Kathy Barnes-Million, and Timothy A. Board
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great book for all ages
When I first got this book, I didn't think it would be that great, but when I started to read it, I found out this was a great, interesting book. I recommend this book to anyone, kids and adults.


Constantine and Eusebius
Published in Hardcover by Harvard Univ Pr (1981)
Author: Timothy David Barnes
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Who was Eusebius?
Most readers of history are familiar with the Emperor Constantine's reported vision of the Cross before his victory at the Milvian Bridge and his deathbed baptism to Christianity, yet few probably know about the emperor's first biographer, Bishop Eusebius of Caesarea (260-339 C.E.). University of Toronto Professor Timothy D. Barnes devotes this scholarly volume to the two men. With copious footnoting, the first third of the book details the era from Diocletian's reforms to Constantine's consolidation of power as sole emperor of a united Roman Empire. In introducing Eusebius, Barnes backtracks to Third century Caesarea, a cosmopolitan seaport in Roman Palestine, and the Christian scholar Origen. Origen's interest in the relationship of God with humankind led him to a synthesis of Platonism and Christianity, believing that God had revealed himself - imperfectly - through Holy Scripture, and on three levels of understanding that encompassed body, soul and spirit. Eusebius was influenced by Origen, but interpreted the Bible from a historical perspective, with the Holy Spirit as the ultimate author. As scholar-historian, Eusebius compiled Chronicle, a guide to biblical place names, with a chronology that dated Moses and the Hebrew prophets in relation to Christ's Incarnation. Eusebius met Constantine in 325, at Nicea, during a council of some 300 bishops, which the emperor called primarily to settle the heresy of Arianism. A bishop by then, Eusebius was under suspicion and presented a formal creed of orthodoxy to refute reports of his Arian sympathies. In 330, when Constantine dedicated New Rome on the site of ancient Byzantium, Eusebius was asked to provide 50 bibles for churches in the new capital. The bishop was there again in 336 for the emperor's 30th anniversary, and read his Panegyric to Constantine, a poem of praise that likened the emperor to Christ. Eusebius then began a 4-book Life of Constantine, another panegyric that he transformed into a biography. In the final chapter Barnes discusses the historical value of the Life and provides a summary of the book's contents. Although Eusebius only met Constantine 4 times and received 6 letters, which reflect respect but not intimacy, he had access to documents after 324, yet glosses over the bloody succession to power by Constantine's 3 sons. An Epilogue treats of the criticism of Constantine by Julian II, Zosimus and others, and the renewed interest in the emperor during the Renaissance and Counter- Reformation. Barnes's conclusion, "Constantine... was neither a saint nor a tyrant. He was more humane some of his immediate predecessors, but still capable of ruthlessness and prone to irrational anger.... After 312 Constantine considered that his main duty as emperor was to inculcate virtue in his subjects and to persuade them to worship God. Constantine's character is not wholly enigmatic; with all his faults and despite an intense ambition for personal power, he nevertheless believed sincerely that God had given him a special mission to convert the Roman Empire to Christianity." Albert Noyer M.A. Author: The Saint's Day Deaths.


Athanasius and Constantius: Theology and Politics in the Constantinian Empire
Published in Paperback by Harvard Univ Pr (2001)
Author: Timothy D. Barnes
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NOT FOR BEGINNERS
I put myself on a summer reading course of important Late Roman/Early Byzantine Emperors. I started with Diocletian and hope to stop with Maurice. After reading Constantine the Great by Micheal Grant I began to cast around for a book on his successors. Of Constantine's three sons, this is the only major work in the past ten years that deals with any of them, the eventual victor in their succession struggle, Constantius. This book focuses on the Christian Bishop Athanasius' struggle for legitimacy within the late Empire.

Barnes discusses, in overwhelming detail, the multitude of early Christian squabbles and power-struggles that sought to define Christian orthodoxy within the Christian Roman Empire. Little is known of Athanasius as a person but his religious impact is enormous and Barnes dives into this and drags his reader down with him. There are too many names, councils and conflicts for anyone other than a true expert to keep straight.

One important idea I learned, though, was the absolute power the Emperors truly had. Most books give you an idea of this when they say, "Emperor So-And-So ordered the deaths of 10000 people." This book explains Imperial power in a new way. When Constantius wrote condemning letters about Athanasius, you can sense the man's panic as he tried to explain his way back into the Emperor's good graces.

This is what saves the book. You begin to root for Athanasius to survive (which he did as the Bishop of Alexandria for 45 years) as conspiracy after conspiracy strives to destroy his reputation and anathemize him and his teachings.

Don't try this book unless you have a good grasp of early Christian history or late Roman history.


Electronic CAD Frameworks (Kluwer International Series in Engineering and Computer Science, 185)
Published in Hardcover by Kluwer Academic Publishers (1992)
Authors: Timothy J. Barnes, David Harrison, A.R. Newton, and R.L. Spickelmier
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Ammianus Marcellinus and the Representation of Historical Reality (Cornell Studies in Classical Philology, Vol 56)
Published in Hardcover by Cornell Univ Pr (1998)
Author: Timothy David Barnes
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English Romantic Hellenism: 1700-1824 (Literature in Context (Barnes & Noble Books).)
Published in Hardcover by Barnes & Noble (1982)
Author: Timothy Webb
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From Eusebius to Augustine: Selected Papers 1982-1993 (Collected Studies Series, Cs438)
Published in Hardcover by Variorum (1994)
Author: Timothy David Barnes
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Hill and Redman's Law of Landlord and Tenant
Published in Ring-bound by Butterworths Tolley (1995)
Authors: John Furber MA, Michael Barnes, Paul Matthews, Timothy Harry, Nicholas Taggart, Joanne R. Moss, Edward Cole, Jonathon Karas, Raymond Cooper, and Christopher Jessel
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Loyalists and Community in North America: (Contributions in American History)
Published in Hardcover by Greenwood Publishing Group (30 August, 1994)
Authors: Robert M. Calhoon, Timothy M. Barnes, and George A. Rawlyk
Amazon base price: $72.95
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