000 01748nam a2200337 a 4500
005 20260119070953.0
008 2023-07-04 11:23:30
020 _a9780802849717, 0802849717
040 _cThư viện Cơ Đốc
041 _aeng
082 _a270.1082
082 _bB886-W78
100 _aWinter, Bruce W.
100 _eAuthor
245 _aRoman Wives, Roman Widows
245 _bThe appearance of new women and the Pauline communities
245 _cBruce W. Winter
260 _aU.S.A.
260 _bW.B. Eerdmans Pub
260 _c2003
300 _a236tr.
300 _bPaperback, illustrations
300 _c24 cm
520 _aIn ancient Roman law you were what you wore. This legal principle became highly significant because, beginning in the first century A.D., a ""new"" kind of woman emerged across the Roman empire - a women whose provocative dress and sometimes promiscuous lifestyle contrasted starkly with the decorum of the traditional married women. What a woman chose to wear came to identify her as either ""new"" or ""modest."""" ""Augustus legislated against the ""new"" woman. Philosophical schools encouraged their followers to avoid embracing her way of life. And, as this fascinating book demonstrates for the first time, the presence of the ""new"" woman was also felt in the early church, where Paul exhorted Christian wives and widows to emulate neither her dress code nor her conduct.
650 _aChristianity and culture -- History -- Early church, ca 30-600
650 _aWomen -- Biblical teaching
650 _aThe Roman Empire
650 _aWives Religious life
856 4 _uhttps://data.thuviencodoc.org/books/11052/roman.jpg
_yCover Image
911 _aNguyễn Thị Kim Phượng
999 _c10903
_d10903