Research Fellow
| College of Human Sciences
School of Humanities
| Department: Biblical and Ancient Studies
Early Christian Greek and Latin literature,especially:
Dreams, Prophecy and Violence from Early Christianity to Early Islam. $843000. Sole investigator.
Summary: The project aims to uncover the common roots of Christian and Islamic dream interpretation. It will reveal common themes in dream literature from pagan and Jewish antiquity to early Christianity and early Islam, and show how dreams and prophecy have been used to increase religious control, and to justify violence since Late Antiquity.
With its focus on an ARC-targeted research area - Understanding Culture and Communities - the project will benefit Australia by building intercultural understanding between contemporary Jews, Christians and Muslims. It will stress the common cultural roots of Judaism, Christianity and Islam by uncovering the crucial role of dreams and prophecy in increasing the authority of religious leaders, and the use of dreams to justify inter-religious violence.
Memories of Utopia: Destroying the Past to Create the Future. Lead CI. CI P. Allen, CI W. Mayer. PI: Chris de Wet, UNISA. $396 500.
Summary: This project aims to examine the evidence for competing utopian ideologies in early Christianity, which was a prelude to the later clash with Islam from the seventh century onward. Evidence from pagan-Jewish-Christian conflicts in Late Antiquity (300-650 CE) shows that violent destruction of the past is not exclusive to fringe religious groups. These past conflicts are relevant for understanding the conflict in the Middle East, precisely because analysis of the sources shows that, in intra- and inter-religious conflicts in Late Antiquity in this same geographic region, violent destruction of the past was a propensity in mainstream religion.
Negotiating Conflict through letter writing in the seventh century, an era of crisis. Lead CI. CI Allen. $155 000.
Summary: Greek and Latin letters of the seventh century show how bishops and emperors of Rome and Constantinople negotiated their claims to universal and local authority in the course of religious conflicts, and how they attempted to resolve bitter cultural and political divisions through diplomacy.
Crisis management in Late Antiquity: The Evidence of Episcopal Letters. CI B. Neil and CI P. Allen.
Poverty and Welfare in Late Antiquity. Lead CI: P. Allen; CI B. Neil and CI W. Mayer.
Bronwen Neil is Professor of Ancient History at Macquarie University, Sydney, Australia, and a Research Fellow in the Department of Biblical and Ancient Studies, UNISA.