Dan Snow's History Hit - How Did Ancient Romans become Christians?

Episode Date: January 1, 2026

Around 50 CE, a small group of travellers began to preach that a Jewish man, crucified by the Romans, had risen from the dead. Teaching love, forgiveness and eternal life, this new faith quickly gaine...d followers. By the early fourth century, it was thriving, and over the next hundred years, it exploded, spreading across the entire Roman Empire before becoming its official religion. What enabled it to take such a strong hold so quickly and so steadfastly? Dan is joined by author, broadcaster and historian Professor Alice Roberts to examine how Christianity out-organised and outlasted the Roman Empire. Alice's new book is called 'Domination: The Fall of the Roman Empire and the Rise of Christianity'.Produced by James Hickmann, Mariana Des Forges and edited by Matthew Wilson and Dougal Patmore.Dan Snow's History Hit is now available on Youtube! Check it out at: https://www.youtube.com/@DSHHPodcastSign up to History Hit for hundreds of hours of original documentaries, with a new release every week and ad-free podcasts. Sign up at https://www.historyhit.com/subscribe.We'd love to hear your feedback - you can take part in our podcast survey here: https://insights.historyhit.com/history-hit-podcast-always-on.You can also email the podcast directly at ds.hh@historyhit.com. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Around about the year 50 AD, a tiny sect of travellers was spreading a radical idea that a Jewish man, crucified by the Romans, had risen from the dead. He was in fact the son of God. He was God. You're listening to Dan Snow's history hit, and this is the story of the rise of Christianity. The followers of that faith preach love and forgiveness, and it turns out. life. It proved an attractive, convincing message. Thousands of people converted. By the early 4th century, a few hundred years later, it was a thriving religion, but it was still a minority one. It existed alongside lots of other religious groups within the Roman Empire. But during the
Starting point is 00:00:49 hundred years that followed, it exploded. It even became the official religion of the mighty Roman Empire. This is the story of how a small but tenacious minority out-organized, out-performed and ultimately outlasted the Roman Empire to become the dominant cultural force in the Western world. For this, I'm delighted to be joined by the author, the presenter, the broadcast, the professor, the legend, Alice Roberts. Let's get into it. Alice Roberts, good to see you. Nice to see you, too, Dan. Let's get things on. the way here, ring the bell. Why are you ringing out of bell? I'm ringing this bell because it connects with bells in the ancient Celtic church and there's been a really interesting dig
Starting point is 00:01:38 carried out by the University of Cardiff at Clantwick Major, which we think maybe the earliest monastery in Britain and possibly the earliest seat of learning in Britain as well. And it looks like they might have been making these bells there. And we know that bells like this were used in the Celtic church for punctuating church services and calling monks to prayer. Such an amazing topic. Why? I can't ask this. It's a too big question. Why does this small grassroots sect movement just becomes so globally massive and it all must start from the moment of Jesus' death? Take me back to that time. What was Christianity back right at the point at which he dies?
Starting point is 00:02:18 It is a weird thing when you think about it because the Roman Empire is this, well, first of all, vast, sprawling empire, and it's alive with different cults, different religions. It picks up different religions from different places, and you've got the old Greek gods which have been transformed into Roman gods, but then you've got Mithras and Isis and Kibberley and all of these different gods and goddesses. And then you have this tiny little movement, which starts off as a movement within Judaism. They're all Jews. You know, Jesus was a Jew, his followers were Jews. and it gradually starts to build.
Starting point is 00:02:55 I think that St. Paul is really important because he starts to preach it to non-Jews, sometimes called Gentiles in the Bible. And once you do that, you're able to spread outside of Judaism. But still, for this minor, everything starts small. So for this minor movement, you might call it a cult to begin with within Judaism, you then spin forward four centuries and you've suddenly got something
Starting point is 00:03:20 which is just about to become the state religion of the Roman Empire. It's extraordinary. It does demand explanation. You've looked at it as this sort of viral phenomenon on the ground. That's what's so exciting. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:03:31 Where do we need to start? Is it with the individuals? Yeah, I think so. And I think very quickly when I started exploring this, I wanted to get into that kind of granular detail and I think coming more from an archaeological background helps with that
Starting point is 00:03:42 because I want to get down to people on the ground. And I'm working back. with. I mean, my book does go back to the kind of the origins of Christianity and how it starts to spread. But what I was particularly interested in was when it's really transformed and it is crucially the fourth century. Because at the beginning of the fourth century, it's thought that only a very tiny minority of the Roman Empire are Christians. You know, you're probably talking something in the region. The estimates vary, but it's something between two and 10%. And then by the end of that century, it's been adopted as the state religion of Rome.
Starting point is 00:04:14 which is what a journey. And so at the beginning, as you pointed out, which I didn't really think about. So this is an empire actually where there is quite a lot of this sort of stuff. There are religions popping up. You'd have met people that like, I'm a follower of these guys over here. That's interesting.
Starting point is 00:04:27 And they sort of muddle along with each other, roughly speaking. So the Christians is just one little competing group within that big picture. So let's get to the beginning of that fourth century. You mentioned this tiny proportion. What, were they just isolated communities? Were they all in one area? How do they worship?
Starting point is 00:04:41 How do they get together? How are they spreading the word? It's interesting because actually, even though there is still quite a minority, a small minority of Christians within the empire, if you look at who they are and where they are, I think that's a really important thing. It does seem to be very much an urban phenomenon.
Starting point is 00:04:57 So there's something about the growth of Christianity that tracks along with the growth of cities within the Roman Empire. And also, they are very well organised already by the 4th century. And a lot of them have administrative roles within Roman cities as well. So we already have bishops by the fourth century. And those bishops have certain administrative roles. And then by the time of Constantine, who's very important, and I spend quite a lot of talking about Constantine,
Starting point is 00:05:26 he recognises that they're good at getting stuff done. And he will task them at doing all sorts of things like being in charge of the grain and oil doll in Alexandria, taking on the provision of some legal services and some funerary services, that kind of thing. They're very useful these Christians. Yeah, yeah. But then can we go back and be like,
Starting point is 00:05:43 Why do you, what do you identify? Why do you think that is? Like, what, what is it about Christians that, is it, it's ticking? See, you're doing the same thing. You're talking about Christianity in a complete abstract way. You're saying, was it Christianity or was it these people? It can only be the people. It can only be the people.
Starting point is 00:05:58 So I think there's lots and lots of different answers to this. I don't think there's one answer. And lots of people have looked at the spread of Christianity from the perspective of the attractiveness of the ideas, which is very kind of internal. I think you've got to look at the external factors as well. When I was writing the book, there's definitely a bit of me that is approaching it using kind of my background as a biologist as well.
Starting point is 00:06:22 I know this sounds really weird, but if you're looking at, for instance, how successful a species is, you can look at the anatomical adaptations of that particular species and you're just looking at maybe an individual and how their body works, but you can't understand the success of that species until you look at the ecology. You can't understand it until you look at how that species is interacting with its wider environment. So you've kind of got to do both things. And there's an awful lot about energetics in evolutionary biology as well. And if you then transfer that into the world of human culture,
Starting point is 00:06:59 because that's what we're doing when we're looking at the spread of Christianity, then what you're really looking at is how that idea is taken up by people and how they're able to support it as well. So economics has to come into it. Yeah, if that makes sense. Makes sense. So I'm looking at all those different things. I haven't looked in detail at how the package of ideas itself was attractive. I've kind of taken it for granted. And lots of people have written about that. Yeah, yeah. It's attractive. It's revolutionary. It's revolutionary. It's a revolutionary. It's exciting. The Paul will be exalted. It's not that revolutionary. So that is one thing I would have come back on is that. Maybe the package is revolutionary. But none of the ideas in it are particularly novel or revolutionary. Be really nice to each other. Yeah, be really nice to each other. There might be some life after death. I mean, St. Paul was a phariseic Jew before he became a Christian. And so they would have been. believed in life after death anyway in ideas of resurrection. And of course, Christianity changes over time. It's not just set in stone. And it's emerging within the Roman Empire.
Starting point is 00:07:52 So the people who are writing about it and helping to spread it further are actually working quite hard to make it attractive to bring other aspects of Roman culture into it. So we see philosophy being brought into it, has that aspects of platonic and stoic philosophy. I think it gets the point where it doesn't feel like something exotic. It's not alien. for the Romans. Yeah, yeah. It's just something that fits with
Starting point is 00:08:16 Roman culture more generally. There's another interesting thing that's happening within religions in the Roman Empire which is
Starting point is 00:08:24 there seems to be a trend towards what people have described as henotheism which is that you have polytheism but you might have
Starting point is 00:08:32 one god that is kind of the supreme god theos Upsistos they would say in Greek. So you'd have
Starting point is 00:08:40 your many and varied gods but there be one that you particularly admire and worship. And the Roman emperors did have a tendency to do that as well. So they would kind of identify with one god. And, you know, very often that would be Jupiter or soul. They quite like soul because that's the sun god and the sun is there for everybody. You know, it kind of makes sense. And so you've got this monotheistic religion, which again, you know, if we set monotheism against polytheism, it seems very, very different. But then if you set it in that
Starting point is 00:09:10 context of there's this tendency almost towards monotheism anyway and particularly with religions associated with the idea of empire and the idea of a single monarch. It helps to have a single god and a single monarch. But I haven't answered your question, have I? Because you were saying what was attractive and how did it kind of work or how did they make it work? And I think, again, we get big clues from looking at how Roman cities operated and what else was going on in Roman cities all the way through, that's what I wanted to do, was put Christianity in its context, in the Roman Empire, in its context, in these cities.
Starting point is 00:09:45 For instance, what we see in these Roman cities is a really strong kind of level of civic organization in terms of collegia. So these guilds, effectively, they would have been called later on in the Middle Ages. And there were all sorts of different guilds in Roman cities. So if you were a professional,
Starting point is 00:10:02 if you were a doctor, you'd be a member of the Physicians Guild. If you were a follower of Mithras, Which is another religion. Another religion, yeah, another Eastern religion. Then you could belong to effectively a collegium of Mithras. And these collegia operated a bit like membership clubs. So you'd pay in your subs.
Starting point is 00:10:21 And if you fell on hard times, then the collegiate you might support you. And if you died leaving a widow, it might support the widow. And you can start to see how Christians are operating within cities as a kind of collegium. They are networking in that way. And then gradually, it does seem to emerge amongst those kind of professional classes before it then gets into the elites. In those professional classes, you've got people who have their professions already. So they're already doctors and lawyers.
Starting point is 00:10:52 And so they're going to bring that into the church with them. And so then we find the church as an organisation actually starting to do things like providing legal services, providing healthcare, and being asked by the city to do that. Yeah, because if you're a religion that, prove is very attracted to and is spread by warriors or farmers, there's going to be a very different character to that religion, right? Yeah, I mean, it's very popular amongst soldiers as well, amongst military. But I think what's interesting about it is just to put all of that together.
Starting point is 00:11:22 I think when we talk about a religion, I think it's really hard to talk about it because it's almost as though, I think particularly where we're used to the idea of separation of state and religion, even though it's imperfect in Britain, We have quite a lot of influence, religious influence, in our state. But if we have that kind of principle in our mind of a separation of state and religion, that just didn't exist in the Roman Empire. And, you know, a religion was always something else.
Starting point is 00:11:47 And I suppose it's silly to imagine that it wasn't. Christianity had to be worldly in order to survive. If it hadn't have been commercial in some way, it just wouldn't have survived in the environment it was in. I'm going to get out of the abstract now. Got men and women. Women important in this story. Are they important early Christians? Yeah, they are, but it is very much within that heavily patriarchal society, which is Roman.
Starting point is 00:12:12 So we've got important people in these cities, in these towns around the empire. And I guess if you're trying to expand a religion, it's good to be in the places where business is done, where orders are written down, where infrastructure projects, you're in the right place, right? Yeah. How do we get then from there to this mass adoption? What have you learned about this? of, well, the archaeology, whatever it is, that sees those people extend exponentially. I think it's more top down than perhaps we've suspected.
Starting point is 00:12:42 So it's really interesting because it's going to be different at different times and in different places. And I think when Christianity starts going, it is a small grassroots movement. But as it's expanding within the empire, it does become more and more top down. I mean, once it's adopted, I suppose if we spin forward to once it's adopted as a state religion, of the Roman Empire, when you then get into the 5th century, we see alliances being formed between, for instance, Roman emperors and people on the fringes of the Roman Empire, particularly various groups of Goths, and they are able to express their allegiance with the Roman Empire by converting to Christianity. And it's very much their leaders. So you'll see these Gothic kings just
Starting point is 00:13:27 converting to Christianity, because that for them is like pledging allegiance to a flag. And then it's top down. It's like, I've converted to Christianity. Everybody in my particular territory is now a Christian. And it is about military allegiances on the fringes of the Roman Empire. And in those cases, because this is so interesting as Christianity expands and through the early medieval period, those got, they're getting something out of their alliance, aren't they?
Starting point is 00:13:53 But also, they're getting priests, they're getting bishops, they're getting useful people who can write things down and collect taxes and these professionals that you've talked about. Yeah, the bishops are interesting because the bishops are interesting, because the bishops are gradually, and before Christianity is the state religion of the Roman Empire, the bishops are gradually taking on more and more of the business of a city, more and more of that administrative business of the city. So they're kind of working alongside the old Roman system of magistrates,
Starting point is 00:14:20 but they're gradually taking more and more of that work on. And so they're very influential. And we see that happening. I mean, I've written a lot in the book about Alexandria because I think that we find a lot of clues about how Christianity became quite so successful in Alexandria. And in Alexandria, we can see that certainly by the fourth century, the bishops are involved in the grain export business. Now, this is the biggest business in Alexandria.
Starting point is 00:14:49 Agri business is the biggest business across the empire anyway, and particularly for Egypt. So Egypt has got this huge export of grain that actually the Roman Empire ends up depending on. There's a beautiful coin of Commodus from the second century where you've got Commodus on the back. You've got Commodus as Hercules holding his club and he's facing ISIS, the mother goddess of Egypt. He's standing there with her rattle her cisterum and then with the other hand handing a sheaf of wheat over to Comedus and it says Providenti Org, the providence of the emperor. As emperor, Comedus was going to bring all that grain from Egypt and spread it around
Starting point is 00:15:28 the empire. And of course, what emperors did was provide the grain doll to Roman citizens. So Roman citizens expected this kind of, it's not really welfare, but it's more like a kind of universal basic income. You get some. And a lot of that's coming from Egypt through the port of Alexandria. And by the fourth century, the bishops are pretty heavily involved in that. Then spin forward to the sixth century, they're completely running it. They own the granaries. They have their own fleet taking the export out of Alexandria, and of course they own or are operating as franchises, all the monasteries, which are also agribusinesses down the Nile. And then do you get the effect, for example, like the Rothschild found in Europe, for
Starting point is 00:16:08 example, if they're Christians, their counterparties in Rome and Austria are Christians, is it like you mentioned those fraternities, is there a trust, it eases business, it takes some of the friction out of doing business. If you know you've got some Christians that you quite like over there, you can deal with them. Yeah, I'm sure. I'm sure. And they are constantly sending letters to each other. So it's all very literate as well. And going back, I suppose, into earlier centuries, you realize that you are very much dealing with the elites in the Roman Empire because you are talking about a literate religion. It's a religion of the word. And yeah, they are all keeping in contact with each other by constant
Starting point is 00:16:39 letter writing. So we can actually see that happening. There's a lot of competition as well, though. So undoubtedly, there are effectively, I suppose, sort of trading relations that are emerging in that way, but also a lot of competition. So the bishops of Alexandria would compete with each other to run that very lucrative grain business. So even between the Christians that compete. Yeah, yeah. And I think that's why Constantine meets them
Starting point is 00:17:04 at the Council of Nicaea. So it's usually described as a real kind of turning point, a pivotal moment when a Roman emperor for the first time sits down and meets all these bishops, hundreds of bishops. And with the kind of assumption that he must have been Christian, he must have been very interested in Christianity, and not only that, but these minutiae of Christianity and the nature of God,
Starting point is 00:17:28 which is what they were debating at the Council of Nicaea. But again, if you pull it down from the abstract and go, okay, well, who's debating? And where did this argument about the nature of God, were God and Jesus exactly the same thing, or subtly different, which is what the Aryan heresy boils down to, where did that happen in Alexandria? And you've got these competing factions with a man who's a presbyter,
Starting point is 00:17:49 who I think probably wants to be Bishop of Alexandria and the then Bishop of Alexandria. And you've got these two political factions who are warring with each other. And I think Constantine is rather worried that if that turns into an actual clash in Alexandria, as it so often did, who had riots breaking out in ancient Alexandria all the time,
Starting point is 00:18:09 that the grain wouldn't get out of the granaries onto the barges, onto the ships, and off around the eastern Mediterranean, 325, he'd only just become the same, single emperor of the Roman Empire, having deposed all the others of the Tetraarchy, which is a polite way of saying, slaughtering them. So he'd just become the single emperor. He'd just made Byzantium, his new Rome. It's the city of half a million people that need feeding. He's got his army in the east as well. They all need feeding too. He is so dependent on that
Starting point is 00:18:41 grain coming out of Alexandria. So I think that's why he was there. And the grain is in the hands of the Christians. Yeah, it's hard to absolutely prove that in the early 4th century. You've definitely got letters suggesting that there is already church involvement in that trade. And then it ramps up and later on we can see that the church is heavily involved with it and by the 6th century running the whole shabang. You're listening to Dan Snow's history. There's more to come. I'm sort of behind those monasteries down there. No, that sounds interesting.
Starting point is 00:19:27 So they would have been previous to Christianity, what, just sort of villas, well, agro businesses. Yeah, I mean, I think that this is potentially another book, Dan, because I think that the Roman Empire was, if we go back to sort of the first century BC, where you've got the Republic and then into the kind of a, Roman Empire. The Romans were quite interested in Egypt because of all the grain, but they also looked to Egypt as a kind of weird way to run a country because it was so bureaucratic.
Starting point is 00:19:57 And I don't know whether that kind of temple economy then goes on to kind of implement to the Roman Empire because it was undoubtedly very bureaucratic from a very early time. And certainly under the Ptolemies, it's a very bureaucratic set up. And those bureaucrats might be priests of in Oh, yeah, it's totally. It's all the temple economy. Okay. Yeah. Yeah. Okay, so big temples, like Ramesses, funerary, whatever, they are in charge of big chunks of land. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:20:24 And that's where they get their income from. They're carefully monitoring how much people are producing and making sure that exactly the right amount is being taken as effectively taxes. Okay. Yeah. And those transition to being Christian establishments? Yes. So we get monasteries being set up in Egypt and you get monasteries being set up everywhere else.
Starting point is 00:20:43 and my book starts with Christianity in the far west, so the appearance of monasteries in Britain and in the south-west. How interesting. Yeah, I know. I know. I thought you might get that in there somewhere. Your home and native land? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:20:59 Well, it goes back to about 20 years ago when I was looking at a coastal cemetery in Wales and I was hanging off a rope, abseiling down this cliff. And there was a cemetery that nobody had known about eroding out of the cliff face and human bones were rattling down onto the beach. So we thought we'd go and have a look and at least try and map the extent of this cemetery. We kind of retrieved the bits of human bone that were just falling out. But obviously we're not going to burrow into the cliff and increase erosion.
Starting point is 00:21:28 But we mapped the cemetery above. And then I got really interested in these early Christian Welsh cemeteries. And it seems to be that we do have Christianity very, very early in West Wales compared to anywhere else. But having said that, I mean, it's just very hard to spot it. early, because you've got Christians being buried with non-Christians. And of course, we have this period in Britain which we call notoriously the Dark Ages, when we don't have much in the way of the written words, that early medieval period after the Romans. I think because we've
Starting point is 00:21:57 got that lack of history, we've assumed that there's more of a hiatus between the end of the Roman period and then what we can start to see emerging several centuries later. And I think we've probably got wealthy families hanging on to power locally in a way that we have in Gaul. So in Gaul, we don't have that dark ages historically. We've got loads of literature and we can see quite clearly that that's exactly what's happening. So the elite families in Gaul are holding on to their position at the top of society. And sons who would have gone off to be, you know, if I was a wealthy Roman matron, I would have expected my sons to go off and have a good Roman education and then go off to be lawyers and prefects and basically that governing class of the
Starting point is 00:22:43 Roman Empire. And Bishop jobs start to enter these careers so that that kind of layer of administration is replaced by ecclesiastical administration. And then what I've got no idea of is whether as a wealthy Roman matron or post-Roman matron, whether I would have thought that that would have helped my sons to stay in those positions as the Roman Empire crumbled. What had happened is even if it was inadvertent, they'd invented a system which was robust and resilient as the Western Roman Empire crumbled. So we can see Gaul, for instance, crumbling into these different kingdoms after the end of the Roman period, which is late 5th century for Gaul.
Starting point is 00:23:30 And because we've got such brilliant documentary records, we can see those same families just continuing through. there's one man who I got slightly obsessed about in the book called Sidonius who wrote... Great letters. It's 147 letters. And you go, oh my goodness. You know, what have we got in Britain from the 5th century?
Starting point is 00:23:47 Nothing, really. You got what Sedonius talks about in passing. Yeah. That's all we got. Oh, my goodness. So Sidonius with his 147 letters which he published during his lifetime. So it's somebody in the 5th century writing about the 5th century, writing about what it was like to live in the 5th century,
Starting point is 00:24:02 as the Roman Empire dissipates and dissipates. and disappears, and he goes off to be prefect of Rome for a bit, I think in the 460s, which is like effectively the Metropolitan Mayor of Rome, and then he comes back to Gaul into a top-level administrative job, which is Bishop of Claremont. And he's there as Bishop of Claremont under the Aegisyss still of the Roman Empire. But then the Visigoths, who've been given Aquitaine, and then are expected to kind of help suppress Gallic uprisings when they happen occasionally, just decide that they're going to take Southern France for their own. And they lay siege to Claremont. Sidonius is there with his brother trying to keep them
Starting point is 00:24:42 at bay. It's in vain. So then he is either exiled or runs away to Spain. And it's obviously rather annoyed that he had this fantastic job in Claremont, a very lovely villa, which he describes in great detail in one of his letters. And he writes to the Visigothic King, Eurek, who he knows as a Christian, even if he thinks he's maybe not the right sort of Christian. But he writes to him a very flattering letter and says, actually, I'd rather like you and can I have my odd job back? And Eurek says yes. So I think if Cedonius, I think if that had happened decades earlier in the fourth century
Starting point is 00:25:18 before Christianity was the state religion and before bishops were quite as powerful, if Cedonius had been a magistrate under the Roman Empire in what became Claremont, I don't think that Eurek, the Visigoth, would have given him his job back. He gave him his job back because somehow it seemed separate enough from the Roman Empire. But all the good bits of the Roman Empire, but he knew how to run the show, bring in fresh water, get the grain coming. So you're providing the services, but not necessarily as one of the emperors' immediate... No, and his God who had obviously supported the Roman Emperor before would now support Eurek. So it was transferable, any monarch will do.
Starting point is 00:26:02 Can we come back to Britain? Do you think the same thing's happening there, but we just don't know about it? So the Roman state so disappears, but do you think there are still local officials, but we're now calling them bishops or clergy, who are able to still do the kinds of things that the Roman Empire did? Yes, I'm sure. And I think that we talk about the Romans leaving, don't we? But who leaves?
Starting point is 00:26:22 I mean, the Roman army leaves in 410. and I think a couple of pro-European administrators have booted out. But essentially, I think a lot of it is just going to continue because you have got these quite sophisticated systems of administration, and they will continue. I imagine what's happening is something similar to Gaul. And what we might be saying, and what we certainly see archaeologically,
Starting point is 00:26:47 is that we start to see those kind of regional identities re-emerging. And it's almost like Roman culture was this kind of veneer, makes everything look very similar on the surface, and especially at a higher level of society where you have got those kind of similarities, although there are still regional differences, but you have got these similarities in the way that you plan a town, for instance, or the way that you construct a villa. So somebody coming from southern Spain would go to Britain and they'd be familiar with some of the architecture, for instance. I think that what then happens is you then see more kind of regional differences emerging. And you're almost going back to what
Starting point is 00:27:22 Britain was like in the Iron Age. I mean, I mean, I find it absolutely mind-blowing that we've still got some of that administrative pattern, that kind of administration in the landscape persisting to the present day. Because I think some of our modern counties are essentially these Iron Age kingdoms, which then become administrative units underneath the Roman Empire, when the whole thing is then governed as Britannia. And then when we're kind of seceding from the Roman Empire, those individual units return to being kingdoms again.
Starting point is 00:27:54 But with some of that Romanness transmitted through these Christian institutions. Yeah, because we're already at a point where the state religion of the Roman Empire has been Christianity for at least a generation by the time that Britain is leaving the Roman Empire. So Christianity would have been quite embedded. We know there were bishops. So we have bishops from Britain travelling to some of these important church meetings. We just don't have a lot of information in the same way that we do in Gaul. But what we can see as well in Gaul
Starting point is 00:28:26 is that people very much saw Christianity as a Roman thing and you have other people writing so Paulina Sapella who converts to Christianity he's a near contemporary of Sidonius who actually says that he converts to Christianity because it connects him back to a feeling of real Romanness and I suppose I don't know why we haven't just seen Christianity as an extension of the Roman Empire
Starting point is 00:28:49 because it's there, it's written in Latin, Rome is quite important. I mean, essentially that's what I ended up feeling with this book, was that the Western Roman Empire doesn't disappear. The connection back to the single emperor and the idea of a coherent, I suppose, political empire has gone. But the way that cities are administered is still the same. And essentially, Christianity is just Romaness continuing.
Starting point is 00:29:22 You listen to Dan Snow's history. Don't go anywhere. There's more to come. So through this fourth century into the fifth, we've got its official religion, the key administrators of bishops, they're Christians. What about normal people? How Christian are they?
Starting point is 00:29:49 I don't think we know. Really? Yeah, I really don't think we know. because they don't write. So it's really, really hard. And you obviously get to a point with Christianity where one of the answers to why it became so successful, I'm saying it again now,
Starting point is 00:30:03 is that it becomes completely exclusive. So gone are the days of the Roman Empire when you could worship anybody or anything. You could have all that range of different gods and goddesses. And that was fine as long as you also worship the empire. as long as you subscribe to the imperial cult, you could be a worshipper of ISIS or Mithras or Jupiter or what you wanted,
Starting point is 00:30:30 as long as you also respected and worshipped the emperor. That was gone, and suddenly all those other religions and cults were completely excluded, and Christianity was the only thing, and Christianity then becomes the imperial cult. So essentially, Christianity is your way of showing that you are Roman and that you do respect and worship the emperor. That's also very attractive to emperors, isn't it?
Starting point is 00:30:53 That actually, rather than just allowing this world where everyone believes their own thing as long as they also believe in it. Let's cut to the chase. Let's just make sure that actually it is exclusive. Everyone has to believe in this thing, which also, by the way, celebrates me as emperor. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:31:06 I become God's representative on earth, right? Yeah, you can see it both ways, can you? And I think it's interesting, you know, again, looking at Constantine meeting the bishops, it's interesting looking at it from Constantine's point of you and thinking, what did he have to gain and was he worried about Alexandria and the grain export? but also all those bishops had an awful lot to gain
Starting point is 00:31:22 and they were in his inner circle so he definitely had bishops in his inner circle advising him so they had a lot to gain if they could get a Roman emperor to really involve himself with the church I think there's lots of different people with lots of different motives yeah but in terms of normal people
Starting point is 00:31:38 from what your archaeologist taught you people might hedge their bets for a couple of generations what sort of had a few had a few crosses around the house but kept some of the old ways going what's your perception of that I think what's interesting is that you see aspects of kind of pagan rituals continuing. But in some ways, the church accepts that and adopts
Starting point is 00:31:55 that. I mean, I've been really interested looking at particularly funerary practices. And in one of my earlier books buried, I was writing about these different kind of feasts of the dead, which pre-Christian Romans had, that were fixed points in the calendar. And you'd have your own days of the dead as well, which were related to when your loved one had passed away and then perhaps the anniversary of that, that kind of thing. But there's also fixed days in the calendar in the Roman calendar when you would go to graves and you would have feasts at the graveside. And there was one of these that's called Rosalia, which is also a feast of roses too. And that just slides across into the Christian Orthodox calendar and becomes, in Romania, it's still called Rosalee. In France,
Starting point is 00:32:39 it's Pacta Rose and it's otherwise known as Pentecost. So you do have these pagan rituals which just slide across. And temples become churched as well. I mean, literally the physical fabric. Yeah. Oh, God, the physical fabric of it is fascinating. And this is where it gets intensely archaeological. So what you find is this absolutely extraordinary transformation of Roman buildings
Starting point is 00:33:04 into Christian buildings, Roman Christian buildings. And so I've been going on tour with my book and I've been saying to people in the audience, if I say the word basilica to you, what does it mean? What does it mean, Dan? Well, it means a magnificent early Roman, early Christian church. Okay. So if I go back two and a half thousand years ago into ancient Greece and I say basilica to you, what is it? Well, it's where the government gets run from. Exactly. So it's, the Greek word, I know. We didn't prepare this. People think I know about history. It's not prepared. So Basilius is king in Greek. Basilica is the king's house.
Starting point is 00:33:43 and in your Greek city state you're going to have a king in charge he'll meet with his advisers in the king's house that's the basilica. It's got a colonnade along the front so it's called the Basilica Stoa and that's on the town square,
Starting point is 00:33:56 the Agora and Romans just adopts a lot of Greek stuff. Yeah, there's one in Pompeii right in the main school. Yeah, they do their towns the same. They do Greek style. We're going to call it a forum instead of an Agora
Starting point is 00:34:07 but we'll have a basilica on the forum and you might have a couple of basilic. I think the biggest one that's ever been built was Trajan's Basilica Ulpia in Rome, which was enormous. But when we look at the architecture of those, they have a central chunk, which on the ground plan is a central aisle with pillars and then two sidels, or central nave, I should say, and then two side aisles. And the central bit goes up to two stories. The Basilica Alpia went up to three. And then the side aisles got to one story and come in. Then there's an apse at the end.
Starting point is 00:34:40 And you might put your statues of your emperor in there for the imperial. cult. And then when the official religion of Rome becomes Christianity, that's where you're going to put your altar. And it's like City Hall. So what we're talking about is a fusion of imperial power and religion. Yeah. So then who took over which? Did the politicians go, we are going to take Christianity and make it an official cult? Or did these senior religious figures capture the executive branch? They capture the emperor. Do you know, it's so complicated. And there's so many different people involved in it. There's going to be lots of people with lots of different motives. The emperor, as you said, had a lot to gain by allying himself with a cult which was about a single God
Starting point is 00:35:23 and then having a single monarch on earth makes sense. And the biographer of Constantine says that about Constantine and says that he's reflecting this single God above. And then equally, the bishops have more and more to gain the more imperial favour they have coming in their direction. if you're a big villa owner and you're being hit with those really, really heavy taxes, then you can convert your villa into a monastery and you get a tax exemption. So there's good financial reasons to do it as well. And yet the sting in the tale is that they create this astonishing imperial religion, which then bizarrely allows that religion and Romanness to outlive the political military empire itself,
Starting point is 00:36:09 the office of emperor. Yeah. So weird. That is exactly. what I would say is that I think that we've almost had the world pulled over our eyes and we kind of talk about the end of the Western Roman Empire. I don't think it ever ended. Continued your change.
Starting point is 00:36:20 It carries on. And in a city, it's going to have felt very, very similar. So, the same people, the same families were in that city. German warlord comes in, knocks on the gate. They're like, just, all right, bud. You can be in charge here, but we'll just keep everything running below the surface as it was before. It's all just going to carry on. And so the monasteries operate like the villas did.
Starting point is 00:36:38 They're big agricultural estates, and they're essentially franchises of the church. and they're going to be taxed, say that tax is going to be levied and collected into the cities. We get Roman bathhouses, as well as basilica's being turned into religious buildings. We've also got monasteries evolving out of villas and bathhouses. And the most beautiful example of that I've seen is in Sophia. And there's this gorgeous building that's completely surrounded by these imposing Soviet blocks. And then you've got this absolutely beautiful brick-built building at the end of, the excavated bathhouse. It probably was a bathhouse of the palace of Constantine. And at the end,
Starting point is 00:37:17 part of the bathhouse is still standing because it was made into a church. And it's called the rotunda. And it's this incredible fourth century building. But it was a bathhouse and then a church. And a baptisterium was a plunge pool in a bathhouse before it was ever part of a church. I just imagine the Christians going, what do we do with this watery bit? What do we do with this pool? I'm sure you can find a use of that. Amazing stuff. So, Alice, after all this work that you've done, if anyone out there is trying to start a religion,
Starting point is 00:37:48 what is the most important thing that occur? Is it convincing elite? Is it creating a groundswell, a grassroots movement, creating moments of virality, or doing everything? What's your takeaway? That's really hard. I mean, first of all, I wouldn't want to start a religion.
Starting point is 00:38:02 No, of course. I'm not suggesting you do. Oh, I mean, I think the fact that it has to be a business, as well. That is incredibly important. And that is there right from the very beginning for Christianity. I mean, when the man called Saul, who changes his name to Paul, is travelling round to different cities in the eastern Mediterranean, he is going and talking to people, but he's also asking them to pay their subs as well, the collection for the saints. So it is about funding it as well. It wouldn't have continued had it not been well funded from the very beginning.
Starting point is 00:38:37 So you've got me revenue positive. You've got to be revenue positive. And one of the first people that Paul goes to see and converts to Christianity, it's very difficult to know exactly what happened. But apparently he struck this magician blind. And then this person converts to Christianity was the governor of Cyprus. So he's going straight to influential people to get their buy-in. OK. So it is elite conversion super important. Yes, it is. Yeah. And I think it has to work for those elites. But it does have to work for those elites. But it does have. have to offer things to everybody else as well, which it was very good at doing. But I think more than anything, it just seems to me that it just took over the administration of the Roman Empire and the civic administration of the Roman Empire. And an awful loss of what bishops were doing was, yes, on the one hand, they're faith leaders, but on the other hand, they are administrators. They're running the show. They're running the show. They're running the show. Yes, Roberts. Thank you for
Starting point is 00:39:33 coming on the podcast. What's the book called? It's called Domination. Domination. Go and get everyone. Thank you so much coming on the podcast. much for having me, Dan. Thank you so much for listening to this episode of Dan Snow's History Hit. You know, you could have watched this episode and others on YouTube. That's right. You can peek behind the curtain of how we record this podcast on our YouTube channel. Very exciting new development here.
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