Death and the Afterlife in Syriac Christianity
In late antiquity as in the present age, death left its mark on the lives of families, communities, and societies. Syriac funerary hymns provide important insights into the social, emotional, funerary ritual histories of early Christian communities. Maria Doerfler here explores this body of largely ignored literature that has been attributed to Ephrem the Syrian. Different parts of the collection focus on individuals from a variety of social and ecclesiastical backgrounds: women and children, clergy and ascetics, as well as those who fell victim to natural disasters. The hymns provide insights not only into Syriac Christian ideas about death and the afterlife, but also into their existence, beliefs, and practices more broadly. Through engagement with different theoretical lenses, Doerfler uses instances of personal and communal crisis to elucidate historical and philosophical patterns among late antique Christians, addressing, inter alia, their responses to pandemics, understanding of wealth, and forging communal bonds that transcended death.
- Introduces a body of previously under-explored literature containing important data for understanding the history, literature, and thought of late antiquity
- Provides accessible introductions to theoretical approaches to literary sources, including ritual studies, disaster studies, and spatial theories
- Provides a deeper understanding of early Christians' ideas concerning death, the afterlife, and bereavement
Product details
September 2025Hardback
9781009573788
385 pages
229 × 152 mm
Not yet published - available from September 2025
Table of Contents
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Translating Eve: women and performance in the Necrosima
- 3. 'Short days they lived on earth . . .': the death of children in the Necrosima
- 4. Men and means: wealth and poverty in the Necrosima
- 5. Reading the book of the dead: bishops in the Necrosima
- 6. Reaching across the threshold: covenanters in the Necrosima
- 7. The Churches are empty, the priests are silent: rewriting ritual in pandemic times
- 8. Conclusion: beyond the threshold.