Propter Sodomitarum crimen. Social control, surveillance, and sanctioning of same-sex sexuality in late antique Christian communities

https://doi.org/10.34780/k05yh780

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Résumé

With the triumph of Christianity in the 4th and 5th centuries, a notable shift occurred as this religious doctrine increasingly fostered a fundamentally hostile approach towards same-sex sexuality, which differed from traditional Roman views. This transformation extended beyond theological discourses, manifesting not only in a harsher imperial legislation. More important for the daily lives of thousands of Christians were the preachers’ attempts of establishing a system of stricter social control over homosexual acts. Non-clerical Christians consequently played a pivotal role in monitoring, regulating, and reporting their peers and members of their own clergy suspected to be engaged in same-sex relationships to ecclesiastical authorities. Church sanctions, publicly administered and socially ostracizing, contributed to a self-reinforcing system that solidified the new normative guidelines around sexual norms and thus had a profound influence on the lives of a multitude of people living in the Christianising Roman world.

Mots-clés :

Christianity, sexual morals, social control, homosexuality, surveillance

Publiée

2024-12-18

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Artikel

Comment citer

Hahn, M. (2024) « Propter Sodomitarum crimen. Social control, surveillance, and sanctioning of same-sex sexuality in late antique Christian communities », Chiron. Mitteilungen der Kommission für Alte Geschichte und Epigraphik des Deutschen Archäologischen Instituts, 54, p. 79–112. doi:10.34780/k05yh780.