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Christianity introduced a new moral epoch in the course of human
history. Its effect was necessarily transforming upon those who
came under its sway. Being cosmopolitan in its nature, we have now
to study woman as being somewhat dissociated from racial type and
national manner, and we shall seek to ascertain how she met and was
modified by Christian conditions. These had a larger effect upon
her life than upon that of man; for, by its nature, Christianity
gave an opening for the higher possibilities of her being of which
the old religions took little account. In the realm of the
spiritual, it, for the first time, assented to her equality with
man. That the women of the first Christian centuries submitted
themselves to the influence of that religion in a varying degree,
the following pages will abundantly show. And it will be seen that
in the many instances where the Christian doctrine was not
permitted to dominate the life, the dissimilarity of those women
from their prototypes in former heathendom is correspondingly
lessened. While it is not possible to treat this subject without
illustrating the above-mentioned fact, the authors beg to remind
the reader that this is distinctively a historical and not a
religious work. Though, under other circumstances, they would be
very willing to state positive views in regard to many questions
herein suggested, it is not within the province of this book to
defend or refute any religious institution. The aim is solely and
impartially to represent the life of the Christian women of the
first ages. Though this is a work of collaboration, Mr. Brittain is
solely responsible for the part of the book treating of the women
of the Western Roman Empire, and Mr. Carroll is solely responsible
for that discussing the women of the Eastern Roman and Byzantine
Empires. Differences of personal characteristics, based upon
dissimilarity of national temperament, reveal themselves in these
women of Rome and Constantinople, but the Christian principle,
through its transforming and elevating influence on the lives of
pagan women, gives unity to the volume, and presents a type of
womanhood far superior to any that had up to this time been
produced by the Orient or early Greece or ancient Rome. At Bottom
of the Hill Publishing all books are edited by human beings. This
book has is complete with illustrations, has no missing or blurred
pages, nor errant marks. Spelling errors, and omitted or unintended
characters, will be few, if any. We recognize that we make mistakes
but strive to give readers an exceptional product at the lowest
price possible.
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