Most ancient peoples cremated their dead, I think - burial was used in ancient Egypt, and generally features where religions believe in bodily resurrection or else that one needs one's body to enter the afterlife,.
Random question (hence the point of the thread): To what extent had Christianity spread by the time of the fall of the Western Empire. I know some were Aryan, some Catholic/Nicean, etc., but I don't know the extent of Christianity or the timeline for when major milestones took place (particularly beyond the border).
I didn't know about that.Ireland itself is an odd duck too, where Christian and Pagan priestly classes seem to have existed in parallel for some time, unofficially up until the 17th century.
I didn't know about that.
No one yet has mentioned the spread of Christianity through the Middle East.
I thought Plotinus would bring that up. We know that Christianity seems to have spread through the Parthian Empire much as it did through the Roman Empire. The main difference seems to be that the upper classes didn't convert. These upper classes decided that the Parthian Christians might act as a fifth column of sorts for a Roman invasion, and so began a massive purge of the Christians, that makes any of the Roman persecutions pale in comparison.
I assume Plotinus, or even Dachs - that is kind of his region - would know more about the situation tha myself. A similar purge of Manichaeans later took place there. You now know everything I do about Parthian Christians.
Anyhow, as far as I know about Christians in the Middle East, Lord Baal is correct in that it spread throughout Persians, though the persecutions did not happen in under Sassanid monarchs. In fact, some tried the opposite - supporting branches of Christianity persecuted in the Roman/Byzantine Empires - and claim themselves as the true protectors of Christianity. Khosrau II's capture of some big important Christian cross thingy (I forgot what it was) was an important symbol of this, though Heraclius recaptured it.
Christianity was also popular among several Arabic tribes. You've probably heard of claims - probably true to some extent - that Mohammed was influenced by various Christian ideas. Even if he wasn't, he was highly aware of them nevertheless.
During the medieval era Christianity east of the ERE was mostly dominated by the Nestorian Church, which had adherents all the way to Mongolia and China (in regions, oddly enough, where Manichaeans also did well enough). They were already persecuted as a foreign religion for a while during the Tang Dynasty, for instance, and some of the Mongols running around during the Mongol conquests were Nestorian.
Sassanid treatment of Christianity was mixed. At times, they were alright with a Church of Persia being established. At least one of the Shahanshas (Khosrau/Xusro/Khusro II) had a Christian wife, and Yazdgerd II had pretty good relations with the Roman emperors and Christianity until late in his reign. Other times, the Sassanid state ruthlessly persecuted Christianity, especially any version that happened to be connected to the Roman government, as such Christians were seen as potential fifth columnists of the Romans. Generally, there was at least some persecution, and it worsened or lessened as relations with the Romans went up and down. The Sassanid monarchy and the Zoroastrian religious establishment were closely connected, and the religious establishment really didn't like any religious competition.
Though they practiced some weird version of Zoroastrianism caled Zurvanism that worshiped the third of the two gods, Zurvan. I think. Religion's not my strong suit at all.![]()
Christianity was pretty major with the Arabs before Islam, and still is today, though it's shrunk a lot in the past few centuries. My great-grandparents were Christian Lebanese. The Ghassanid kings were Arabs, often Christian, and usually allied with the Romans in the Sassanid era.
And the "cross thingy" was the True Cross (supposedly) captured along with Jerusalem.Heraklios eventually got it back when he beat the Sassanids.
German occupation of the Channel Islands was largely a propaganda coup, rather than important in any way. The Islanders were treated very well compared to other occupied territories. I believe only a small handful died. Part of this is likely due to the fact that the numbers of Jews on the islands was positively miniscule. There was some resistance, but it wasn't violent. It mostly consisted of hiding shipwrecked sailors or crashed pilots from the Germans.How was German occupation of the Channel islands different from life on the mainland for the Brits? Also how was it different from English occupation of the Faroes?
I would have mentioned the Middle East, but I understood the question to be about Europe!
Ireland itself is an odd duck too, where Christian and Pagan priestly classes seem to have existed in parallel for some time, unofficially up until the 17th century.
So what happened to Phoenician populations across the Mediterranean following the final defeat of Carthage?
The plight of Carthaginian population is well known, but Carthage was far from the only Phoenician settlement in North Africa and there were many other Phoenician settlements elsewhere such as Gades and Carthago Novo in Iberia, and the Phoenician homeland itself. Plus it is my understanding that the Phoenicians, being a sea-faring mercantile culture, had established Phoenician quarters in many cities and trading hubs throughout the Mediterranean.
I guess after the decline of Carthage and the cities of the Phoenician homeland, Phoenician populations had less political clout and over the centuries assimilated into local populations, but I'm hoping someone can provide additional insight.
From what I know they mostly assimilated, though the Lebanese do tend to claim direct descent from Phoenicians (I don't know the genetics of that, though, so I won't make a statement as to the likelihood of that). According to Wikipedia remnants of the Phoenician language still lingered on in the early days of the Arabic Empire, although like in many originally Semitic but non-Arabic-speaking regions the Arabs conquered (such as the Maghreb, Mesopotamia, and Egypt), it appears Phoenician was supplanted by Arabic, and seemingly much more severely (as Berber, Assyrian, Coptic, etc. still survive in some form or another).
Sounds about right. Kinda sad that Phoenician culture was absorbed, it was interesting. I may be biased a bit because my great-grandparents came from Lebanon and my family still makes their delicious food, though.
But it's interesting to note that spoken Lebanese Arabic is different enough from other forms of Arabic that it's sometimes seen as a separate language, and there have been suggestions that it be written in a modified Latin script. Now, these differences may not be any greater than between Arabic and any other dialects. I dunno, it'd take Owen Glyndwr to decipher Wiki's page on the differences. But Lebanese nationalism and Phoenicianism hold that Lebanon is not Arab but Phoenician. This view was/is especially popular with the far-right militia and political party, the Guardians of the Cedars.