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Religion in the Roman Empire (RRE)

Managing Editor: Jörg Rüpke (Erfurt)

Editors: Katell Berthelot (Aix-en-Provence), Jan Dochhorn (Durham), Maren Niehoff (Jerusalem), Rubina Raja (Aarhus), Jörg Rüpke (Erfurt), Christopher Smith (St Andrews), Chiara Ombretta Tommasi (Pisa), Markus Vinzent (Erfurt), Annette Weissenrieder (Halle a.d. Saale)

Associate Editors: Nicole Belayche (Paris), Robyn Le Blanc (Greensboro, NC), John Curran (Belfast), Richard L. Gordon (Erfurt), Gesine Manuwald (London), Volker Menze (Wien), Blossom Stefaniw (Oslo), Miguel John Versluys (Leiden), Greg Woolf (Los Angeles)

ISSN 2199-4463 (Print Edition)
ISSN 2199-4471 (Online Edition)
199.00 € Price for institutions
including VAT
54.00 € Price for individuals
including VAT

Volume 10 (2024) / Price per volume (3 issues with approx. 430 pages)

Religion in the Roman Empire (RRE) is bold in the sense that it intends to further and document new and integrative perspectives on religion in the Ancient World combining multidisciplinary methodologies. Starting from the notion of "lived religion" it will offer a space to take up recent, but still incipient, research to modify and cross the disciplinary boundaries of History of Religion, Archaeology, Anthropology, Classics, Ancient History, Jewish History, Rabbinics, New Testament, Early Christianity, Patristics, Coptic Studies, Gnostic and Manichean Studies, Late Antiquity and Oriental Languages. We hope to stimulate the development of new approaches that can encompass the local and global trajectories of the multidimensional pluralistic religions of antiquity.

 

Manuscripts

Please send manuscripts, editorial inquiries and book review proposals to:

Prof. Dr. Jörg Rüpke
Max-Weber-Kolleg
Universität Erfurt
Postfach 900 221
99105 Erfurt
E-mail: rre@uni-erfurt.de

Authors are invited to use all types of letters and languages relevant for their area in quotations and are asked to provide translations. For speci­fic terms within the running texts, however, transcribed forms will be used (with the exception of Greek).