Abstract

Christianity emerged as a small and marginal movement in the first century Palestine and throughout the following three centuries it became highly visible in the whole Mediterranean. Little is known about the mechanisms of spreading innovative ideas in past societies. Here we investigate how well the spread of Christianity can be explained as a diffusive process constrained by physical travel in the Roman Empire. First, we combine a previously established model of the transportation network with city population estimates and evaluate to which extent the spatio-temporal pattern of the spread of Christianity can be explained by static factors. Second, we apply a network-theoretical approach to analyze the spreading process utilizing effective distance. We show that the spread of Christianity in the first two centuries closely follows a gravity-guided diffusion, and is substantially accelerated in the third century. Using the effective distance measure, we are able to suggest the probable path of the spread. Our work demonstrates how the spatio-temporal patterns we observe in the data can be explained using only spatial constraints and urbanization structure of the empire. Our findings also provide a methodological framework to be reused for studying other cultural spreading phenomena.

Highlights

  • Data Availability Statement: All relevant data are within the paper and its Supporting Information files

  • The list of all the ORBIS cities with the population estimate can be found in S3 File, and their position in the transportation network is shown in S2 Fig

  • The complex spatio-temporal geographical patterns exhibited by the diffusive processes on networks are turned into homogeneous traveling waves, which enables us to represent the dynamics of the spreading process without the need to realize the diffusive network model computationally

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Data Availability Statement: All relevant data are within the paper and its Supporting Information files. Because of the missing material evidence concerning Christianity until the third century [3], the spatial dimension of this spread has been studied only to a limited extent, primarily on the basis of spatial information found in early Christian texts [4, 5]. We show that the spread of Christian congregations in the first three centuries follows to a large extent a gravity-guided diffusion model. We compare this model to corresponding static factors and to a simple spatial diffusion and demonstrate that our model is the best one in capturing the spatio-temporal pattern of the Christianization process. Since the presented method is easy to replicate and the model

Methods
Results
Discussion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call