đŸ›ïž The Blood of Eagles: Lugdunum, 197 AD

Steel meets steel beneath the Gallic sun as two Roman titans clash—the Empire itself hangs in the balance. On this frost-kissed February morn, Septimius Severus and Clodius Albinus wage war not for glory, but for the very soul of Rome. The eagle standards rise through the dust of ten thousand marching boots, crimson cloaks streaming like blood against the winter sky.

This was no battle against barbarian hordes. This was brother against brother, legion against legion—the deadliest day in Roman history, when the Empire consumed itself in civil strife. From this crucible of war, Severus emerges scarred but supreme, his hand finally heavy upon the throne.

The gods watch. The swords sing. And history remembers.

This post is 100% AI generated.

#z_image #AIart #RomanEmpire #AncientWarfare #SeptimiusSeverus #Lugdunum #CinematicRealism #AtmosphericArt #GenerativeAI #LLM

Irenaeus

Irenaeus of Lyons (circa 130-202 AD) is 1 of the most important theologians of the 2nd century. He’s often called the “Father of Catholic Theology.” He served as a crucial bridge between the era of the Apostles & the developed institutional Church of the later Roman Empire.

He was born in Smyrna (modern-day Turkey). He was a student of Polycarp, who was himself a disciple of John the Apostle. This connection to an actual eyewitness of Jesus gave Irenaeus a unique statue. In an era where secret teachings were being whispered in various sects, Irenaeus could claim a direct, public, & verifiable line of “transmission” back to the source.

Around 177 AD, he traveled to Lugdunum (Lyons, in modern-day France) to serve as a priest. Eventually, he became the bishop after his predecessor, Pothinus, was martyred.

Irenaeus’ legacy is defined by his battle against Gnosticism. Gnosticism is a diverse movement that threatened to dismantle early Christianity. Generally, Gnostics believed:

  • The material world was evil, created by a lesser, bumbling deity (Demiurge).
  • Salvation came through secret, esoteric knowledge (gnosis).
  • Jesus didn’t have a physical body (Docetism), as matter was inherently corrupt.

Irenaeus saw this as a total rejection of the Hebrew scriptures & the reality of the Incarnation. To counter this, he wrote his 5-volume masterpiece, “Against Heresies” (Adversus Haereses). Irenaeus’ theology’s centerpiece is the concept of Recapitulation. He argued that Jesus “summed up” all of humanity in Himself.

Just as the 1st Adam failed at the Tree of Knowledge, Jesus (the “new Adam”) succeeded on the tree of the Cross. Irenaeus taught that Jesus went through every stage of mortal human life (infancy, youth, & adulthood) to “sanctify” & “undo” the corruption introduced at each stage of the Fall.

Before Irenaeus’ time, there wasn’t the New Testament as we know it today. Different groups/sects used different, & various, gospels. This is where we get the infamous banned books of the Bible. Irenaeus was the 1st major figure to argue for the Four-Fold Gospel.

He insisted that there could be no more, & no fewer, than 4 Gospels (Matthew, Mark, Luke, & John), using a poetic justification: just as there are 4 zones of the world (or 4 corners) & 4 principal winds, the Church had to have 4 “pillars” of the Gospel. By doing this, he helped stabilize the core of the Christian Bible.

To fight the Gnostic claim of secret traditions, Irenaeus proposed 2 tests of “Truth”:

  • The Rule of Faith:
    • A summary of essential beliefs (a forerunner of the Apostles’ Creed) that all true churches held in common.
  • Apostolic Succession:
    • Irenaeus argued that if Jesus had secret knowledge, he would’ve given it to the bishops he appointed.

Irenaeus’ most profound contribution to theology is the concept of Recapitulation (anakephalaiosis). Using the math of his day, he sought to “sum up” the entire human experience through Christ.

To counter his Gnostic opponents, Irenaeus significantly develops Paul’s presentation of Christ as the Last Adam. Irenaeus’ presentation of Christ as the New Adam is based on Paul’s Christ-Adam parallel in Romans 5:12-21.

But also dervies significantly from the Johannine presentation of Adam-Christ typology. Irenaeus uses this parallel to demonstrate that Christ truly took human flesh. Irenaeus considered it important to emphasize this point because he understands the failure to recognize Christ’s full humanity links the various strains of Gnosticism together, as seen in his statement that “according to the opinion of no one of the heretics was the Word of God made flesh.”

Irenaeus believes that unless the Word became flesh, humans weren’t fully redeemed. He explains that by becoming man, Christ restored humanity to bring in the image & likeness of God, which they’d lost in the Fall of Man.

Just as Adam was the original head of humanity through whom all sinned, Christ is the new head of humanity who fulfills Adam’s role in the Economy of Salvation. The Economy of Salvation (a.k.a. Divine Economy) is that part of divine revelation in the Roman Catholic tradition that deals with God’s creation & management of the world, particularly his plan of salvation accomplished through the Church. Irenaeus calls this process of restoring humanity: Recapitulation.

Irenaeus emphasizes the importance of Christ’s reversal of Adam’s actions. Through His obedience, Christ undoes Adam’s disobedience. Irenaeus presents the Passion as the climax of Christ’s obedience, emphasizing how this obedience on the tree of the Cross undoes the disobedience that occurred through a tree.

Irenaeus’ interpretation of Paul’s discussion of Christ as the New Adam is significant because it helped develop the recapitulation theory of atonement.

Irenaeus took part in the Quartodeciman Controversy. When Victor I of Rome tried to force a universal practice of fasting until Easter to supersede the Jewish practice & prevent Christians from partaking of the Passover, Polycrates who led the Churches of Anatolia continued to hold old traditions of the paschal feast. For this reason Victor I wanted to excommunicate Polycrates & his supporters. But this was a step too far for Irenaeus & other bishops.

Tradition holds that he was martyred around 202 AD during the persecution of Emperor Septimius Severus. Thought historical records of his death are sparse compared to his writings.

In 2022, Pope Francis officially declared him a “Doctor of Unity” (Doctor Unitatis), acknowledging his role in bridging the Eastern & Western theological traditions.

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Article du jour sur Wikipédia : le sarcophage des Acceptii, un grand sarcophage romain fragmentaire en marbre, découvert en 1870 prÚs de Lyon et datant du IIe ou IIIe siÚcle. Il est orné de décorations mythologiques que leur état fragmentaire rend difficiles à identifier.
https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sarcophage_des_Acceptii
#RomeAntique #sculpture #sarcophage #Antiquité #histoire #archeologie #Lugdunum #Lyon
Sarcophage des Acceptii — WikipĂ©dia

Une superbe expérience permettant de découvrir #lugdunum
https://explore-lyon-antique.grandlyon.com/fr/accueil

#lyon

ActualitĂ© archĂ©ologique, sur Connaissance des arts : "Dans le cimetiĂšre de Loyasse, Ă  Lyon, les vestiges du Ier siĂšcle d’une porte monumentale et d’une voie romaine de Lugdunum pourraient bien avoir Ă©tĂ© mis au jour par les archĂ©ologues."
https://www.connaissancedesarts.com/monuments-patrimoine/archeologie/archeologie-a-lyon-une-decouverte-exceptionnelle-revele-les-secrets-de-lantique-lugdunum-11200920/
#archéologie #histoire #Antiquité #RomeAntique #Lyon #Loyasse #Lugdunum #ConnaissanceDesArts
Archéologie : à Lyon, une découverte exceptionnelle révÚle les secrets de l'antique Lugdunum

En 2023, le service archĂ©ologique de la Ville de Lyon a entamĂ© des fouilles sur la colline de FourviĂšre, situĂ©e dans le creux d’un mĂ©andre de la SaĂŽne. Au

Connaissance des Arts
Teatro Romano de Lyon

Arriba vemos una vista general del teatro romano de Lyon:

FOTOGRARTE

đŸȘ” This is a roman #millefiori glass bowl from the Museum of Antiquities in Rouen, France. Romans called the city #Rotomagus - it was the second city of Gallia Lugdunensis, after #Lugdunum, modern Lyon. 📾 me
#romanglass #ancientglass

@archaeodons @histodons
@antiquidons

1 Aug 10 BC: b. Emperor Claudius - Tiberius Claudius Nero Germanicus at #Lugdunum #otd
☀ For #ReliefWednesday: #roman Stele found at Glanum, depicting a group of legionnaires in formation. Exhibited at the #Lugdunum Gallo-Roman Museum in Lyon, France. 📾 Own pics.
#ReliefWednesday : représentation de trois déesses, les "matres", assises dans une niche en forme de coquille. Celle du milieu tient un enfant emmailloté. Sculpture exposée au musée #Lugdunum à #Lyon.