04-18-2005, 01:09 PM
So much for that great paper on Roman history I blathered on about.
I have a rough draft due at 6:30 tonight and have fifteen sources and a paragraph.
My paper is a two-prong attack, the history and the discourse. My outline is as follows:
--Christianity under Diocletian
--Constantine's battle for the throne/Milvian Bridge/becomes Christian
--Christianity under Constantine
then
--symbols in Constantine's empire: coinage and statuary
--recorded documents by historians, including the Edict of Milan
--and something wild and wonderful that will tie this all together; I have a feeling that this wild and wonderful thing will involve linking Constantine's (written) actions to events
Or, I'm BSing my way into a rough draft. (Fifteen pages and thirty--THIRTY sources?! Oy gevald!)
Angel had writer's block. I have writer's I've-been-writing-too-many-things-lately-and-my-brain-is-fried-spam.
:(
I have a rough draft due at 6:30 tonight and have fifteen sources and a paragraph.
Quote:During the reign of the emperor Diocletian over the eastern half of the late Roman empire, the persecution of Christians reached an all-time high. Diocletian passed laws and even ordered the army to end this threat to national security. Yet when Constantine assumed leadership of the western half of the empire, he counted a belief in Christianity as the reason he won his imperial seat. Theologians, historians, and scholars have raged on for centuries about Constantine's Edict of Milan and conversion to Christianity was a political ploy or a genuine religious belief. However, I intend to propose in this paper that Constantine's conversion to Christianity and subsequent empirical reformations happened to bond the Roman empire back together to prevent it from splintering into civil war.
My paper is a two-prong attack, the history and the discourse. My outline is as follows:
--Christianity under Diocletian
--Constantine's battle for the throne/Milvian Bridge/becomes Christian
--Christianity under Constantine
then
--symbols in Constantine's empire: coinage and statuary
--recorded documents by historians, including the Edict of Milan
--and something wild and wonderful that will tie this all together; I have a feeling that this wild and wonderful thing will involve linking Constantine's (written) actions to events
Or, I'm BSing my way into a rough draft. (Fifteen pages and thirty--THIRTY sources?! Oy gevald!)
Angel had writer's block. I have writer's I've-been-writing-too-many-things-lately-and-my-brain-is-fried-spam.
:(
UPDATE: Spamblaster.