Christendom at the crossroads:

the Council of Nicaea (325 C. E), Arianism, and the Mediterranean history of Monotheism.

Autores

Resumo

This article examines the Council of Nicaea (325 CE) not merely as an internal Christian ecclesiastical event but as a pivotal moment in the broader Mediterranean history of monotheism. Situated within the dossier 'Councils and Christianisms. Mobilities, Religiosities and Spirituality in Antiquity and the Middle Ages', the study looks to the Hellenistic past — through the Christological controversies of Tertullian (c. 160-220 CE) and Origen (c. 185-253 CE) — and to the medieval future, through the Germanic Arian kingdoms. It analyzes the subordinationist Christology of Arius of Cyrene, whose insistence that Jesus was a created servant and messenger of God placed him at the intersection of radical monotheistic traditions that later shaped the theological environment in which Islam emerged. Drawing on four analytical frameworks — historical theology, political theology, the social history of the Germanic Arian kingdoms, and comparative monotheism — the article argues that the suppression of Arianism at Nicaea dispersed subordinationist monotheism across the Mediterranean through the Visigothic, Ostrogothic, and Vandal kingdoms, creating social and religious conditions that facilitated the reception of Islam in North Africa, the Iberian Peninsula, and the Levant.

Biografia do Autor

Habib Badawi, Professor at the Lebanese University

Habib Al-Badawi is an assistant professor at the Lebanese University, where he majored in Japanese Studies since 2005, a fellow at The AUB Policy Institute (Issam Fares Institute for Public Policy and International Affairs - American University of Beirut), and trainer at: Lebanon Educator Ethics Assessment Project, organized by The Republic of Lebanon Ministry of Education & Higher Education.
In 1995 Dr. Al-Badawi earned a B.A from Beirut Arab University with an equivalent degree from Alexandria University. His academic path in History then started in the Lebanese University, where he earned T.D, D.E.S, D.E.A (equivalent to M.A) then a Doctoral degree in Modern History.

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Publicado

2026-04-10

Como Citar

Badawi, H. (2026). Christendom at the crossroads: : the Council of Nicaea (325 C. E), Arianism, and the Mediterranean history of Monotheism. Revista Diálogos Mediterrânicos, 2(29), 3–19. Recuperado de https://dialogosmediterranicos.com.br/RevistaDM/article/view/513

Edição

Seção

Dossiê "Concílios e cristianismos. Mobilidades, religiosidades e espiritualidade na Antiguidade e na Idade Média".