Hostname: page-component-6766d58669-7cz98 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2026-05-15T11:44:15.583Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Debating the domus ecclesiae at Dura-Europos: the Christian Building in context

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 August 2024

Camille Leon Angelo
Affiliation:
Yale University, Department of Religious Studies
Joshua Silver
Affiliation:
The University of Manchester, School of Environment, Education and Development
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

At Dura-Europos, homes were architecturally adapted across the late 2nd and 3rd c. CE by different religious groups to serve the needs of their communities. Although the Synagogue, Mithraeum, and Christian Building all began as domestic structures and share a similar architectural development, the origins of the latter have received unique attention through its classification as a domus ecclesiae or house church. This (hyper)focus on the structure's past use as a house does not do full justice to the archaeology of the building. Through an analysis of architectural adaptations, including before-and-after 3D reconstructions and daylight simulations, the authors show how the renovations significantly differentiated the Christian Building from its domestic antecedent and from Dura's houses more broadly. This approach is meant to shift attention away from more generalized, translocal, evolutionary models of Christian architectural development to micro-level archaeological analysis that situates structures within the spatial vernacular of their local contexts.

Information

Type
Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BYCreative Common License - NC
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0), which permits non-commercial re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original article is properly cited. The written permission of Cambridge University Press must be obtained prior to any commercial use.
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press
Figure 0

Fig. 1. City plan of Dura by A. H. Detweiler (Dura-Europos Collection, YUAG, neg. Y-733), annotated with names of structures and blocks by J. A. Baird. (Courtesy of J. A. Baird.)

Figure 1

Fig. 2. Plan-perspective of the Christian Building (M8-A): (a) prior to its renovation for Christian community use; (b) following its renovation for Christian community use. (C. Leon Angelo and J. Silver.)

Figure 2

Fig. 3a. Schematic render of the Christian Building (M8-A) prior to adaptation; view from the entrance of Room 4A looking northwest across the courtyard to (from left to right) Rooms 6, 7B, 7A, and 8. (C. Leon Angelo and J. Silver.)

Figure 3

Fig. 3b. Schematic render of the Christian Building (M8-A) after adaptation; view from the entrance of Room 4 looking northwest across the courtyard to (from left to right) Rooms 6, 7B, 7A, and 8. (C. Leon Angelo and J. Silver.)

Figure 4

Fig. 4. Dura-Europos's houses: wall paintings versus courtyard staircases/pictorial graffiti. (C. Leon Angelo and J. Silver.)

Figure 5

Fig. 5. Christian Building, section elevations, restoration. (Drawn by H. Pearson, Dura-Europos Collection, YUAG, neg. Yale-2219-01, courtesy YUAG.)

Figure 6

Fig. 6a. Section detail, showing the construction of the new ceiling above the canopy in Room 6 of the Christian Building (M8-A). (C. Leon Angelo and J. Silver.)

Figure 7

Fig. 6b. Section detail, showing the construction of the roof of the Christian Building (M8-A). (C. Leon Angelo and J. Silver.)

Figure 8

Fig. 7a. Cumulative yearly illuminance simulation of the Christian Building (M8-A) before adaptation (orientation is to true north; render parameters: 243 CE, windows and doors open; scale: 0-300 lx). (C. Leon Angelo and J. Silver.)

Figure 9

Fig. 7b. Cumulative yearly illuminance simulation of the Christian Building (M8-A) after adaptation (orientation is to true north; render parameters: 253 CE, windows and doors open; scale: 0-300 lx). (C. Leon Angelo and J. Silver.)

Figure 10

Fig. 8a. Cumulative yearly illuminance simulation of the Christian Building (M8-A) before adaptation; view from Room 2, looking southwest. The entrance to Room 4A is on the left and the entrance to Room 5 is on the right (render parameters: 243 CE, windows and doors open; scale: 0-1500 lx). (C. Leon Angelo and J. Silver.)

Figure 11

Fig. 8b. Cumulative yearly illuminance simulation of the Christian Building (M8-A) after adaptation; view from Room 2, looking southwest. The entrance to Room 4 is on the left and the entrance to Room 5 is on the right (render parameters: 253 CE, windows and doors open; scale: 0-1500 lx). (C. Leon Angelo and J. Silver.)

Figure 12

Fig 9a. Point-in-time illuminance simulation of the Christian Building (M8-A) before adaptation (orientation is to true north; render parameters: July 243 CE, 1530 hours, windows and doors open; scale: 0-300 lx). (C. Leon Angelo and J. Silver.)

Figure 13

Fig. 9b. Point-in-time illuminance simulation of the Christian Building (M8-A) after adaptation (orientation is to true north; render parameters: July 253 CE, 1530 hours, windows and doors open; scale: 0-300 lx). (C. Leon Angelo and J. Silver.)

Figure 14

Fig. 10a. Point-in-time illuminance simulation of the Christian Building (M8-A) before adaptation (orientation is to true north; render parameters: July 243 CE, 1530 hours, windows open and doors closed; scale: 0-300 lx). (C. Leon Angelo and J. Silver.)

Figure 15

Fig. 10b. Point-in-time illuminance simulation of the Christian Building (M8-A) after adaptation (orientation is to true north; render parameters: July 253 CE, 1530 hours, windows open and doors closed; scale: 0-300 lx). (C. Leon Angelo and J. Silver.)

Figure 16

Fig. 11a. Point-in-time illuminance simulation of the Christian Building (M8-A) before adaptation (orientation is to true north; render parameters: July 243 CE, 0748 hours, windows and doors open; scale: 0-300 lx). (C. Leon Angelo and J. Silver.)

Figure 17

Fig. 11b. Point-in-time illuminance simulation of the Christian Building (M8-A) after adaptation (orientation is to true north; render parameters: July 253 CE, 0748 hours, windows and doors open; scale: 0-300 lx). (C. Leon Angelo and J. Silver.)

Supplementary material: File

Angelo and Silver supplementary material

Angelo and Silver supplementary material
Download Angelo and Silver supplementary material(File)
File 10.2 MB