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Extinction: Polytheism Unreformed

In: The Political Economy of Indo-European Polytheism

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  • Mario Ferrero

    (University of Eastern Piedmont)

Abstract

This chapter surveys the religions that became extinct. While we have no reliable information about the Celts, the Germanic religions had scanty professionalPriesthood/priestprofessional priesthood, so they offered little organize resistance to conversionConversion; in Iceland the assembly voted for the adoption of Christianity. In Greco-Roman religion both the pantheonPantheon and the priesthood continued unchanged in the empire. The elective cults multiplied but never challenged the civic religion, while the non-professional priests of the latter had no incentive to address the growing overlapping of divine jurisdictionsOverlap, of gods’ jurisdictions and the consequent inefficiencyInefficiency of the cult. So nobody in the system had an incentive to resist Christianization of the empire.

Suggested Citation

  • Mario Ferrero, 2022. "Extinction: Polytheism Unreformed," Contributions to Economics, in: The Political Economy of Indo-European Polytheism, chapter 0, pages 77-89, Springer.
  • Handle: RePEc:spr:conchp:978-3-030-97943-0_5
    DOI: 10.1007/978-3-030-97943-0_5
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