
New Books in Ancient History Michael L. Satlow, "An Enchanted World: The Shared Religious Landscape of Late Antiquity" (Princeton UP, 2026)
Apr 13, 2026
Michael L. Satlow, Professor of Judaic and Religious Studies at Brown University, explores religion as lived practice in Late Antiquity. He traces shared spiritual landscapes, from angels and spirits to amulets and sacred places. Short scenes cover ritual specialists, contested calendars, and how everyday people navigated an enchanted world of healing, protection, and overlapping sacred spaces.
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COVID Leave Let The Book Coalesce
- Satlow described getting stuck writing this wide project and detouring to write How the Bible Became Holy before returning to finish An Enchanted World.
- The COVID leave year gave him focused time to crack the problem and complete the book's narrative.
Religious Labels Were Situational
- Identities like Christian or Jew were often fuzzy on the ground and activated situationally rather than fixed social categories.
- Bishops, rabbis, and imperial writers sharpened boundaries in texts, but everyday interactions blurred them in markets, associations, and houses.
Associations Defined Belonging
- Voluntary associations functioned as practical communities for burial, banquets, and mutual aid and could define belonging more than theological labels.
- Synagogues or guildlike groups operated semi-legally and membership often signaled social identification rather than strict legal status.


