
New Books in Christian Studies Felege-Selam Solomon Yirga, "The Chronicle of John of Nikiu: Coping with Crisis in Post-Roman Egypt" (U California Press, 2025)
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Feb 2, 2026 Felege-Selam Solomon Yirga, Assistant Professor of History at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, and author of a study on John of Nikiu. He discusses the Coptic chronicle’s survival and transmission. He explores how the text frames Roman decline as theological crisis. He traces everyday continuities after 642 and how Roman identity is reworked in a Coptic voice.
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Chronicle Recasts Roman Genre To Explain Collapse
- John of Nikiu repurposes Roman chronicle form to explain Rome's collapse under Arab rule as moral and theological failure.
- The Chronicle treats imperial decline as God's withdrawal caused by theological error and civic decadence.
Chalcedon As Pivot For Divine Alienation
- John argues Rome's moral decline centers on acceptance of Chalcedon's decisions and societal degradation.
- God withdraws protection and provides emperors who mirror that decline, culminating in Egypt's loss.
Continuity And Rupture Coexist After Conquest
- Many daily practices and languages persisted after 642, so life changed slowly despite political rupture.
- But monasteries' destruction, tax burdens, violence, and ecclesiastical reconfigurations created real discontinuities.

