Eusebius (260-340), Bishop of Caesarea, one of the most important Church Fathers of late antiquity, has enjoyed and endured a roller-coaster reputation down the ages for both veracity and
style. Here scholars identified only by name present their views. Among the topics are the promotion of the Constantinian agenda in his On the Feast of Pascha, school activity at Caesarea
through the lens of the Martyrs, his role as educator in the context of the General Elementary Introduction, aesthetics and the politics of Christian architecture in his Panygyric on the
Building of Churches, and Alexander Polyhistor's Peri Ioudaion and literary culture in republican Rome. Annotation 穢2011 Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)