This book bridges Japanese and European scholarly approaches to ecclesiastical history to provide new insights into how the papacy conceptualised its authority and attempted to realise and communicate that authority in ecclesiastical and secular spheres across Christendom. Adopting a broad, yet cohesive, temporal and geographical approach that spans the Early to the Late Middle Ages, from Europe to Asia, the book focuses on the different media used to represent authority, the structures through which authority was channelled and the restrictions that popes faced in so doing, and the less certain expression of papal authority on the edges of Christendom. Through twelve chapters that encompass key topics such as anti-popes, artistic representations, preaching, heresy, the crusades, and mission and the East, this interdisciplinary volume brings new perspectives to bear on the medieval papacy. The book demonstrates that the communication of papal authority was a two-way process effected by the popes and their supporters, but also by their enemies who helped to shape concepts of ecclesiastical power.
Communicating Papal Authority in the Middle Ages
will appeal to researchers and students alike interested in the relationships between the papacy and medieval society and the ways in which the papacy negotiated and expressed its authority in Europe and beyond.
This book bridges Japanese and European scholarly approaches to ecclesiastical history to provide new insights into how the papacy conceptualised its authority and attempted to realise and communicate that authority in ecclesiastical and secular spheres across Christendom.
Introduction /
1. Authority at a Distance: Popes, their Media, and their
Presence Felt in the Frankish Kingdom /
2. Imitatio Christi in Papal Synodal
Sermons, 10951274 /
3. John XXII as a Wavering Preacher: The Popes Sermons
and the Norms of Preaching in the Beatific Vision Controversy /
4. Franciscan
Identity and Iconography in the Assisi Tapestry commissioned by Pope Sixtus
IV /
5. Crisis and Antagonism: Contending Popes as a Challenge to Papal
Authority /
6. Papal Communication and the Fifth Crusade, 12171221 /
7.
Having one little wolf at the papal court is not enough: The Limits of
Papal Authority in Milanese Affairs in the Mid-Fifteenth Century /
8. Why did
a Viking King meet a Pope? Cnuts Imperial Politics, Scandinavian Commercial
Networks, and the Journey to Rome in 1027 /
9. Papal Contact with the
Mongols: Means of Communication in the Thirteenth Century /
10. Dei et
ecclesiae inimicus: A Correspondence between Pope Gregory IX and John III
Batatzes /
11. Medieval Heretics in the East: A Heresiological Label for
Bosnian Bogomils/Patarenes in the Thirteenth Century /
12. The Papacy and
Crusading in the Far North? A Forgotten Religious Frontier of Medieval Latin
Christendom
Minoru Ozawa is Professor of Medieval History at Rikkyo University, Japan.
Thomas W. Smith is Keeper of the Scholars and Head of Oxbridge Admissions (Arts and Humanities) at Rugby School, UK.
Georg Strack is Professor of Medieval History at Philipps-Universität Marburg, Germany.