ABSTRACT

Princes of the Church brings together the latest research exploring the importance of bishops’ palaces for social and political history, landscape history, architectural history and archaeology. It is the first book-length study of such sites since Michael Thompson’s Medieval Bishops’ Houses (1998), and the first work ever to adopt such a wide-ranging approach to them in terms of themes and geographical and chronological range.

Including contributions from the late Antique period through to the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, it deals with bishops’ residences in England, Scotland, Wales, the Byzantine Empire, France, and Italy. It is structured in three sections: design and function, which considers how bishops’ palaces and houses differed from the palaces and houses of secular magnates, in their layout, design, furnishings, and functions; landscape and urban context, which considers the relationship between bishops’ palaces and houses and their political and cultural context, the landscapes and towns or cities in which they were set, and the parks, forests, and towns that were planned and designed around them; and architectural form, which considers the extent of shared features between bishops’ palaces and houses, and their relationship to the houses of other Church potentates and to the houses of secular magnates.

chapter 1|11 pages

Introduction

Researching the palaces of princes of the Church

part I|86 pages

Projecting Images of Power

chapter 3|11 pages

Late Antique Episcopal Complexes

Bishop Eufrasius and his residence at Poreč (Croatia)

chapter 5|14 pages

‘A Mere Domestic Life’

Catherine Talbot in the Georgian episcopal home

chapter 6|12 pages

Auckland Castle in the Late Eighteenth and Early Nineteenth Centuries

The palace and princely power

part II|60 pages

Palaces, Forests, and Parks

chapter 10|15 pages

Deer Parks and Masculine Egos

Knights, priors, and bishops in the medieval north of England

part III|88 pages

Palaces and the Work of the Bishop

chapter 13|10 pages

How to Travel With a Bishop

Thirteenth-century episcopal itineraries

chapter 15|21 pages

Why So Many Houses?

The varied functions of the episcopal residences of the see of Winchester, c. 1130–c. 1680 1

part IV|140 pages

Design, Function, and Decoration

chapter 18|17 pages

Ubi Papa Ibi Roma

The Bishop of Rome’s residence in the fourteenth century: Avignon

chapter 19|19 pages

Exeter Bishop’s Palace

chapter 20|19 pages

En Route and in Residence

Integrating documentary and archaeological evidence for the itineraries and residences of the medieval Bishops of Durham 1

chapter 24|27 pages

Bishop Hugh of Le Puiset’s Great Hall at Auckland Castle

Its place in English twelfth-century architecture