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Heresy and the Making of European Culture
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Heresy and the Making of European Culture book
Heresy and the Making of European Culture
DOI link for Heresy and the Making of European Culture
Heresy and the Making of European Culture book
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ABSTRACT
Scholars and analysts seeking to illuminate the extraordinary creativity and innovation evident in European medieval cultures and their afterlives have thus far neglected the important role of religious heresy. The papers collected here - reflecting the disciplines of history, literature, theology, philosophy, economics and law - examine the intellectual and social investments characteristic of both deliberate religious dissent such as the Cathars of Languedoc, the Balkan Bogomils, the Hussites of Bohemia and those who knowingly or unknowingly bent or broke the rules, creating their own 'unofficial orthodoxies'. Attempts to understand, police and eradicate all these, through methods such as the Inquisition, required no less ingenuity. The ambivalent dynamic evident in the tensions between coercion and dissent is still recognisable and productive in the world today.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part |2 pages
Part I The Wheat and the Tares
chapter 4|22 pages
Lombard Religiosities Reconsidered: ‘Arianism’, Syncretism and the Transition to Catholic Christianity
part |2 pages
Part II Inventing Heresies
chapter 5|16 pages
Perceptions of Heresy in Historiographical and Hagiographical Sources of Aquitaine and the Loire Valley During the High Middle Ages
chapter 6|22 pages
The Bogomils’ Folk Heritage: False Friend or Neglected Source?
part |2 pages
Part III Approaching Literary and Narrative Sources
chapter 7|12 pages
Why God Keeps Sending His Angels: Domestic Disturbance and Joseph’s Doubts about Mary in Chester and York
chapter 8|20 pages
Vernacular Poetry and the Spiritual Franciscans of the Languedoc: The Poems of Raimon de Cornet
chapter 9|22 pages
Heretical Hussites: Oswald von Wolkenstein’s ‘Song of Hell’ (‘Durch Toren Weis’)
chapter 10|30 pages
Dogging Cornwall’s ‘Secret Freaks’: Béroul on the Limits of European Orthodoxy
part |2 pages
Part IV Law and the Inquisition
chapter 12|18 pages
Heresy, Orthodoxy and the Interaction Between Canon and Civil Law in Theodore Balsamon’s Commentaries
chapter 13|14 pages
Fighting Clergy, Church Councils and the Contexts of Law: The Cutting Edge of Orthodoxy or the Ambiguous Limits of Legitimacy?
chapter 14|10 pages
‘Famosus est et satis publicum’: Factionalism and the Limits of Doctrine in the Case Against Meister Eckhart
chapter 15|14 pages
The Inquisition in Medieval Bohemia: National and International Contexts
chapter 16|20 pages
Clerical Illegitimacy in the Diocese of Sodor: Exception or Rule in the Late Medieval Church?
part |2 pages
Part V Heresy, Place and Community
chapter 17|20 pages
Learning by Doing: Coping with Inquisitors in Medieval Languedoc
chapter 18|28 pages
Travels and Studies of Stephen of Siwnik‛ (c.685–735): Redefining Armenian Orthodoxy Under Islamic Rule
chapter 20|8 pages
Church Reform and Witch-Hunting in the Diocese of Lausanne: The Example of Bishop George of Saluzzo
part |2 pages
Part VI Distant Mirrors: Heresies, Orthodoxies and Modernities