The transformation of a religious landscape : medieval southern Italy 850-1150
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
The transformation of a religious landscape : medieval southern Italy 850-1150
(Conjunctions of religion & power in the medieval past / edited by Barbara H. Rosenwein)
Cornell University Press, 2006
- : cloth
Available at 2 libraries
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Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. [197]-213) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
The Transformation of a Religious Landscape paints a detailed picture of the sheer variety of early medieval Christian practice and organization, as well as the diverse modes in which church reform manifested itself in the eleventh and twelfth centuries.
From the rich archives of the abbey of the Holy Trinity of Cava, Valerie Ramseyer reconstructed the complex religious history of southern Italy. No single religious or political figure claimed authority in the region before the eleventh century, and pastoral care was provided by a wide variety of small religious houses. The line between the secular and the regular clergy was not well pronounced, nor was the boundary between the clergy and the laity or between eastern and western religious practices.
In the second half of the eleventh century, however, the archbishop of Salerno and the powerful abbey of Cava acted to transform the situation. Centralized and hierarchical ecclesiastical structures took shape, and an effort was made to standardize religious practices along the lines espoused by reform popes such as Leo IX and Gregory VII. Yet prelates in southern Italy did not accept all aspects of the reform program emanating from centers such as Rome and Cluny, and the region's religious life continued to differ in many respects from that in Francia: priests continued to marry and have children, laypeople to found and administer churches, and Greek clerics and religious practices to coexist with those sanctioned by Rome.
Table of Contents
Introduction
Part I. Christianity in the Lombard Era (c. 849-1077)
Chapter 1. Society and Government before the Normans
Chapter 2. Religious Authority and Ecclesiastical Organization before Centralization
Chapter 3. Religious Houses and the Clergy before Reform
Part II. Reorganization and Reform in the Norman Period (c. 1050-1130)
Chapter 4. The New Archbishopric of Salerno
Chapter 5. The Construction of a Monastic Lordship: The Abbey of the Holy Trinity of Cava
Epilogue: Changes and Continuities
Works Cited
Index
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