Hugh of Amiens and the twelfth-century Renaissance

Author(s)

    • Freeburn, Ryan P.

Bibliographic Information

Hugh of Amiens and the twelfth-century Renaissance

Ryan P. Freeburn

(Church, faith and culture in the Medieval West)

Ashgate, c2011

Available at  / 2 libraries

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. [245]-267) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Hugh of Amiens (c. 1085-1164) was an important intellectual figure in the twelfth century. During a long life he served as a cleric, Cluniac monk, abbot, and archbishop of Rouen. He wrote a number of works including poems, biblical exegesis, anti-heretical polemics, and most importantly one of the earliest collections of systematic theology, his Dialogues. This book examines all of Hugh's writings to uncover a better understanding not only of this individual, but also of the twelfth-century as a whole, especially the theological preoccupations of the period, including the development of systematic theology and views on the differences of the monastic and clerical ways of life.

Table of Contents

  • Introduction
  • Chapter 1 Hugh of Amiens:
  • Chapter 2 The Epistola Gravioni:
  • Chapter 3 The Poems of Hugh of Amiens
  • Chapter 4 The Dialogues and the Early Stages of Systematic Theology
  • Chapter 5 Hugh of Amiens and the Monastic Life:
  • Chapter 6 A Saintly Crusader and Hermit:
  • Chapter 7 'In principio Deus creavit':
  • Chapter 8 Hugh of Amiens and the Heretics:
  • Chapter 9 Speculation, Contemplation and a Host of Septenaries:
  • Chapter 10 De memoria:
  • Chapter 101 Conclusion

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