Defining heresy : inquisition, theology, and papal policy in the time of Jacques Fournier

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Defining heresy : inquisition, theology, and papal policy in the time of Jacques Fournier

by Irene Bueno ; translated from Italian by Isabella Bolognese, Tony Brophy, and Sarah Rolfe Prodan

(Studies in medieval and Reformation thought, v. 192)

Brill, c2015

  • : hardback

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. [339]-362) and indexes

Description and Table of Contents

Description

In Defining Heresy, Irene Bueno investigates the theories and practices of anti-heretical repression in the first half of the fourteenth century, focusing on the figure of Jacques Fournier/Benedict XII (c.1284-1342). Throughout his career as a bishop-inquisitor in Languedoc, theologian, and, eventually, pope at Avignon, Fournier made a multi-faceted contribution to the fight against religious dissent. Making use of judicial, theological, and diplomatic sources, the book sheds light on the multiplicity of methods, discourses, and textual practices mobilized to define the bounds of heresy at the end of the Middle Ages. The integration of these commonly unrelated areas of evidence reveals the intellectual and political pressures that inflected the repression of heretics and dissidents in the peculiar context of the Avignon papacy.

Table of Contents

Introduction PART I. AT THE CROSSROAD OF JUSTICES 1 At the Crossroads of Justices: A Bishop's Court in the Early Fourteenth Century 1.1 Secular Justice in Languedoc 1.2 Sharing Rights in the City of Pamiers 1.3 The Decretal Multorum querela 1.4 The Internal Organization of the Court of Pamiers 1.5 The Accused of Jacques Fournier 2 Repressing secundum iura. Jacques Fournier, inquisitorial procedures and dissimulation 2.1 Inquest and Preliminary Stages 2.2 Oath 2.3 Informatio and preventio 2.4 Proof, Confession, Memory 2.5 Persuasion and Coercion: How to Get a Confession 2.6 "The Way that Heretics Usually Respond" 2.7 Abjuration and Sentence 3 Questioning Heretics: Proving Error according to Tradition 3.1 On the Fact of Heresy 3.2 Questions about Belief 4 The Extension of Heretical Paradigm 4.1 The Bishop-Inquisitor and the Duality of Justice 4.2 The Bishop-Administrator and the Anticlerical Protest 4.3 From Observation to Religious Doubt PART II. THE GOSPEL AND THE HERETICS 5 Heresy in Fournier's Theological and Exegetical Writings 5.1 Jacques Fournier and the Theological Consultations of John XXII 5.2 Fournier's Commentary on the Gospel of Matthew 5.3 Organization of the Work 6 Heretics in Fournier's Commentary on Matthew 6.1 Corrupting Faith, Corrupting Customs 6.2 False Prophets 6.3 "Beware of Heretics" 6.4 Falsity 6.5 Improbity 6.6 Guile 6.7 Malice and Cruelty 7 The Signs of Heresy: How to Tell a Plant from its Fruit 7.1 Recognizing a Heretic by their Words and Actions 7.2 Heresy as Absolute Evil 7.3 Sweet and Useful Fruits, Bitter and Useless Fruits 8 The Origin of Evil and Individual Responsibility 8.1 The Origin of Evil by Reason of Being 8.2 The Origin of Evil by Reason of Possibility 8.3 The Condemnation of Bad Plants PART III. THE PAPACY AGAINST HERETICS 9 Heretics, Rebels, and Schismatics in the Pontificate of Benedict XII 9.1 Beguins, Friars, and Fraticelli in Benedict XII's Political Horizon 9.2 Reconciliation and Obedience: The Failure of Negotiations with Louis the Bavarian 10 Apostolico conspectui: Heretics and Inquisitors between Centre and Periphery 10.1 The Protection of Secular Lords 10.2 Against Inquisitorial Abuse 10.3 Magic and Sorcery, Divination and Devil Invocation 11 Schismatics and Infidels Beyond the Frontiers of Latin Christianity 11.1 Border Clashes in the Iberian Peninsula 11.2 The Schism of the East and the Crusade Against the Turks 11.3 The Errors of the Armenians 11.4 The Universal Shepherd and the Conversion of the Tartars Conclusions List of Abbreviations Bibliography Index

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