Darrera modificació: 2020-11-03 Bases de dades: Sciència.cat, Arnau
Menache, Sophia, Clement V, Cambridge, University Press (Cambridge Studies in Medieval Life and Thought, 36), 1998, xiv + 351 pp.
- Resum
- Clement V, the first 'Avignon' pope, led the Church during nine critical years, 1305-14. Elected two years after the outrage committed upon Boniface VIII at Anagni, Clement saw as his main goal the restoration of harmonious relations with the leading monarchs of Christendom. In achieving his aim, he paved the way for the Church in the modern period. This book provides the first complete analysis of Clement's pontificate from the two complementary viewpoints offered by diplomatic documentation and by narrative sources. Their point of convergence validates a re-evaluation of the Avignon 'Babylonian captivity' of the papacy. As a result, Clement's pontificate no longer appears as a shameful surrender to Capetian interests. Rather, it demonstrates a consistent scale of priorities, among which the recovery of the Holy Land was accorded pre-eminence.
Conté:
* Introduction
* 1. Clement V
* 2. Church policy
* 3. Crusade and mission
* 4. Italy
* 5. France
* 6. England
* 7. The council of Vienne and the Clementinae
* Conclusions
Inclou referències al qui fou un dels seus metges, Arnau de Vilanova.
- Matèries
- Església
Biografia Història - Política Vilanova, Arnau de Església - Papat
- Notes
- Notícia bibliogràfica de Josep Perarnau dins Arxiu de Textos Catalans Antics, 19 (2000), 864.
Reimpr.: 2002.
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