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El. knyga: Late Medieval Heresy: New Perspectives: Studies in Honor of Robert E. Lerner

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From the Gregorian reforms to the Protestant Reformation, heresies and heretics helped shape the religious, political, and institutional structures of medieval Europe. Within this larger history of religious ferment, the late medieval period presents a particularly dynamic array of heterodox movements, dissident modes of thought, and ecclesiastical responses. Yet recent debates about the nature of heresy in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries have too easily created an impression of the period after 1300 as merely an epilogue to the high medieval story.
This volume takes the history of heresy in late medieval Europe (1300-1500) on its own terms. From Paris to Prague and from northern Germany to Italy and even extending as far as Ethiopia, the essays shed new light on a vibrant world of audacious beguines, ardent Joachites, Spiritual Franciscans, innovative mystics, lay prophets, idiosyncratic alchemists, daring magicians, and even rebellious princes locked in battles with the papacy. As befits a collection honoring the pioneering career of Robert E. Lerner, the studies collected here combine close readings of manuscripts and other sources with a grounding in their political, religious and intellectual contexts, to offer fresh insights into heresies and heretics in late medieval Europe.

MICHAEL D. BAILEY is Professor of History at Iowa State University; SEAN L. FIELD is Professor of History at the University of Vermont.

Contributors: Louisa A. Burnham, Elizabeth Casteen, Jörg Feuchter, Samantha Kelly, Richard Kieckhefer, Deeana Copeland Klepper, Frances Kneupper, Georg Modestin, Barbara Newman, Sylvain Piron, Justine L. Trombley.

Fresh investigations into heresy after 1300, demonstrating its continuing importance and influence.

Recenzijos

A welcome collection..The standard of scholarship throughout the volume is uniformly high. * THE RICARDIAN * [ Those] who are interested in late medieval religion will surely find this essay collection valuable not only for the individual essays but also for the larger picture it presents of late medieval religious dissent. * Sixteenth Century Journal * The volume forces us to continue to ask the most basic questions: Who or what, after all, was a heretic in the later Middle Ages? These essays reveal the "staggering variety" (248) that emerges as we continue to try to answer that question. They thus stand alone, in their own right, as a significant contribution to our ongoing efforts to rethink the later Middle Ages as an era of manifold religious options. As such, they seem a most fitting honor for the scholar [ Robert Lerner] who has done so much over so many years to help us see that complexity anew. * Archa Verbi *

Preface: Robert E. Lerner: A Portrait vii
Richard Kieckhefer
List of Contributors
xiv
Introduction: Historiography, Methodology, and Manuscripts: Robert E. Lerner and the Study of Late Medieval Heresy 1(13)
Michael D. Bailey
Sean L. Field
1 The Heresy of the Templars and the Dream of a French Inquisition
14(21)
Sean L. Field
2 The Dissemination of Barthelemy Sicard's Postilla super Danielem
35(21)
Sylvain Piron
3 Magic, Mysticism, and Heresy in the Early Fourteenth Century
56(20)
Michael D. Bailey
4 The Making of a Heretic: Pope John XXII's Campaign against Louis of Bavaria
76(20)
Georg Modestin
5 Unusual Choices: The Unique Heresy of Limoux Negre
96(20)
Louisa A. Burnham
6 Princely Poverty: Louis of Durazzo, Dynastic Politics, and Heresy in Fourteenth-Century Naples
116(21)
Elizabeth Casteen
7 Disentangling Heretics, Jews, and Muslims: Imagining Infidels in Late Medieval Pastoral Manuals
137(20)
Deeana Copeland Klepper
8 New Frontiers in the Late Medieval Reception of a Heretical Text: The Implications of Two New Latin Copies of Marguerite Porete's Mirror of Simple Souls
157(21)
Justine L. Trombley
9 Disputing Prophetic Thought: The 1466 Questio quodlibetalis of Johannes of Dorsten
178(17)
Frances Kneupper
10 Heretics, Allies, Exemplary Christians: Latin Views of Ethiopian Orthodox in the Late Middle Ages
195(20)
Samantha Kelly
11 `By them in reality I meant the Jews': Medieval Heretics in the Work and Life of Renate Riemeck (1920-2003)
215(23)
Jorg Feuchter
Afterword: Who or What Was a Heretic in the Late Middle Ages? 238(12)
Barbara Newman
Robert E. Lerner: A Chronological Bibliography 250(9)
Index 259