Pope Gregory IX (1227-1241)
Title
Pope Gregory IX (1227-1241)
Subtitle
Power and Authority
Price
€ 141,00 excl. VAT
ISBN
9789463724364
Format
Hardback
Number of pages
368
Language
English
Publication date
Dimensions
15.6 x 23.4 cm
Also available as
eBook PDF - € 140,99
Table of Contents
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Preface
Contributors
Abbreviations
Illustrations
Introduction : Pope Gregory IX (1227-1241) - Damian J. Smith, Brenda M. Bolton
Chapter One: ‘Our Lord Hugo’: Gregory IX before the pontificate - Brenda M. Bolton
Chapter Two: Gregory IX and the ‘Lombard Question’ - Gianluca Raccagni
Chapter Three: Gregory IX and the Search for an Anglo-French Peace, 1227-4 - Nicholas Vincent
Chapter Four: Gregory IX and the Crusades - Michael Lower
Chapter Five : Gregory IX and the Greek East - Nikolaos G. Chrissis
Chapter Six: Gregory IX and Denmark - Torben Kjersgaard Nielsen
Chapter Seven: Gregory IX and Spain - Damian J. Smith
Chapter Eight: Gregory IX and Mission - Iben Fonnesberg-Schmidt
Chapter Nine: Penitet eum satis? Gregory IX, inquisitors, and heresy as seen in contemporary historiography - Andrea Sommerlechner
Chapter Ten: The Third Quadriga: Gregory IX, Joachim of Fiore and the Florensian Order - Julia Eva Wannenmacher
Chapter Eleven: Gregory IX and the Liber Extra - Edward A. Reno III
Chapter Twelve: Gregory IX and Rome: Artistic patronage, ceremonies and ritual space - Claudia Bolgia

Damian J. Smith (ed.)

Pope Gregory IX (1227-1241)

Power and Authority

As Cardinal Hugo and as pope, Gregory was one of the dominant figures in the history of the papacy of the High Middle Ages. Coming to prominence under Pope Innocent III, Hugo played an important political role, particularly as legate on various occasions, as well as being a major promoter of the new religious orders. As pope, his battle with Emperor Frederick II is one of medieval history’s most absorbing conflicts. But he also acted as peacemaker, promoter of the Crusades, instigator of mission for the sake of conversion, refomer of the Curia, patron of arts and liturgy, and as a passionate advocate of Church reform. His decretal collection, the Liber Extra, was the most influential of the Middle Ages. A full examination of Gregory’s pontificate is very long overdue. The current volume brings together a team of international scholars, each of them expert in dealing with a particular aspect of the pontificate, and provides what will be a collection of studies of lasting scholarly value on a central figure of the medieval papacy.
Editor

Damian J. Smith

Damian J. Smith is Professor of Medieval History in the Department of History at Saint Louis University, USA. He is the author/editor/translator of numerous books and articles concerning the Medieval Iberian Peninsula, the Mediterranean, and the Church. He is currently writing a history of the reign of James I of Aragon (1213-1276).