Before the Gregorian Reform: The Latin Church at the Turn of the First Millennium

Before the Gregorian Reform: The Latin Church at the Turn of the First Millennium

by John Howe
Before the Gregorian Reform: The Latin Church at the Turn of the First Millennium

Before the Gregorian Reform: The Latin Church at the Turn of the First Millennium

by John Howe

Hardcover(New Edition)

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Overview

Historians typically single out the hundred-year period from about 1050 to 1150 as the pivotal moment in the history of the Latin Church, for it was then that the Gregorian Reform movement established the ecclesiastical structure that would ensure Rome’s dominance throughout the Middle Ages and beyond. In Before the Gregorian Reform John Howe challenges this familiar narrative by examining earlier, "pre-Gregorian" reform efforts within the Church. He finds that they were more extensive and widespread than previously thought and that they actually established a foundation for the subsequent Gregorian Reform movement.

The low point in the history of Christendom came in the late ninth and early tenth centuries—a period when much of Europe was overwhelmed by barbarian raids and widespread civil disorder, which left the Church in a state of disarray. As Howe shows, however, the destruction gave rise to creativity. Aristocrats and churchmen rebuilt churches and constructed new ones, competing against each other so that church building, like castle building, acquired its own momentum. Patrons strove to improve ecclesiastical furnishings, liturgy, and spirituality. Schools were constructed to staff the new churches. Moreover, Howe shows that these reform efforts paralleled broader economic, social, and cultural trends in Western Europe including the revival of long-distance trade, the rise of technology, and the emergence of feudal lordship. The result was that by the mid-eleventh century a wealthy, unified, better-organized, better-educated, more spiritually sensitive Latin Church was assuming a leading place in the broader Christian world.

Before the Gregorian Reform challenges us to rethink the history of the Church and its place in the broader narrative of European history. Compellingly written and generously illustrated, it is a book for all medievalists as well as general readers interested in the Middle Ages and Church history.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780801452895
Publisher: Cornell University Press
Publication date: 04/01/2016
Edition description: New Edition
Pages: 372
Product dimensions: 6.40(w) x 9.30(h) x 1.20(d)
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

John Howe is Professor of History at Texas Tech University. He is the author of Church Reform and Social Change in Eleventh-Century Central Italy: Dominic of Sora and His Patrons and coeditor of Inventing Medieval Landscapes: Senses of Place in Western Europe.

Table of Contents

Introduction: A Pre-Gregorian Reform?
1. "Wolves Devouring the Lambs of Christ"
2. “Enter Confidently into the War of the Lord God”
3. “A White Mantle of Churches”
4. “To Rouse Devotion in a Carnal People”
5. “Following in the Footsteps of the Saints”
6. “When My Soul Longs for the Divine Vision”
7. “Learning Is Part of Holiness”
8. “The Body Is Not a Single Part”
9. “One Shepherd Presides over All Generally”
Epilogue: A Pope Captured, A Church Triumphant

What People are Saying About This

G. A. Loud

Before the Gregorian Reform is wide-ranging, thoughtful, and thought-provoking, written in a clear and indeed engaging way: I have found this book very stimulating, and have learned a great deal.

Hans J. Hummer

In this deeply learned and handsomely illuminated book, John Howe boldly reinserts the role played by church reform into the story of the formation of Europe during the fraught centuries around the millennium. He magnificently brings to life the creativity of an era too often overshadowed by the glories of the Carolingian and twelfth-century 'renaissances' that came before and after it. Like the gold and jewels that gleam on a medieval psalter, the work is studded with elegant evocations of the rich spirituality and dazzling material culture of Europe around the year 1000: its books, liturgy, statuary art, reliquaries, manuscripts, castles, and the ‘white mantel’ of its churches. Before the Gregorian Reform is a mature work of scholarship written by a leading scholar of church history at the top of his craft.

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