Book contents
- The Cambridge History of the Papacy
- The Cambridge History of the Papacy
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Table
- Contributors
- General Introduction
- Part I Spaces, Liturgies, Travels
- Part II Women, Gender, Sexuality
- Part III Science, Medicine, Technology
- 14 Medicine in the Court of the Avignon Papacy
- 15 Popes, the Body, Medicine, and the Cult of Saints after Trent
- 16 Catholic Bioethics from Pius XI to Pope Francis I
- 17 The Popes and Magic
- 18 Heavens: The Papacy, Astrology, and Astronomy to 1800
- 19 Care for Our Common Home: The Papacy and the Environment
- 20 Popes and the Media
- Part IV Education, Culture, Arts
- Select Bibliography
- Index
19 - Care for Our Common Home: The Papacy and the Environment
from Part III - Science, Medicine, Technology
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 February 2025
- The Cambridge History of the Papacy
- The Cambridge History of the Papacy
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Table
- Contributors
- General Introduction
- Part I Spaces, Liturgies, Travels
- Part II Women, Gender, Sexuality
- Part III Science, Medicine, Technology
- 14 Medicine in the Court of the Avignon Papacy
- 15 Popes, the Body, Medicine, and the Cult of Saints after Trent
- 16 Catholic Bioethics from Pius XI to Pope Francis I
- 17 The Popes and Magic
- 18 Heavens: The Papacy, Astrology, and Astronomy to 1800
- 19 Care for Our Common Home: The Papacy and the Environment
- 20 Popes and the Media
- Part IV Education, Culture, Arts
- Select Bibliography
- Index
Summary
This chapter outlines a historiography of the papacy and the environment and begins with several observations. First, papal approaches to the environment are shaped by the historical evolution of the papacy itself. Second, notions of environment and environmentalism are varied across secular, religious, and, by extension, papal discourse and action. Relatedly, these pluriform conceptions are influenced by locations that include geographic, epistemological, and socio-cultural. Thus informed, the chapter engages two distinct periods. The first is the sixth to the sixteenth centuries, wherein papal approaches to the environment were variously shaped by notions of wilderness, classical natural history, anthropocentrism, monastic spiritualities and activities, and expanding ecclesial infrastructure and temporal power. The second period begins with global industrialization around 1750 and continues through to today. Therein, papal environmentalism is especially expressed in modern Catholic social teaching that began with Leo XIII in 1891 and continues through Francis I, especially Laudato si’ in 2015.
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- Information
- The Cambridge History of the Papacy , pp. 536 - 572Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2025