Book contents
- The cambridge history of the Papacy
- The Cambridge History of the Papacy
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Contributors
- General Introduction
- Part I Christendom and Empire
- Part II Crises, Schisms, and Dissent
- Part III Reformations and Revolutions
- Part IV Theopolitics and Religious Diplomacy
- Part V Inter-Faith Relations: Confrontation and Dialogue
- 25 The Papacy and the Christian East: The Theological Issues
- 26 The Popes and the Protestant Churches
- 27 The Popes and Islam
- 28 The Islamic World and the Papacy
- 29 The Medieval Papacy and the Jews
- 30 The Papacy and the Jews since the French Revolution
- Select Bibliography
- Index
29 - The Medieval Papacy and the Jews
from Part V - Inter-Faith Relations: Confrontation and Dialogue
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 February 2025
- The cambridge history of the Papacy
- The Cambridge History of the Papacy
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Contributors
- General Introduction
- Part I Christendom and Empire
- Part II Crises, Schisms, and Dissent
- Part III Reformations and Revolutions
- Part IV Theopolitics and Religious Diplomacy
- Part V Inter-Faith Relations: Confrontation and Dialogue
- 25 The Papacy and the Christian East: The Theological Issues
- 26 The Popes and the Protestant Churches
- 27 The Popes and Islam
- 28 The Islamic World and the Papacy
- 29 The Medieval Papacy and the Jews
- 30 The Papacy and the Jews since the French Revolution
- Select Bibliography
- Index
Summary
The relations between medieval and early modern Jews and the popes rested on consistently applied canonical and Roman law principles, alongside Pauline theology, which was itself bifurcated. These principles were fundamentally restrictive, and the restrictions became tighter over time. To speak of a mild early Middle Ages, driven by Augustinian principles, which turned radically hostile after the First Crusade, is a distortion. Nobody mentioned Augustine until Innocent III. There were forced conversions even in the early Middle Ages. Similarly, the Fourth Lateran Council of 1215 was not a turning point, but a culmination. Subsequent attacks on literature were new, but not papally initiated. Beginning with Benedict XIII in 1415, a move to press conversion – without ignoring old limits, theoretically – began to grow, which culminated in Paul IV’s foundation of the Roman ghetto in 1555, intended be a cauldron of conversion achieved through repression. The policy failed.
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- Information
- The Cambridge History of the Papacy , pp. 747 - 769Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2025