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
- 6 Gregory VII and the Reform Movement
- 7 The Schism of 1054
- 8 The Papacy, Heresy, and Religious Dissent
- 9 The Papacy and Crusaders: From the Saracens to Stalin
- 10 The Avignon Papacy and the Great Western Schism
- 11 The Great Western Schism in History and Memory
- Part III Reformations and Revolutions
- Part IV Theopolitics and Religious Diplomacy
- Part V Inter-Faith Relations: Confrontation and Dialogue
- Select Bibliography
- Index
8 - The Papacy, Heresy, and Religious Dissent
from Part II - Crises, Schisms, and Dissent
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
- 6 Gregory VII and the Reform Movement
- 7 The Schism of 1054
- 8 The Papacy, Heresy, and Religious Dissent
- 9 The Papacy and Crusaders: From the Saracens to Stalin
- 10 The Avignon Papacy and the Great Western Schism
- 11 The Great Western Schism in History and Memory
- Part III Reformations and Revolutions
- Part IV Theopolitics and Religious Diplomacy
- Part V Inter-Faith Relations: Confrontation and Dialogue
- Select Bibliography
- Index
Summary
The chapter takes stock of the major trends in recent scholarship of medieval heresy and ecclesiastical repression, identifies promising research avenues, and provides an overview of the way in which the papacy confronted the perceived menace of heresy in the central Middle Ages, considering the representations of and responses to religious dissent displayed by the official Church alongside its own motifs and transformations. The implementation of anti-heresy measures are thus observed in light of the main historical developments of the papacy in the central centuries of the Middle Ages: the eleventh-century reform and its institutional legacy; the zenith of papal monarchy; and the Avignon papacy and its political and intellectual developments. In all these different contexts, variously permeated by the ideal of papal theocracy, the Holy See fashioned apt legal and theological responses intended to contain what was featured as an enduring peril threatening the Church and Christendom.
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- Information
- The Cambridge History of the Papacy , pp. 213 - 234Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2025