Medieval Church Councils in Scotland
Autor Donald Watten Limba Engleză Hardback – 30 noi 2000
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780567087317
ISBN-10: 056708731X
Pagini: 204
Dimensiuni: 138 x 216 x 22 mm
Greutate: 0.37 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția T&T Clark
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 056708731X
Pagini: 204
Dimensiuni: 138 x 216 x 22 mm
Greutate: 0.37 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția T&T Clark
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Cuprins
Early
evidence
of
church
councils
in
Scotland
to
c.
1100Legatine
councils
1125-1192Interim
arrangements
1192-1225Establishment
of
the
Scottish
provincial
council
1225-1239Diocesan
and
provincial
statutes
of
the
mid-thirteenth
centuryMembership
and
organisation
of
the
provincial
councilDevelopments
1239-1296The
reign
of
King
Robert
I
1306-1329Provincial
councils
and
the
Three
Estates
1329-1424Last
years
of
the
traditional
arrangements
1424-1472Epilogue
Recenzii
"Ce
livre
est
une
contribution
importante
à
l'étude
de
l'influence
de
l'
Église
écossaise
sur
les
structures
socio-politiques
plus
larges
du
bas
moyen
âge."
--Revue
d'Histoire
Ecclesiastique
96.3
"This scholarly volume presents a broadly chronological analysis of the working of Scottish provincial councils both as agents of ecclesiastical reform and as institutions firmly embedded within the political structure of the realm and subject to at least a measure of royal control. In making a contribution to a major international series, Watt has had to grapple with the notorious deficiencies of the Scottish source material and the problems of its interpretation . . . Watt is to be congratulated on presenting the first full analysis of an organ of the Scottish Church which certainly functioned more smoothly without an archbishop than it was ever able to after 1472."--Ecclesiastical History 53.1
"This simple but important story is here worked out on the basis of a meticulous criticism of the original sources."--Theologische Literaturzeitung Redaktion
"The detailed account of this institution which Donald Watt provides is, moreover, an impressively sustained piece of scholarship. The main body of evidence, the extant diocesan and provincial statutes, is bristling with interpretive challenges." --The Journal of Religious History
"This scholarly volume presents a broadly chronological analysis of the working of Scottish provincial councils both as agents of ecclesiastical reform and as institutions firmly embedded within the political structure of the realm and subject to at least a measure of royal control. In making a contribution to a major international series, Watt has had to grapple with the notorious deficiencies of the Scottish source material and the problems of its interpretation . . . Watt is to be congratulated on presenting the first full analysis of an organ of the Scottish Church which certainly functioned more smoothly without an archbishop than it was ever able to after 1472."--Ecclesiastical History 53.1
"This simple but important story is here worked out on the basis of a meticulous criticism of the original sources."--Theologische Literaturzeitung Redaktion
"The detailed account of this institution which Donald Watt provides is, moreover, an impressively sustained piece of scholarship. The main body of evidence, the extant diocesan and provincial statutes, is bristling with interpretive challenges." --The Journal of Religious History