Papal History
4,737 Followers
Recent papers in Papal History
A brief introduction to four periods of the history of the Jews and popes in Rome
This most recent edition of the bibliography contains almost 21,200 titles in English (64%) and French (36%), with an introductory section on historiography. It deals with every aspect of Italian history and culture from the Late... more
This essay explores some of the papal symbols which assumed particular prominence during the pontificate of Pope Innocent III (1198–1216). These symbols belong to different modes of expression: metaphoric speech and writing (vicarius... more
"Co' voti concordi di tutti, fu creato quella mattina sommo pontefice; non sapendo quegli medesimi che l'avevano eletto rendere ragione per che causa, in tanti travagli e pericoli dello stato della Chiesa, avessino eletto uno pontefice... more
FROM: Analecta Romana Instituti Danici, XXVIII (2001)
Laudato si es una encíclica escrita por el papa Francisco y dedicada a la protección del medio ambiente. El cambio climático es un problema global con graves dimensiones ambientales, sociales, económicas, distributivas y políticas, y... more
Why did Giordano Bruno let himself be led to the stake by the Holy Office on 17 February 1600? A new, compelling and documented reconstruction that reopens one of the most celebrated court cases in our history. Perché Giordano Bruno si... more
The year 538 A.D. became the turning point in the history of the Roman Empire since so many aspects on political, administrative and economical levels were already switched off that when Justinian declared himself to be a theologian from... more
This short piece, originally written in 2005 during my undergraduate studies of Communications and Mass Media at the University of New York in Prague, attempts a discourse analysis of the 1884 Encyclical "Humanum Genus", penned by Pope... more
The Festa della Chinea, which roughly translates as ‘Festival of the Wandering Nag’, was a historic festival held in Rome bi-annually until the late 18th century (1788), in which the viceroy of the Kingdom of Naples was required to pay... more
Pierwotna wersja w języku angielskim: https://www.academia.edu/33985097/Papal_Ceremonial_-_History_and_Meaning
The Popes in Caserta in the Modern and Contemporary Age
“Avignon Papacy” Oxford Bibliographies in “Renaissance and Reformation.” Ed. Margaret King. New York: Oxford University Press, 2018-04-26.
A obra que contem dois dos manuscritos que vão ser abordados e analisados na realização deste trabalho: as Chronicles of the Crusades, em que contem a Chronicon de rebus gestis Ricardi Primi, de Richard of Devizes, que relata os 3... more
The paper takes a critical look at the suggestion by a Finnish historian, Jouko Vahtola, that the Order of the Sword Brothers or Brethren on the initiative of the Finnish bishop Thomas (Tuomas) was present in Finland for a period in the... more
"Failed Ritual? Medieval Papal Funerals and the Death of Clement VI (1352)," " in Histories of Post-Mortem Contagion: Infectious Corpses and Contested Burials, ed. Christos Lynteris, and Nicholas Evans (London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2017),... more
Paper published in: T. Weddigen, S. de Blaauw, B. Kempers & A. Roth (eds.), Functions and Decorations: Art and Ritual at the Vatican Palace in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance (Capellae Apostolicae Sixtinaeque Collectanea Acta... more
Paper deals with the historical story of the advent of Christianity. Examines what Christianity had to offer Rome during its war with the Jews (placation of slaves & the poor, promise of life after death & "reward", making soldiers... more
The consensus on Pope Honorius III (1216–27) is that he was a conciliatory politician who lacked the harder edge possessed by his immediate predecessor and successor. Yet, using overlooked evidence regarding the role of Honorius in... more
To a large degree, the Bible and the Church have been lumped together in people’s minds and the frustration that some have felt with the actual “institutions of Christianity” have made them question and throw out the church, the Bible,... more
From amazon.com: ""Whoever needs an act of faith to elucidate an event that can be explained by reason is a fool, and unworthy of reasonable thought." This line, spoken by the notorious 18th-century libertine Giacomo Casanova,... more
Doubtlessly, Callistus, Bishop of Rome (217?−222?), was added to the list of honored martyrs of the City of Rome (Depositio martyrum). But whether or not he actually was martyred, as the Acta Callisti suggest, is controversially debated.... more
In Living under the Evil Pope, Martina Mampieri presents the Hebrew Chronicle of Pope Paul IV, written in the second half of the sixteenth century by the Italian Jewish moneylender Benjamin Neḥemiah ben Elnathan (alias Guglielmo di... more
Paper demonstrating the origin of Popes (or Bishops of Rome) from the Calpurnius Piso family, giving the actual identities of the first 10 Popes. 18 pages. This paper also makes the case for the mention of Christ in the works of Flavius... more
Discusses the uses of the figure of the Virgin Mary in the Chronicon Livoniae by Henry of Livonia (completed c. 1227) and asks how Henry's appropriations of the Virgin may have been received in Rome during the pontificate of Innocent III... more
Il diplomatico milanese Angelo Maria Durini (1725-1796), cardinale dal 1776, attraversa l’Europa e il secolo dei Lumi con l’imponenza della sua corporatura e un passo da minuetto, senza lasciarsi imbrigliare nelle facili categorie di... more
A Disputed Question, in English, on the Question of whether there be substantial error in Pope Benedict's Act of Renunciation of office.
While they often go hand-in-hand and the distinction between the two is frequently blurred, authority and power are distinct concepts and abilities – this was a problem that the Church tussled with throughout the High and Late Middle... more
Primo volume della prima traduzione italiana della celebre storia di Roma di F. Gregorovius (dall'inizio del V secolo d.C. alle premesse dell'invasione longobarda).
Joannes Leo Africanus, (c. 1494 – c. 1554?) (or al-Hasan ibn Muhammad al-Wazzan al-Fasi, Arabic:حسن ابن محمد الوزان الفاسي) was an Andalusian Amazigh Moorish diplomat and author who is best known for his book Descrittione dell’Africa... more
Zainteresowanie końcem przybiera różne formy. Bywa życiową pasją i łączy się z potrzebą odpowiedzi na palące pytania egzystencjalne, ale może być też traktowane jako problem teoretyczne, którego rozwiązanie pozwala lepiej rozumieć teksty... more
On the basis of new late medieval manuscripts of the 'Tractatus ymaginis Salvatoris' - the legend of the Salvator Icon in the Papal Lateran - the paper revises the genesis of this oldest Roman image legend and its adaption by Nicolaus... more
This chapter presents the first analysis and comparison of the arengae from a wide range of papal crusade calls in order to assess how Pope Gregory IX (1227– 41) used biblical imagery to justify and promote crusading in a variety of... more