The Decretals of Gregory IX, promulgated in 1234, was the first collection of canon law for the Catholic Church invested with universal and exclusive authority, and was the culmination of a century and a half process by which the a now papal-led Church came to be the leading institution within medieval European society. The Decretals, also known as the Liber extra - a compilation of 1971 papal letters, constitutions and conciliar canons drawn principally from the century prior to its issuance - has long been understood as a key text for the study of the medieval papacy, the rise of scholasticism within the universities, and the extension of the Church's jurisdiction into almost every area of medieval life. The degree to which the man co...
Pope Gregory the Great\u27s Liber Regulae Pastoralis has often been called one of the most influenti...
For over three centuries, the Liber Pontificalis Ecclesiae Ravennatis (LPR), written in the 830\u27s...
Medieval bishops often had a special book of liturgical services that only a bishop could perform. S...
At some point in the 1180s a scribe in south-west England copied out sixty-five folios of papal lett...
A significant number of Pope Alexander III’s decretal letters were incorporated into the "Liber Extr...
Gratian has long been called the Father of Canon Law. This latest volume in the ongoing History of M...
This study uses the analysis of communication practices and strategies to argue for a new understand...
This thesis examines the deposition of French bishops from office during the pontificate of Gregory ...
PhDThis study examines the crusading movement during the reign of Pope Gregory X in the latter part ...
The Carolingian renovatio of the earlier ninth century was marked by an intensified interest in “the...
grantor: University of TorontoThe Pseudo-Augustinian treatise De vera et falsa penitentia ...
Papal law is known from the late 4th century (Siricius). There was demand for decretals and they wer...
Geoffrey, abbot of the Trinity of Vendôme (1093-1132), who takes a prominent part in the Gregorian R...
This dissertation explores the transmission of the letters of Pope Leo the Great (pope, 440-461). I...
The modern Western legal tradition owes a great debt to the medieval canon law of the Church, severa...
Pope Gregory the Great\u27s Liber Regulae Pastoralis has often been called one of the most influenti...
For over three centuries, the Liber Pontificalis Ecclesiae Ravennatis (LPR), written in the 830\u27s...
Medieval bishops often had a special book of liturgical services that only a bishop could perform. S...
At some point in the 1180s a scribe in south-west England copied out sixty-five folios of papal lett...
A significant number of Pope Alexander III’s decretal letters were incorporated into the "Liber Extr...
Gratian has long been called the Father of Canon Law. This latest volume in the ongoing History of M...
This study uses the analysis of communication practices and strategies to argue for a new understand...
This thesis examines the deposition of French bishops from office during the pontificate of Gregory ...
PhDThis study examines the crusading movement during the reign of Pope Gregory X in the latter part ...
The Carolingian renovatio of the earlier ninth century was marked by an intensified interest in “the...
grantor: University of TorontoThe Pseudo-Augustinian treatise De vera et falsa penitentia ...
Papal law is known from the late 4th century (Siricius). There was demand for decretals and they wer...
Geoffrey, abbot of the Trinity of Vendôme (1093-1132), who takes a prominent part in the Gregorian R...
This dissertation explores the transmission of the letters of Pope Leo the Great (pope, 440-461). I...
The modern Western legal tradition owes a great debt to the medieval canon law of the Church, severa...
Pope Gregory the Great\u27s Liber Regulae Pastoralis has often been called one of the most influenti...
For over three centuries, the Liber Pontificalis Ecclesiae Ravennatis (LPR), written in the 830\u27s...
Medieval bishops often had a special book of liturgical services that only a bishop could perform. S...