Synopses & Reviews
A standard work of reference for the study of the religious history of western Christianity in the later Middle Ages.
Review
"...the benchmark for all study of hagiography and the cult of saints in the later Middle Ages." Thomas Head, The Medieval Review"A monumental work of scholarship, of vital importance for an understanding of church, popular piety, and sainthood in the high and late Middle Ages." Richard Kieckhefer, Northwestern University"...the translation is a great service to a wider audience, particularly to college professors and their students. ...Vauchez has created a coherent magnum opus that continues to engage today's reader with its freshness." Maiju Lehmijoki-Gardner, Church History"...Andr^D e'^ Vauchez is a scholar whose work is to be carefully considered and even treasured." Thomas Head, The Catholic Historical Review"Vauchez is a master of the historian's craft... His book is eminently readable, erudite but never pedantic, unassuming yet inspiring confidence...." Rudolph M. Bell, Jrnl of Interdisciplinary History"This book is a fine example of current Biblical analysis. Both Biblical analysis. Both Biblical scholars and persons involved in pedagogy will be the richer for Estes' work." Arnold Rzepecki, Catholic Library Assn"...the epithet 'masterpiece' still seems, after almost twenty years, deserved...his examination of sanctity is a brilliant study of the full range of late medieval Christianity." Caroline Walker Bynum, Journal of Social History"This publication is a complete, elegant, and most welcome translation of the revised edtiion (1988) of Vauchez's classic, La saintéé en occident aux derniers siècles du moyen ^D6age, d'aprés les procès de canonization et les documents hagiographiques (Rome: Ecole Fran^D?caise, 1981)." Nicholas Watson, Studies in the Age of Chaucer"...an important event in the history of medieval studies, and one can only hope that it gains much wider currency among medievalists." P.J. Nugent, The Journal of Religion"...the book is magnificent." Thomas F. X. Noble, Religious Studies Review
Review
'A monumental work of scholarship, of vital importance for an understanding of church, popular piety, and sainthood in the high and late Middle Ages.' Richard Kieckhefer, Northwestern University
Review
'A massive, comprehensive and very sophisticated study of late medieval saints and their cults.' Stephen Wilson, University of East Anglia
Synopsis
This is a standard work of reference for the study of the religious history of western Christianity in the later middle ages which, since its publication in French in 1981, has come to be regarded as one of the great contributions of recent times to medieval studies.
Table of Contents
Introduction; Book 1. The church and the cult of the saints in the medieval west: Part 1. Control of the Cult of the Saints from its Origins to the Thirteenth Century: 1. Late antiquity and the early middle ages: 'vox populi' and episcopal power (third to tenth century); 2 .Towards papal reservation of the right of canonisation (eleventh to thirteenth centuries); 3. The process of canonisation from its origins to its classical form (c. 1200 to c. 1270); 4. The evolution of the role of canonisation: from control to selection; 5. 'Sancti' and 'beati'; Part 2: The Rise of the Cult of the Saints and the Assertion of 'Modern' Sanctity: 6. The role of the papacy; 7. The role of the regulars; 8. The secular clergy and the laity; Conclusion: the cult of the saints between universalist aims and the rise of particularism; Book 2. Typology of medieval sanctity: Part 1. Popular Sanctity and Local Sanctity: 9. Popular sanctity; 10. Local sanctity; Part 2. Official Sanctity: Forms and Criteria of Christian Perfection According to Processes of Canonisation: 11. Typology of official sanctity: quantitative aspects; 12. Forms of sanctity and ways of life; 13. The evolution of the criteria of sanctity from the late twelfth to the early fifteenth centuries; Conclusion: the Roman church faced with popular and local sanctity: a silent rejection; Book 3. The signs and significations of sanctity: Part 1. The Manifestations and Effects of Sanctity in the Popular Mind: 14. 'Virtus': the language of the body; 15. The structures and expansion of the field of the miraculous; Part 2. The Roman Church and Sanctity: 16. The Holy See and the critique of miracles; 17. Life and virtues of the saints in the processes of canonisation; Conclusion: the hagiographical mentality and the popular mind; General conclusion; Appendices; List of sources; Bibliography; Bibliographical update; Index of places; Index of persons; Subject index.