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Léon IX et son temps : actes du colloque international organisé par l'Institut d'Histoire Médiévale de l'Université Marc-Bloch, Strasbourg-Eguisheim, 20-22 juin 2002
Authors: ---
ISBN: 2503516270 9782503516271 9782503536897 Year: 2006 Volume: 8 Publisher: Turnhout : Brepols,

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Le pontificat de Léon IX (1049-1054) marque un tournant dans l’histoire de l’Eglise. Energique et déterminé, Léon IX voyage au sud comme au nord des Alpes, tient de nombreux conciles, fait sentir même aux évêques le poids de l’autorité romaine, tente de mener une politique cohérente face aux Normands et aux Byzantins, réforme la vieille chancellerie pontificale… Il lance ainsi, dans le respect de l’autorité impériale, la réforme de l’Eglise qui deviendra ensuite la réforme grégorienne.Saisissant le prétexte du millénaire de sa naissance, un colloque réuni à Strasbourg en juin 2002 a fait le point sur les origines, la personnalité, l’action et l’entourage de ce pape, ainsi que sur les sources, narratives, diplomatiques, épistolaires, nécrologiques, archéologiques et autres, de l’histoire de son pontificat.

Church reform and social change in eleventh-century Italy : Dominic of Sora and his patrons
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ISBN: 081223412X 9780812234121 Year: 1997 Publisher: Philadelphia : University of Pennsylvania Press,

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At the dawn of the second millennium, new churches and castles sprang up throughout Western Europe. In central Italy, St. Dominic of Sora (d. 1032) and his patrons played a key role in this process. John Howe mines the surprisingly rich but heretofore neglected sources that tell their story. He has written an absorbing case study of an ecclesiastical reform that was earlier - if less literate and less centralized - than the Gregorian Reform that would soon follow. At the center of his book is Dominic, a well-documented saint, hermit, abbot, and founder of monastic establishments, whose life and career reveal how central Italy was transformed during the first part of the eleventh century by the creation of walled hilltop villages and the establishment of unparalleled numbers of monasteries. In this lively and readable book, Howe argues that reform in the world of the eleventh century meant restoring lands, building churches, regularizing the clergy's distinctive garb, and changing the celebration of the liturgy. Much of what Dominic and his patrons accomplished soon became obsolete, swept aside by a more legalistic and coherent reform ideology. Yet nearly a thousand years later, traces of the new order that Dominic and his followers created can still be found in the Italian countryside

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