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Major new study of secular-religious boundaries and the role of the clergy in the administration of Italy's late medieval city-states.
List of contents
1. Introduction Frances Andrews; 2. Bishop and commune in twelfth-century Cremona: the interface of secular and ecclesiastical power Edward Coleman; Part I. Urban Case Studies: 3. Ut inde melius fiat: the commune of Parma and its religious personnel Frances Andrews; 4. The employment of religious orders in Piacenza between the thirteenth and the fourteenth century Caterina Bruschi; 5. Cremona: a case study Christoph Friedrich Weber; 6. Employment of religious in the administration of the Modena commune from the twelfth to the fifteenth century Pierpaolo Bonacini; 7. Verona: a model case in the study of relationships between members of religious orders and the government of the city Maria Agata Pincelli; 8. The tasks assigned to the Humiliati by the commune of Bergamo (twelfth-fourteenth centuries) Maria Teresa Brolis and Andrea Beneggi; 9. Religious and public life: Lucca, a case study Ignazio del Punta; 10. Pistoia: a case study Sarah Tiboni; 11. Religious in the service of the commune: the case of thirteenth- and fourteenth-century Perugia Giovanna Casagrande; 12. On the trail of religious in the medieval communes of Viterbo and Tuscia Eleonora Rava; 13. Venetian exceptionalism? Lay and religious in Venetian communal governance Dennis Romano; Part II. Ecclesiastial Perspectives: 14. Cistercians as administrators in the thirteenth-century Italian communes Paolo Grillo; 15. The Cistercian monk and the casting counter William R. Day, Jr; 16. Hermits for communes: the Camaldolese in the service of the communes of central and northern Italy in the thirteenth to fifteenth centuries Cécile Caby; 17. Cooperative intervention: sermons supporting the governing authority in fifteenth-century Italy Stefan Visnjevac; Part III. Comparisons beyond Central and Northern Italy: 18. Religious in secular offices in late medieval southern Italy Hubert Houben; 19. Interactions between lay and ecclesiastical offices in Sardinia Andrea Puglia; 20. The abbot and public life in late medieval England Martin Heale; 21. Epilogue Frances Andrews.
About the author
Professor Frances Andrews has taught Mediaeval History at the University of St Andrews since 1995. In 2007 she founded the St Andrews Institute for Mediaeval Studies.