Sacred History: Uses of the Christian Past in the Renaissance World
Sacred History: Uses of the Christian Past in the Renaissance World
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Abstract
This book surveys early modern ‘sacred history’, i.e. the historiography of the Christian Church, its leaders and saints, and its institutional and doctrinal developments, in the two centuries c.1450–1650. Thirteen thematic chapters examine the influence of Renaissance humanism, religious reform, and other political, intellectual, and social developments of these two centuries on the writing of ecclesiastical history in its various forms. These diverse genres of historical writing, inherited from medieval culture, included saints’ lives, diocesan histories, national chronicles, and travel accounts. Early chapters examine Catholic and Protestant traditions of sacred historiography in Western Europe, especially Italy and Switzerland. Subsequent chapters examine particular instances of sacred historiography in Germany, Central Europe, Spain, England, Ireland, France, and Portuguese India and developments in Christian art historiography and Holy Land antiquarianism. With deep medieval roots, ecclesiastical history was generally a conservative enterprise, often serving to reinforce confessional, national, regional, dynastic, or local identities. But writers of sacred history innovated in research methods and in techniques of scholarly production, especially after the advent of print. The demand for sacred history was particularly acute in the various movements for religious reform, in both Catholic and Protestant traditions. After the Renaissance, many writers sought to apply humanist critical principles to writing about the Church, but the sceptical thrust of humanist historiography threatened to undermine many ecclesiastical traditions, and religious historians often had to wrestle with tensions between criticism and piety.
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Front Matter
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Part I Church History in the Renaissance and Reformation
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1
Church History in Early Modern Europe: Tradition and Innovation
Anthony Grafton
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2
Primitivism, Patristics, and Polemic in Protestant Visions of Early Christianity
Euan Cameron
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3
Cesare Baronio and the Roman Catholic Vision of the Early Church
Giuseppe Antonio Guazzelli
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4
What Was Sacred History? (Mostly Roman) Catholic Uses of the Christian Past after Trent
Simon Ditchfield
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1
Church History in Early Modern Europe: Tradition and Innovation
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Part II National History and Sacred History
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5
The Germania illustrata, Humanist History, and the Christianization of Germany
David J. Collins, S.J.
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6
Renaissance Chroniclers and the Apostolic Origins of Spanish Christianity
Katherine Van Liere
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7
Imagining Christian Origins: Catholic Visions of a Holy Past in Central Europe
Howard P. Louthan
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8
Elizabethan Histories of English Christian Origins
Rosamund Oates
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9
Reconstructing Irish Catholic History after the Reformation
Salvador Ryan
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5
The Germania illustrata, Humanist History, and the Christianization of Germany
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Part III Uses of Sacred History in the Early Modern Catholic World
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10
The Lives of the Saints in the French Renaissance c.1500–c.1650
Jean-Marie Le Gall
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11
Doubting Thomas: The Apostle and the Portuguese Empire in Early Modern Asia
Liam Matthew Brockey
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12
Cultural History in the Catacombs: Early Christian Art and Macarius’s Hagioglypta
Irina Oryshkevich
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13
Scholarly Pilgrims: Antiquarian Visions of the Holy Land
Adam G. Beaver
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10
The Lives of the Saints in the French Renaissance c.1500–c.1650
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End Matter
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