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6.1 Ea bulla, quam cruciatam dicimus : the character and administration of crusade indulgences 6.1 Ea bulla, quam cruciatam dicimus : the character and administration of crusade indulgences
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6.2 Popularity and returns 6.2 Popularity and returns
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6.3 Control and retention 6.3 Control and retention
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6 6 Indulgences and the crusade against the Turks
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Published:December 2012
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Abstract
This chapter considers the most important feature of crusading's devotional and economic impact, the distribution of indulgences in exchange for financial contributions. In the first place, it attempts to locate the period's most significant indulgence commissioner, Raymond Perault, in terms of his predecessors and contemporaries. Secondly, the popularity of crusading indulgences and the criticism to which the practice was subjected are assessed. And lastly, Perault's attempt to promote a crusade in the empire between 1501 and 1503 is reconsidered. The focus is on the exceptional challenge that Perault confronted, namely a duplicitous pope, a volatile political situation in Germany, and an organizational task of massive proportions.
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