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Clerical households in late Medieval Italy

Title
Clerical households in late Medieval Italy / Roisin Cossar.
ISBN
9780674971899
0674971892
Publication
Cambridge, Massachusetts : Harvard University Press, 2017.
Copyright Notice Date
©2017
Physical Description
232 pages ; 25 cm.
Summary
This book takes up the familiar topic of church reform in the later Middle Ages, but does so in a novel way: by examining the relationship between reform and the domestic lives of parish priests, their female companions, and other members of the priests' households or familia in the fourteenth century. Focusing on northern Italy, including Venice, and drawing on a wide range of archival records, the book challenges traditional characterizations of the late medieval clergy as "corrupt." Instead, it shows priests responding to the regulation of their domestic lives. They responded by carefully shaping written records in which household members appeared, for instance by presenting their sexual partners as servants and their children as apprentices. The book also traces, in many cases for the first time, the life cycle and status of priests' kin and household members, including their female companions, children, mothers, and slaves. In addition, the book explores both the work and material cultures of the clerical household in the decades after the Black Death. Throughout, the author argues that the priest's household was a community with roots in both ecclesiastical and lay society. Approaching the history of church reform through the lens of the clerical household, the book provides a new perspective on the history of the Christian church and domestic life in Italy at the beginning of the Renaissance.-- Provided by publisher
Format
Books
Language
English
Added to Catalog
April 11, 2017
Series
I Tatti studies in Italian Renaissance history.
I Tatti studies in Italian Renaissance history
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Contents
Introduction
Part I. Making records: Notaries, registers, and archives
Records as artifacts and historical events
Part II. The clerical familia: Priests as patriarchs: the clergy and their households
"She is not my wife but a servant": clerics' companions
Material culture and work in the clerical domus.
Citation

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