Canon law in the age of reform, 11th-12th centuries /
Saved in:
Main Author: | |
---|---|
Format: | Book |
Language: | English |
Created: |
Aldershot, Hampshire, Great Britain : Brookfield, Vt., USA :
Variorum ; Ashgate Pub. Co.,
c1993.
|
Series: | Collected studies ;
CS406. |
Subjects: | |
Tags: |
Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
|
Table of Contents:
- I. Cardinal Humbert of Silva-Candida (d. 1061)
- II. Humbert of Silva-Candida and the political concept of Ecclesia in the Eleventh-century reform movement
- III. Canon law aspects of the Eleventh-century Gregorian reform programme
- IV. Simoniaca haeresis and the problem of orders from Leo IX to Gratian
- V. Gregory VII and the juristic sources of his ideology
- VI. Eleventh- and early Twelfth-century canonical collections and the economic policy of Gregory VII
- VII. Was there a Gregorian reform movement in the Eleventh century?
- VIII. The reception of Pope Gregory VII into the Canon Law (1073-1141)
- IX. The reception of Pope Gregory VII into the Canon Law (1073-1141), Part II
- X. The Epistola Widonis, ecclesiastical reform and canonistic enterprise 1049-1141
- XI. The Gregorian reform tradition and Pope Alexander III
- XII. The perception of Jews in the canon law in the period of the first two crusades.