Liturgy, Sanctity and History in Tridentine Italy: Pietro Maria Campi and the Preservation of the Particular

Ön Kapak
Cambridge University Press, 28 Kas 2002 - 416 sayfa
This book brings together for the first time detailed analyses of Tridentine liturgical reform, Counter-Reformation sanctity and the late Renaissance 'revolution' in historical method. Thus it redraws traditional historical boundaries, and offers an original and challenging reappraisal of the relations between Rome and its local Italian churches during the 150 years after the closure of the Council of Trent in 1564. A fundamentally new context is also provided for the work of Cesare Baronio, 'father' of Counter-Reformation historical scholarship, and of his regional counterparts. The examination of the writings of one such local Baronio, Pietro Maria Campi of Piacenza (1569-1649), acts as a focus for this study, which also includes the fullest account yet published of Counter-Reformation canonisation procedure, as well as the first extended scholarly treatment of Ferdinando Ughelli's Italia sacra, together with that work's long-term implications for Italian national history writing. The book further provides a comprehensive survey of Italian local hagiography and ecclesiastical history writing of the period.
 

İçindekiler

Introduction
1
LITURGY
15
Reform of liturgy and the reinvention of Historia sacra
17
Hagiography as liturgy in a local context the Ecclesia Placentina riformanda
68
Continuity in change towards a working definition of Tridentine hagiography
117
The early christian martyr
135
The aristocratic hermit
148
The wellborn nun
181
The lay helper of the urban poor
195
The visionary shepherdess
204
The saintly pointiff
212
Historia sacra as redemptor ecclesiarum italicarum
273
The ecclesiastical roots of national historiography Ferdinando Ughellis Italia sacra
328
Bibliography
361
Index
391
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