Keepers of the Keys of Heaven: A History of the Papacy

Author:   Roger Collins ,  Roger Collins
Publisher:   Orion Publishing Co
ISBN:  

9780753826959


Pages:   576
Publication Date:   18 March 2010
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us.

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Keepers of the Keys of Heaven: A History of the Papacy


Overview

Few human institutions have survived so long and played a continuously important role in world history and affairs than the Papacy. From the time of St Peter to the present day, this establishment has sought to make sense of contemporary issues. Its story is a long and complicated one, full of incident, ideas and the interplay of personalities. In this masterful single volume, eminent scholar Roger Collins offers an account of the entire arc of papal history, describing how its authority was acquired and exercised, and in turn, challenged and threatened; how it faced and overcame crises - both from within and without; its relationship with Rome; the tradition of artistic patronage; and the character and policies of individual popes. KEEPERS OF THE KEYS OF HEAVEN is a vivid and revealing portrait of an enduring body, chronicling two thousand years of ambition, scandal, persecution, faith and glory.

Full Product Details

Author:   Roger Collins ,  Roger Collins
Publisher:   Orion Publishing Co
Imprint:   Weidenfeld & Nicolson
Dimensions:   Width: 13.60cm , Height: 4.00cm , Length: 21.60cm
Weight:   0.520kg
ISBN:  

9780753826959


ISBN 10:   075382695
Pages:   576
Publication Date:   18 March 2010
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us.

Table of Contents

Reviews

Few historians write as engagingly and wittily as Roger Collins. This is a wonderful, magnificent account of an institution that has touched the lives of millions and still does. - Alexander McCall Smith. Always accessible...impeccably fair and even detached when it comes to analysing controversial actions...[A] vast and admirable tome. - Sunday Times.


Few historians write as engagingly and wittily as Roger Collins. This is a wonderful, magnificent account of an institution that has touched the lives of millions and still does. - Alexander McCall Smith. Always accessible...impeccably fair and even detached when it comes to analysing controversial actions...[A] vast and admirable tome. - Sunday Times.


The history of a 2,000-year-old office whose holders have shaped world history, from St. Peter to Benedict XVI.Roman Catholic tradition identifies popes as the successors to Peter, who supposedly was - or at least helped appoint - the first bishop of Rome. Yet in fact Christianity had no bishops until well after Peter's death, notes Collins (Research Fellow/Univ. of Edinburgh; Visigothic Spain, 2004, etc.). This kind of mythologizing has carried the papacy through numerous near-death experiences. Secular protectors, extraordinary pontiffs and luck (or providence, depending on your take) have also played a part in helping popes expand their spiritual authority even as their temporal powers shriveled. The narrative covers such epic events as the schism between Rome and Eastern Christianity, the Crusades, church councils and the Protestant Reformation. But it does not neglect peculiarities like the Cadaver Synod, in which a medieval pope's enemies exhumed his corpse, arrayed it in robes before an ecclesiastical court and convicted the moldering remains of perjury and breaking canon law. Collins sprints through the centuries, but his detail-saturated prose makes the book seem long. Grand themes bob in a sea of names and dates, with even insignificant popes and other bit players rating fleeting mentions. The author's conclusions on major, controversial figures are invariably balanced. He judges as far from proven the case against Pius XII, whose failure to condemn the Nazis' treatment of Jews led historian John Cornwell to dub him Hitler's Pope (1999). Collins does acknowledge that Pius was at the very least constrained by the habitual caution that made him a good Vatican diplomat rather than a natural leader of men in time of crisis. John Paul II gets kudos for charisma and combating communism, but criticism for opposing artificial contraception to halt AIDS and inertia in the face of sex abuse by priests.A useful reference for students and diehard fans of church history, but includes more than general readers will want to know. (Kirkus Reviews)


Author Information

Roger Collins was born in London and educated at Oxford. A distinguished religious scholar who has published widely on medieval Europe, he is an Honorary Fellow at Edinburgh University and a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society. He lives in Edinburgh.

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