Pope Innocent III (1160/61–1216): To Root Up and to Plant

Author:   John C. Moore
Publisher:   University of Notre Dame Press
ISBN:  

9780268035143


Pages:   277
Publication Date:   15 January 2009
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
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Pope Innocent III (1160/61–1216): To Root Up and to Plant


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Author:   John C. Moore
Publisher:   University of Notre Dame Press
Imprint:   University of Notre Dame Press
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.90cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.481kg
ISBN:  

9780268035143


ISBN 10:   0268035148
Pages:   277
Publication Date:   15 January 2009
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.

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Reviews

Thank goodness that John C. Moore's biography of Pope Innocent III is finally available in an affordable format. His clarity of language, nuanced analysis, and evident mastery of both the sources and the wealth of studies devoted to this pope, whose pontificate was a major watershed in Western history, make Moore's study a 'must have' addition to the library of every medieval student and scholar. -Alfred J. Andrea, The University of Vermont The author's presentation of Innocent's person and pontificate is eminently fair. The complexity of the individual and his times are remarkably well documented. The author has given us an interesting, comprehensive and readable history of an important Pope and an important period in the history of the Church. -Catholic Library World Refusing to be driven by one or another of the great operatic episodes of Innocent's pontificate, Moore has produced the most comprehensive and rounded study ever written of the man and the pope-the very readable history of a pontificate from day to day. -Edward M. Peters, Henry Charles Lea Professor of History, University of Pennsylvania Moore makes a self-consciously bold choice by deciding to abandon the prevailing thematic approach to Innocent and instead to organize his material chronologically. . . . Generously quoting from Innocent's pre-papal works, papal sermons, and, above all, papal letters, Moore allows his subject the chance to speak for himself. Three well-produced illustrations, two from the thirteenth century, one from the twentieth, depict Innocent's persona hieratically. More intimately, however, we glimpse him momentarily relaxed and good-humored, thanks to the prose of Gerald of Wales. . . . Moore's prose is eminently readable. . . . Inherently complex matters of papal diplomacy and relations with troublesome Christian kings are ludicly explained. -Speculum This book assesses Innocent's personal attitudes as expressed both in his ecclesiological ideas and in his practical actions and describes events on the basis of a wide range of sources (papal letters, decrees and sermons). In addition Moore's chronological approach establishes the actual framework within which Innocent built up his policy. -Journal of Ecclesiastical History John C. Moore was a distinguished expert on Innocent III and his pontificate before the publication of this volume and his reputation will be enhanced by this thorough and searching scholarly biography of the pope. Moore sets out to provide an insight into the reality of the pontificate as Innocent experienced it, and thus he is very good at evoking details of life in the papal court. Moore's biography is wide-ranging, showing the preoccupations of the pope at all of the stages of his pontificate. -English Historical Review


Thank goodness that John C. Moore's biography of Pope Innocent III is finally available in an affordable format. His clarity of language, nuanced analysis, and evident mastery of both the sources and the wealth of studies devoted to this pope, whose pontificate was a major watershed in Western history, make Moore's study a 'must have' addition to the library of every medieval student and scholar. - Alfred J. Andrea, University of Vermont Moore's analysis of Innocent's pontificate operates on two levels: he explains the papal approach towards events according to their theological background, which is recorded by his sermons, and he constantly examines the facts, as they are recorded in the papal registers.... In his conclusions, Moore depicts Innocent as 'fluctuating' between the signs of God and his papal leadership. Thus Innocent 'expanded the theoretical rights and the actual power of the papacy as he inherited it, and he passed it on to his successors to expand even further.' - Journal of Ecclesiastical History Moore makes a self-consciously bold choice by deciding to abandon the prevailing thematic approach to Innocent and instead to organize his material chronologically.... Generously quoting from Innocent's pre-papal works, papal sermons, and, above all, papal letters, Moore allows his subject the chance to speak for himself.... Moore's prose is eminently readable.... Inherently complex matters of papal diplomacy and relations with troublesome Christian kings are lucidly explained. - Speculum


John C. Moore was a distinguished expert on Innocent III and his pontificate before the publication of this volume and his reputation will be enhanced by this thorough and searching scholarly biography of the pope. Moore sets out to provide an insight into the reality of the pontificate as Innocent experienced it, and thus he is very good at evoking details of life in the papal court. Moore's biography is wide-ranging, showing the preoccupations of the pope at all of the stages of his pontificate. -- English Historical Review The author's presentation of Innocent's person and pontificate is eminently fair. The complexity of the individual and his times are remarkably well documented. The author has given us an interesting, comprehensive and readable history of an important Pope and an important period in the history of the Church. -- Catholic Library World The intention of John C. Moore's biography of Pope Innocent III, originally published by Brill in 2003, is to provide a chronological account of the life of one of the most influential and able of the medieval pontiffs. By abandoning the more usual thematic approach to Innocent's pontificate, Moore wants us to better appreciate 'how the events in one area of his experience may have influenced his reactions to events in others.'. . . In spite of its structural problems, Moore's is the best biography of Innocent III, and this paperback edition should now make it available to the very students of history for whom it was intended. -- The Catholic Historical Review Moore makes a self-consciously bold choice by deciding to abandon the prevailing thematic approach to Innocent and instead to organize his material chronologically. . . . Generously quoting from Innocent's pre-papal works, papal sermons, and, above all, papal letters, Moore allows his subject the chance to speak for himself. . . . Moore's prose is eminently readable. . . . Inherently complex matters of papal diplomacy and relations with troublesome Christian kings are lucidly explained. -- Speculum


Author Information

John C. Moore is professor of history, emeritus, at Hofstra University. He is the author and editor of several books, including Love in Twelfth-Century France.

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