The Bishop's Palace: Architecture and Authority in Medieval Italy

Awards:   Winner of Winner of the 2001 Helen and Howard R. Marraro Pri.
Author:   Maureen C. Miller
Publisher:   Cornell University Press
ISBN:  

9780801435355


Pages:   328
Publication Date:   21 June 2000
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Awaiting stock   Availability explained
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The Bishop's Palace: Architecture and Authority in Medieval Italy


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Awards

  • Winner of Winner of the 2001 Helen and Howard R. Marraro Pri.

Overview

Full Product Details

Author:   Maureen C. Miller
Publisher:   Cornell University Press
Imprint:   Cornell University Press
Dimensions:   Width: 17.80cm , Height: 2.50cm , Length: 25.40cm
Weight:   1.361kg
ISBN:  

9780801435355


ISBN 10:   0801435358
Pages:   328
Publication Date:   21 June 2000
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Professional and scholarly ,  Undergraduate ,  Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Awaiting stock   Availability explained
The supplier is currently out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you and placed on backorder. Once it does come back in stock, we will ship it out for you.

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Reviews

Maureen Miller has walked innumerable cities and mastered some exceedingly difficult historiographical issues. Her explorations of the medieval urban texture is a revelation-the Episcopal palace was not simply the seat of religious administration, it was the locus in which spiritual, social, and political life in the early Italian communes was worked out. This is an exciting and original book. -Duane J. Osheim, University of Virginia


"""This significant book is the first history of the medieval episcopal residence in central and northern Italy... It is an impressive work of comparative and interdisciplinary scholarship, and it places the episcopal residence at the center of political and cultural changes within the city before 1300... This book is a major contribution to the literature about medieval urban architecture and the definitive study of the episcopal palace.""-George Dameron, Catholic Historical Review, July 2001 ""This handsomely designed book... is the first volume in what promises to be an exciting interdisciplinary series from Cornell... A welcome contribution to many areas of medieval culture that were previously little understood. As a pivotal work that outlines the parameters of a rarely studied building type and its cultural practices, Miller's book offers a step forward and throws the door open on a new range of issues that could be pursued by specialists of various disciplines and methodological stripes.""-Jill Caskey, Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians, June 2001 ""A handsome, generously illustrated volume... All levels.""-Choice, January 2001 ""I was profoundly impressed by this book. Miller handles and synthesizes historical and archaeological evidence... with equal precision, and offers insights that will be valuable to the archaeologist and to the the cultural historian.""-Matthew M. Reeve, Religion and the Arts ""Maureen C. Miller has positioned herself in the midst of two current interests in medieval history: power, and architecture and language. Skillful in both fields, and possessing a magisterial knowledge of archival and printed sources as well as current literature, she has written a book that is required reading for anyone working on central and northern Italy. This study is both analytical and deeply probing and does not hesitate to contest the accepted canon, impelling historians to reconsider positions previously not though to be open to dispute... The power of her arguments, and the elegance of her scholarship command great respect.""-Mary Stroll, American Historical Review, April 2002 ""All over Western Europe bishops were once very much more powerful politically than they are now... The choice of the episcopal residence as a subject is undoubtedly a novel way to explore the link between town and biship and this alone lends Maureen Miller's thoroughly researched book true originality.""-Ross Balzaretti, Urban History, Vol. 28, No. 3, 2001 ""Lavishly illustrated with photographs and diagrams, Miller's narrative is vigorous and convincing... Miller presents us with a striking, perhaps tidy, parallelism between architecture and episcopal power. One might wonder whether, besides imaging power, religious sensibilities, budgetary considerations, and even accident, might also have guided architectural projects, but to this reader Miller's parallels are generally convincing.""-Augustine Thompson, Ecclesiastical History, January 2002 ""An exhilarating and serious book... Miller has done splendid service in locating the bishops firmly in their palaces... Miller's discussion of the painted decoration of bishops' palaces is exemplary and will become required reading... There is much to ponder on in this courageous and innovative book. It marks a new stage in reading the episcopal slant on the topography of power in the medieval Italian city, and its lessons will surely be broadly applied.""-Julian Gardner, Speculum, October 2002 ""Maureen Miller is a splendid scholar/teacher and a great storyteller. Skillfully blending a close reading of legal and institutional documents with a keen curiosity about the actual buildings with which they are associated, she brings a thousand years of key buildings and ideas to life.""-Gary M. Radke, Syracuse University, author of Viterbo: Profile of a Thirteenth-Century Papal Palace ""I am extremely impressed with this very well-written and engaging book. The subject-the bishop's palace-is a novel one and has proven to be a creative way of looking at some of the main debates in medieval Italian history. Maureen Miller has done impressive research in a number of archives, finding in the process many fresh sources on her subject; the notes and bibliography reveal the work of a meticulous historian who has clearly mastered the subject.""-Steven Epstein, University of Colorado at Boulder ""Maureen Miller has walked innumerable cities and mastered some exceedingly difficult historiographical issues. Her explorations of the medieval urban texture is a revelation-the Episcopal palace was not simply the seat of religious administration, it was the locus in which spiritual, social, and political life in the early Italian communes was worked out. This is an exciting and original book.""-Duane J. Osheim, University of Virginia"


Maureen Miller has walked innumerable cities and mastered some exceedingly difficult historiographical issues. Her explorations of the medieval urban texture is a revelation the Episcopal palace was not simply the seat of religious administration, it was the locus in which spiritual, social, and political life in the early Italian communes was worked out. This is an exciting and original book. Duane J. Osheim, University of Virginia


This significant book is the first history of the medieval episcopal residence in central and northern Italy... It is an impressive work of comparative and interdisciplinary scholarship, and it places the episcopal residence at the center of political and cultural changes within the city before 1300... This book is a major contribution to the literature about medieval urban architecture and the definitive study of the episcopal palace. -George Dameron, Catholic Historical Review, July 2001 This handsomely designed book... is the first volume in what promises to be an exciting interdisciplinary series from Cornell... A welcome contribution to many areas of medieval culture that were previously little understood. As a pivotal work that outlines the parameters of a rarely studied building type and its cultural practices, Miller's book offers a step forward and throws the door open on a new range of issues that could be pursued by specialists of various disciplines and methodological stripes. -Jill Caskey, Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians, June 2001 A handsome, generously illustrated volume... All levels. -Choice, January 2001 I was profoundly impressed by this book. Miller handles and synthesizes historical and archaeological evidence... with equal precision, and offers insights that will be valuable to the archaeologist and to the the cultural historian. -Matthew M. Reeve, Religion and the Arts Maureen C. Miller has positioned herself in the midst of two current interests in medieval history: power, and architecture and language. Skillful in both fields, and possessing a magisterial knowledge of archival and printed sources as well as current literature, she has written a book that is required reading for anyone working on central and northern Italy. This study is both analytical and deeply probing and does not hesitate to contest the accepted canon, impelling historians to reconsider positions previously not though to be open to dispute... The power of her arguments, and the elegance of her scholarship command great respect. -Mary Stroll, American Historical Review, April 2002 All over Western Europe bishops were once very much more powerful politically than they are now... The choice of the episcopal residence as a subject is undoubtedly a novel way to explore the link between town and biship and this alone lends Maureen Miller's thoroughly researched book true originality. -Ross Balzaretti, Urban History, Vol. 28, No. 3, 2001 Lavishly illustrated with photographs and diagrams, Miller's narrative is vigorous and convincing... Miller presents us with a striking, perhaps tidy, parallelism between architecture and episcopal power. One might wonder whether, besides imaging power, religious sensibilities, budgetary considerations, and even accident, might also have guided architectural projects, but to this reader Miller's parallels are generally convincing. -Augustine Thompson, Ecclesiastical History, January 2002 An exhilarating and serious book... Miller has done splendid service in locating the bishops firmly in their palaces... Miller's discussion of the painted decoration of bishops' palaces is exemplary and will become required reading... There is much to ponder on in this courageous and innovative book. It marks a new stage in reading the episcopal slant on the topography of power in the medieval Italian city, and its lessons will surely be broadly applied. -Julian Gardner, Speculum, October 2002 Maureen Miller is a splendid scholar/teacher and a great storyteller. Skillfully blending a close reading of legal and institutional documents with a keen curiosity about the actual buildings with which they are associated, she brings a thousand years of key buildings and ideas to life. -Gary M. Radke, Syracuse University, author of Viterbo: Profile of a Thirteenth-Century Papal Palace I am extremely impressed with this very well-written and engaging book. The subject-the bishop's palace-is a novel one and has proven to be a creative way of looking at some of the main debates in medieval Italian history. Maureen Miller has done impressive research in a number of archives, finding in the process many fresh sources on her subject; the notes and bibliography reveal the work of a meticulous historian who has clearly mastered the subject. -Steven Epstein, University of Colorado at Boulder Maureen Miller has walked innumerable cities and mastered some exceedingly difficult historiographical issues. Her explorations of the medieval urban texture is a revelation-the Episcopal palace was not simply the seat of religious administration, it was the locus in which spiritual, social, and political life in the early Italian communes was worked out. This is an exciting and original book. -Duane J. Osheim, University of Virginia


Author Information

Maureen C. Miller is Professor of History at the University of California, Berkeley. She is the author of Clothing the Clergy: Virtue and Power in Medieval Europe, c. 800-1200, The Bishop's Palace: Architecture and Authority in Medieval Italy, and The Formation of a Medieval Church: Ecclesiastical Change in Verona, 950-1150, all from Cornell, and Power and the Holy in the Age of the Investiture Conflict: A Brief Documentary History.

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