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(Ebook) Inspiration and Authority in the Middle Ages: Prophets and Their Critics from Scholasticism to Humanism by Brian Fitzgerald ISBN 9780198808244, 0198808240

  • SKU: EBN-10128902
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Authors:Brian Fitzgerald
Pages:304 pages.
Year:2017
Editon:1st
Publisher:Oxford University Press, USA
Language:english
File Size:1.6 MB
Format:pdf
ISBNS:9780198808244, 0198808240
Categories: Ebooks

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(Ebook) Inspiration and Authority in the Middle Ages: Prophets and Their Critics from Scholasticism to Humanism by Brian Fitzgerald ISBN 9780198808244, 0198808240

Inspiration and Authority in the Middle Agesrethinks the role of prophecy in the Middle Ages by examining how professional theologians responded to new assertions of divine inspiration. Drawing on fresh archival research and detailed study of unpublished manuscript sources from the twelfth to fourteenth centuries, this volume argues that the task of defining prophetic authority became a crucial intellectual and cultural enterprise as university-trained theologians confronted prophetic claims from lay mystics, radical Franciscans, and other unprecedented visionaries. In the process, these theologians redescribed their own activities as prophetic by locating inspiration not in special predictions or ecstatic visions but in natural forms of understanding and in the daily work of ecclesiastical teaching and ministry. Instead of containing the spread of prophetic privilege, however, scholastic assessments of prophecy from Peter Lombard and Thomas Aquinas to Peter John Olivi and Nicholas Trevet opened space for claims of divine insight to proliferate beyond the control of theologians. By the turn of the fourteenth century, secular Italian humanists could lay claim to prophetic authority on the basis of their intellectual powers and literary practices. From Hugh of St Victor to Albertino Mussato, reflections on and debates over prophecy reveal medieval clerics, scholars, and reformers reshaping the contours of religious authority, the boundaries of sanctity and sacred texts, and the relationship of tradition to the new voices of the Late Middle Ages.
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