The formation of Christian Europe: the Carolingians, baptism, and the Imperium christianum

Analyses the Carolingians' efforts to form a Christian Empire with the organizing principle of the sacrament of baptism. Owen M. Phelan argues that baptism provided the foundation for this society, and offered a medium for the communication and the popularization of beliefs and ideas, through w...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Phelan, Owen M. (Author)
Corporate Author: University of Notre Dame (Degree granting institution)
Format: Print Book
Language:English
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Published: Oxford Oxford University Press 2014
In:Year: 2014
Edition:1. ed., impr. 2
Standardized Subjects / Keyword chains:B Carolingian renaissance / Alcuin 735-804 / Baptism / Rule / Political reform
B Alcuin 735-804 / Rule / Carolingian renaissance / Political reform / Baptism
Further subjects:B Europe Church history 600-1500
B Church History Middle Ages, 600-1500
B Carolingians
B Thesis
B Baptism History Middle Ages, 600-1500
B France History To 987
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Summary:Analyses the Carolingians' efforts to form a Christian Empire with the organizing principle of the sacrament of baptism. Owen M. Phelan argues that baptism provided the foundation for this society, and offered a medium for the communication and the popularization of beliefs and ideas, through which the Carolingian Renewal established the vision of an imperium christianum in Europe. He analyses how baptism unified people theologically, socially, and politically and helped Carolingian leaders order their approaches to public life. It enabled reformers to think in ways which were ideologically consistent, publically available, and socially useful.0Phelan also examines the influential court intellectual, Alcuin of York, who worked to implement a sacramental society through baptism. The book finally looks at the dissolution of Carolingian political aspirations for an imperium christianum and how, by the end of the ninth century, political frustrations concealed the deeper achievement of the Carolingian Renewal
Sacramentum : an ordering concept from antiquity to the early Middle Ages -- The articulation of polity : baptism as the foundation of an Imperium Christianum --The Carolingian subject : the Sacramentum of baptism and the formation of identity in Alcuin of York -- The Carolingian machinery of Christian formation : Charlemagne's encyclical letter on baptism from 811/812 and its implications -- The sacramental assumption : baptism and Carolingian society in the ninth century -- Conclusion: Loss and legacy
Item Description:Literaturverz. S. [279] - 307
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ISBN:0198718039