Description

Book Synopsis
This is the first comprehensive study in English about the medieval imperial abbey of Farfa, which played a key role in the period of ecclesiastical reform, beginning in the mid-eleventh century. Its main sources are the Register and Chronicle, compiled by Gregory of Catino, a partisan monk. Controlling strategic property in central Rome and along the coast of Latium, Farfa functioned as a quasi-imperial embassy, supporting the empire in its struggle with the papacy for hegemony. Imperial ties and internal conflicts led to Farfa's loss of liberties and dependency upon the papacy. The book both depicts the competition between the empire and the papacy, and charts Farfa's losing struggle to maintain Benedictine standards and its independence from an expansive papacy.

Trade Review
"...Stroll's work is worth the attention of scholars interested in the struggle between the papacy and empire in the 11th and 12th centuries and in the history of central Italian and Roman politics." Rich Ring, The Medieval Review, 1999. "...a serious scholarly study about Farfa's history...a thought-provoking addition to the literature." John W. Bernhardt, Speculum, 2001.

The Medieval Abbey of Farfa: Target of Papal and Imperial Ambitions

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    A Hardback by Mary Stroll

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      View other formats and editions of The Medieval Abbey of Farfa: Target of Papal and Imperial Ambitions by Mary Stroll

      Publisher: Brill
      Publication Date: 01/03/1997
      ISBN13: 9789004107045, 978-9004107045
      ISBN10:

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      This is the first comprehensive study in English about the medieval imperial abbey of Farfa, which played a key role in the period of ecclesiastical reform, beginning in the mid-eleventh century. Its main sources are the Register and Chronicle, compiled by Gregory of Catino, a partisan monk. Controlling strategic property in central Rome and along the coast of Latium, Farfa functioned as a quasi-imperial embassy, supporting the empire in its struggle with the papacy for hegemony. Imperial ties and internal conflicts led to Farfa's loss of liberties and dependency upon the papacy. The book both depicts the competition between the empire and the papacy, and charts Farfa's losing struggle to maintain Benedictine standards and its independence from an expansive papacy.

      Trade Review
      "...Stroll's work is worth the attention of scholars interested in the struggle between the papacy and empire in the 11th and 12th centuries and in the history of central Italian and Roman politics." Rich Ring, The Medieval Review, 1999. "...a serious scholarly study about Farfa's history...a thought-provoking addition to the literature." John W. Bernhardt, Speculum, 2001.

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