Royal Books and Holy Bones: Essays in Medieval Christianity

Hardback

Main Details

Title Royal Books and Holy Bones: Essays in Medieval Christianity
Authors and Contributors      By (author) Professor Eamon Duffy
Physical Properties
Format:Hardback
Pages:384
Dimensions(mm): Height 234,Width 153
Category/GenreReligion - general
History of religion
Christianity
ISBN/Barcode 9781472953230
ClassificationsDewey:274.04
Audience
General
Illustrations 1 x 8pp colour plate section

Publishing Details

Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Imprint Bloomsbury Continuum
Publication Date 14 June 2018
Publication Country United Kingdom

Description

In these vivid and approachable essays Eamon Duffy engages with some of the central aspects of Western religion in the thousand years between the decline of pagan Rome and the rise of the Protestant Reformation. In the process he opens windows on the vibrant and multifaceted beliefs and practices by which medieval people made sense of their world: the fear of death and the impact of devastating pandemic, holy war against Islam and the invention of the blood libel against the Jews, provision for the afterlife and the continuing power of the dead over the living, the meaning of pilgrimage and the evolution of Christian music. Duffy unpicks the stories of the Golden Legend and Yale University's mysterious Voynich manuscript, discusses the cult of 'St' Henry VI and explores childhood in the Middle Ages. Accompanying the book are a collection of full colour plates which further demonstrate the richness of late medieval religion. In this highly readable collection Eamon Duffy once more challenges existing scholarly narratives and sheds new light on the religion of Britain and Europe before and during the Reformation.

Author Biography

Professor Eamon Duffy is Emeritus Professor of the History of Christianity at the University of Cambridge, and a fellow and former President of Magdalene College. His previous books include Reformation Divided, Saints, Sacrilege and Sedition and The Stripping of the Altars.

Reviews

It is 26 years since Eamon Duffy changed the way that readers of history looked at England on the eve of the Reformation, through his The Stripping of the Altars. Many of the essays here also challenge easy assumptions. All of them are written with a clarity and fluency, humour and humanity that make reading them a pleasure. * Christopher Howse, Daily Telegraph * Erudite but never unapproachable and laced with a dry wit, [Duffy's] essays are essential reading for those with an interest in how people in the past expressed their faith * Sunday Times * Tremendous ... This is a book for the general reader , spiced throughout with Duffy's profound scholarly understanding of the giant subjects with which each essay grapples * Church Times * [Duffy's] extraordinary depth of knowledge is, throughout these essays, lit for his reader by his sense not of what medieval Christians thought but of what they believed, felt, feared, and, above all, did ... [his] learning and judgement, and the clarity of his prose, have done a great deal to counter the lazy, but alas, still common assumption that "medieval" is a synonym for "barbarous". * TLS *