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Medieval Sovereignty
Paperback

Medieval Sovereignty

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Through a focused and systematic examination of medieval theologians, philosophers, and jurists, Andrew Latham explores how ideas about supreme political authority-sovereignty-first emerged during the high medieval period. The author provides a new model for understanding the concept of sovereignty, and traces its roots, not to the early modern or late medieval eras as do all other accounts, but to the High Middle Ages.

This book aims first to provide an account of a pivotal episode in the historical evolution of the idea of sovereignty-the supreme authority to command, legislate, and judge-in the thirteenth century. It also aims to reconnect early modern theorists of sovereignty to the medieval intellectual tradition out of which they emerged.

Latham traces the rise of a dualist-regnalist model whereby supreme authority was vested neither in the pope nor the emperor; nor was it divided between coordinate temporal and spiritual powers (kings and popes). Instead, it was vested exclusively in the king, who held it directly from God or (in the case of John of Paris, for example) the people, without any papal or imperial mediation.

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MORE INFO
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Arc Humanities Press
Country
United States
Date
28 February 2022
Pages
123
ISBN
9781641892940

Through a focused and systematic examination of medieval theologians, philosophers, and jurists, Andrew Latham explores how ideas about supreme political authority-sovereignty-first emerged during the high medieval period. The author provides a new model for understanding the concept of sovereignty, and traces its roots, not to the early modern or late medieval eras as do all other accounts, but to the High Middle Ages.

This book aims first to provide an account of a pivotal episode in the historical evolution of the idea of sovereignty-the supreme authority to command, legislate, and judge-in the thirteenth century. It also aims to reconnect early modern theorists of sovereignty to the medieval intellectual tradition out of which they emerged.

Latham traces the rise of a dualist-regnalist model whereby supreme authority was vested neither in the pope nor the emperor; nor was it divided between coordinate temporal and spiritual powers (kings and popes). Instead, it was vested exclusively in the king, who held it directly from God or (in the case of John of Paris, for example) the people, without any papal or imperial mediation.

Read More
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Arc Humanities Press
Country
United States
Date
28 February 2022
Pages
123
ISBN
9781641892940