The Formation of Papal Authority in Late Antique Italy :Roman Bishops and the Domestic Sphere

Publication subTitle :Roman Bishops and the Domestic Sphere

Author: Kristina Sessa;  

Publisher: Cambridge University Press‎

Publication year: 2011

E-ISBN: 9781316962183

P-ISBN(Paperback): 9781107001060

P-ISBN(Hardback):  9781107001060

Subject: K1 World History

Keyword: 世界史

Language: ENG

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Description

The first cultural history of papal authority in late antiquity, providing a new interpretation of the Roman church and its bishops. This cultural history of papal authority in late antiquity focuses on the late Roman household, providing a new interpretation of the Roman church and its bishops during a critical period of development. Moving beyond traditional histories of the 'rise of the papacy', this study argues that Rome's bishops adopted the ancient elite household as a model of good government for leading the church. This cultural history of papal authority in late antiquity focuses on the late Roman household, providing a new interpretation of the Roman church and its bishops during a critical period of development. Moving beyond traditional histories of the 'rise of the papacy', this study argues that Rome's bishops adopted the ancient elite household as a model of good government for leading the church. This book is the first cultural history of papal authority in late antiquity. While most traditional histories posit a 'rise of the papacy' and examine popes as politicians, theologians and civic leaders, Kristina Sessa focuses on the late Roman household and its critical role in the development of the Roman church from c.350–600. She argues that Rome's bishops adopted the ancient elite household as a model of good government for leading the church. Central to this phenomenon was the classical and biblical figure of the steward, the householder's appointed agent who oversaw his property and people. As stewards of God, Roman bishops endeavored to exercise moral and material influence within both the pope's own administration and the households of Italy's clergy and lay elites. This original and nuanced study charts their manifold interactions with late Roman households and shows how bishops used domestic knowledge as the basis for establishing their authority as Italy's singular religious leaders. Introduction: household management and the Bishop of Rome; 1. The late Roman household in Italy; 2. From dominion to dispensatio: stewardship as an elite ideal; 3. Primus cultor: episcopal householding in theory and practice; 4. Overseeing the overseer: bishops and the lay household; 5. Cultivating the clerical household: marriage, property and inheritance; 6. Mistrusting the bishop: succession, stewardship and sex in the Laurentian schism; 7. The household and the bishop: authority, competition and cooperation in the gesta martyrum; Conclusions. "The book is a significant contribution, and its invigorating thesis will help shape future discussion of a topic of central importance. --BMCR

Chapter

WHY THE HOUSEHOLD? TOWARD A DOMESTIC MODEL OF EPISCOPAL AUTHORITY

THE ROMAN CHURCH AND ITALY IN LATE ANTIQUITY

SOURCES AND STRUCTURE OF THE BOOK

CHAPTER 1 THE LATE ROMAN HOUSEHOLD IN ITALY

PRIVATE WEALTH AND LAND MANAGEMENT

THE HOUSEHOLD COMMUNITY: THE PATERFAMILIAS AND HIS DEPENDENTS

The Wider Domestic Community: High-Status Tenants, coloni, and Slaves

The Householders Intermediaries: Stewards and Domestic Agents

Late Roman Domestic Authority: More Coercive or Progressively Limited?

RELIGION IN THE ELITE LATE ROMAN HOUSEHOLD

CONCLUSION

CHAPTER 2 FROM DOMINION TO DISPENSATIO: STEWARDSHIP AS AN ELITE IDEAL

STEWARDSHIP IN ANCIENT HOUSEHOLDS AND THE BIBLE

THE RECEPTION AND REMAKING OF STEWARDSHIP IN LATE ROMAN CHRISTIAN THOUGHT

DELIMITING THE HOUSEHOLDER'S AUTHORITY: STEWARDSHIP AS SUBORDINATION

ACCENTUATING OIKONOMIA: STEWARDSHIP AS RESPONSIBILITY AND SALVATION

Traditional Expectations of the Householder's Ethical and Religious Oversight

Stewardship as Intensive Religious and Ethical Oversight

THE CHALLENGES OF STEWARDSHIP IN AN OWNERSHIP SOCIETY

CONCLUSION

CHAPTER 3 PRIMUS CULTOR: EPISCOPAL HOUSEHOLDING IN THEORY AND PRACTICE

THE ROMAN BISHOP AS GOD’S CHIEF HOUSEHOLDER-STEWARD

Hippolytus on Callistus as the Inept Steward of the Church

Post-Constantinian Developments: The Bishop of Rome as God's Chief Householder-Steward

Bishops as “Ascetic Householders”

“Rendering Accounts” for Earthly Members of the Domus Dei

Primus Cultor: The Paradoxical Authority of the Episcopal Householder-Steward

The Bishop as Trustful Steward of Material Possessions

THE EPISCOPAL HOUSEHOLD AT ROME: RESIDENCES, MEMBERS, AND PRACTICES

The Bishop's Residences and Administrative Headquarters

Membership: Who Composed the Bishop's Household?

THE EPISCOPAL HOUSEHOLD IN ACTION: THE CONVENTUS AND THE PATRIMONIA

The Bishop's conventus: A Quasi-Domestic Domain of Church Administration

Administering the Patrimonia

The Church as a Property Owner and the Bishop as Administrator: Legal Developments

Rome's Patrimonies: Domestic Administration in Action

CONCLUSION

CHAPTER 4 OVERSEEING THE OVERSEER: BISHOPS AND LAY HOUSEHOLDS

THE PROBLEMS AND PERILS OF MARRIAGE

Nuptial Blessings and the Veiling of Brides11

Ursa's Return: Captivity and Remarriage56

Captivity, Return, and (Re)Marriage in Roman Law: The Ius Postliminii

Correlating Roman Law and Christian Ideal in a Time of War

Innocent to Probus on the Overlapping Domains of Christian Ethics and Roman Law

Toward an Episcopal Oikonomia: Leo on Captivity and the “Recovery” of Marriage

THE TREATMENT OF SLAVES WITHIN THE CHRISTIAN HOME

Areas of Confusion and Contestation: Slavery as Metaphor, and the Christian Slave

Giving up Brutality for Lent: Bishops and the Master–Slave Relationship

Sex, Slaves, and Marriage

Fleeing to the House of God: A New Problem for Christian Slave Owners

A PROBLEM OF PROPERTY: ESTATE CHURCHES AND THEIR OVERSIGHT

A New Regulatory Culture for Domestic Piety

Defining the Villa Church: Roman Bishops and Their Responses to Householders

CONCLUSION

CHAPTER 5 CULTIVATING THE CLERICAL HOUSEHOLD: MARRIAGE, PROPERTY, AND INHERITANCE

MARRIAGE AND THE CLERICAL HOUSEHOLD

Embedding the Clerical Household within the Bishop's Church: Marriage and the cursus

Living the Laws of Restricted Marriage: Bishops and Clerical Households in Practice

THE PROBLEM OF PROPERTY: SEPARATING THE EARTHLY HOUSEHOLD FROM THE DOMUS DEI

The Separation of Property in Civil and Ecclesiastical Law

Roman Episcopal Responses: Ad-hoc Solutions and Claims to Expertise

INHERITING THE DOMUS DEI: DYNASTIC PRINCIPLES AND EPISCOPAL SUCCESSION

CONCLUSION

CHAPTER 6 MISTRUSTING THE BISHOP: SUCCESSION, STEWARDSHIP, AND SEX IN THE LAURENTIAN SCHISM

MISTRUSTING THE BISHOP: A LATE ANTIQUE TRADITION AT ROME

THE LAURENTIAN SCHISM (498–506/7): CHARGES, COUNCILS, AND COMMUNITIES

The Events of the Laurentian Schism: A Brief Synopsis27

Social Alliances and the Public Relations Battle

EPISCOPAL SUCCESSION: A DYNASTIC MODEL FOR SIXTH-CENTURY ROME?

The Scriptura of 483 and the Council of November 6, 501

STEWARDSHIP IN CRISIS: SYMMACHUS, ALIENATION, AND THE TITULI

The Ethics of Alienation: When Can You Trust the Bishop?

Competing for Trust: Symmachus, the Priests, and the Administration of the Tituli

Changing Hearts and Minds: Bishops as Good Stewards in the Symmachan Forgeries

DISCIPLINARY FAILURES: SEXUAL MISCONDUCT IN THE LAURENTIAN SCHISM

Controlling the Body, Managing the Household, and Administering the Church

CONCLUSION

CHAPTER 7 THE HOUSEHOLD AND THE BISHOP: AUTHORITY, COOPERATION, AND COMPETITION IN THE GESTA MARTYRUM

LOCATING THE GESTA MARTYRUM: DATING, AUTHORSHIP, AND AUDIENCE

THE DYNAMICS OF DOMESTIC CONVERSION: BISHOPS, TRANSFORMATION, AND AUTHORITY

Negotiating Conversion: Exchange and Reciprocity Between Householders and Bishops

Transforming the Householder and Preserving the domus

Asymmetries of Authority in the Household: Baptism and the Bishop as Ritual Expert

THE LIMITS OF EPISCOPAL AUTHORITY IN THE DOMESTIC SPHERE

No Bishops in the Bedroom!

The Bishop's Domestic Competitors: Priests, Deacons, and Holy Men

CONCLUSION

CONCLUSION

STEWARDSHIP: A MODEL OF PASTORAL LEADERSHIP IN A WORLD OF TENSION

BIBLIOGRAPHY

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INDEX

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