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Neuerscheinung: Priests, Books, and Compilatory Practices in the Carolingian Period

Coverbild

Coverbild

Die Monografie „Priests, Books, and Compilatory Practices in the Carolingian Period” von Bastiaan Waagmeester ist kürzlich erschienen. In diesem Buch beschreibt er, wie Handbücher von Priestern für die Erforschung der frühmittelalterlichen Kirche dienen, was er anhand der Analyse von Liturgie, Kirchenrecht und Religionsunterricht vorführt. Das Buch ist bei Brepols erschienen. Die Einleitung ist hier bereits verfügbar.

 
Abstrakt:

Much of the Christian empire established by the Carolingians in the eighth century was not only built through royal initiative, but also through the work of local priests. Living among the laity, these clerics provided pastoral care and religious instruction. Yet despite their vital contribution to the development of Christianity in Western Europe, these clergymen and the communities they served remain understudied.

This book investigates the manuscripts they used, offering a glimpse into everyday life around the local church. Far from being poor and illiterate, priests had access to texts specifically adapted to their needs. By examining how these materials were compiled, this study reveals what mattered most in the early medieval countryside. Drawing on excerpts from collections of liturgy, canon law, and patristic expositions — often preserved in the great monastic and court libraries — it uncovers the diversity of local religious practice. These texts reflect how the efforts instigated by Carolingians to foster ‘good Christianity’ were interpreted and implemented outside the centres of power. In exploring these seemingly modest manuscripts, this study opens new pathways into the world of the Carolingian local church and the people who inhabited it.

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OSA Geschichte