Augustinian Theology in the Later Middle Ages Volume 1: Concepts, Perspectives, and the Emergence of Augustinian Identity

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The most comprehensive and extensive treatment to date, based on a major reinterpretation, of what has been called late medieval Augustinianism.

Author(s): Eric Leland Saak, Indiana University, Purdue University at Indianapolis (IUPUI)
Series: Studies in the History of Christian Traditions, 196
Publisher: Brill
Year: 2021

Language: English
Pages: 551
City: Leiden

Half Title
Series Information
Title Page
Copyright Page
Contents
Preface
Tables and Figures
Abbreviations
Introduction: Influence and Impact
1 Augustine and Augustinianism
2 Reception, Influence, and Impact
3 Causation and Periodization
4 Definitions
5 Scholasticism, Scholastic Literature, and the Augustinians
5.1 Lectures on the Sentences and the Augustinian Magistri
5.2 The Appropriation of Augustine
6 Scope of Study
Part 1 Augustinian Traditions
Introduction
Chapter 1 The Reception of Augustine
1 In the Wake of Lombard
1.1 Helinand
1.2 Grosseteste
1.3 Considerations
2 Petrarch
2.1 John of Wales, ofm and Jacques Legrand, oesa
2.2 Petrarch’s Fictionalizing
2.3 Petrarch’s Augustine
2.3.1 De Vita Solitaria
2.3.2 De Otio Religioso
2.3.3 Secretum
2.4 The Disappropriation of Augustine
3 Boundaries of the Augustinian
Chapter 2 The Religio Augustini
1 In Search of Origins
1.1 Augustine’s Monasticism
1.2 The oesa as Institution
1.3 The Formation of the oesa
1.4 Origins and Identity
2 The Daily Life of the Augustinians
Part 2 Augustinian Political Theology
Introduction
Chapter 3 Giles of Rome
1 Brother Giles
2 Giles’s Use of Augustine
2.1 De Regimine Principum
2.2 The Turning Point: De Renuntiatione Pape
2.3 De Ecclesiastica Potestate
3 Giles’s Political Theology
3.1 De Renuntiatione Pape
3.1.1 Potestas Ordinis
3.1.2 Potestas Jurisdictionis
3.1.3 Potestas Pape
3.2 De Ecclesiastica Potestate
3.2.1 Power
3.2.2 Status and Order
3.2.3 Jurisdiction
3.2.4 Salvation
4 Towards an Augustinian Ideology
Chapter 4 James of Viterbo
1 Brother James
2 James’ Use of Augustine
3 De Regimine Christiano
4 Dating and Context
5 James in Paris
6 James and Giles
7 James’ Political Augustinianism
Chapter 5 Augustinus of Ancona
1 Brother Augustinus
2 Augustinus’ Use of Augustine
3 Unam Sanctam and the Emergence of Ecclesiology
4 Summa de Potestate Ecclesiastica
4.1 The Power of Jurisdiction
4.2 Christian Perfection
4.2.1 The Perfection of the Pope
4.2.2 The Religio Augustini
5 Ideology, Identity, and Impact
Part 3 Augustinian Theology in the Studia
Introduction
Chapter 6 Henry of Friemar
1 Brother Henry
2 Theological Production
2.1 Questio de Quolibet
2.2 De Decem Preceptis
2.3 De Quattuor Instinctibus
Chapter 7 Hermann of Schildesche
1 Brother Hermann
2 Theological Production
2.1 Tractatus Contra Haereticos Negantes Immunitatem et Iurisdictionem Sanctae Ecclesiae
2.1.1 The Ecclesiology of Marsilius of Padua
2.1.2 Hermann’s Response
2.1.2.1 Causation
2.1.2.2 Authority
2.1.2.3 The Relationship between the Temporal and the Eternal
2.1.2.4 The Structures of Society
2.2 Tractatus de Conceptione Gloriosae Virginis Mariae
2.3 Speculum Manuale Sacerdotum
Chapter 8 Jordan of Quedlinburg
1 Brother Jordan
2 Theological Production
2.1 Jordan’s Expositio Orationis Dominice
2.2 Jordan’s Opus Postillarum
2.3 Jordan’s Opus Dan
Intermission
Bibliography
Primary Sources
Manuscripts
Early Printed Works
Modern Editions
Secondary Literature
Index of Modern Authors
Index of Names, Places and Subjects