HISTORY OF MEDIEVAL CHURCH AND RELIGIOUS MOVEMENTS

Academic year
2018/2019 Syllabus of previous years
Official course title
STORIA DELLA CHIESA MEDIEVALE E DEI MOVIMENTI RELIGIOSI
Course code
FT0443 (AF:284919 AR:161874)
Modality
On campus classes
ECTS credits
6
Degree level
Bachelor's Degree Programme
Educational sector code
M-STO/01
Period
2nd Term
Where
VENEZIA
Moodle
Go to Moodle page
The course is part of the interdisciplinary activities of the "History - Ancient and medieval Mediterranean", "History - from European hegemony to globalisation" and "Anthropology" curricula of the Bachelor's degree programmes in History. Students are expected to achieve a good knowledge of the main topics and features of the history of the Latin Church in the Middle Ages by considering its institutions and its social dimension, from the Carolingian Age to the Great Western Schism.
Students are expected:
1. -to acquire a basic knowledge of the history of the medieval Latin Church and to be able to interpret its fundamental events in the wider context of the medieval history (knowledge and understanding);
- to know religious movements and orders, relationships between ecclesiastical and secular power, phases of crisis and reform, papal primacy and conciliarism, schisms, canonical law (knowledge and understanding);
- to know the main types of sources for the history of churches and religious movements from the 8th to the 14th centuries (knowledge and understanding);
2. - will be able to critically analyze the various historiographic themes related to the history of the medieval church and religious movements (knowledge and understanding);
3. to develop a critical approach to a vast array of sources, both primary and secondary sources, analyzed during classes, by placing them into the historiographical debate (jugdment???);
4. - to acquire an appropriate lexicon and to consolidate their skills and ability to communicate what they know in a critical way (Communication skills);
5. - will be able to understand and critically analyse the complexity of historical developments in relation to different historical themes (Learning skills)
None. However, students who has not yet attended a class in Medieval History should read a good handbook.
The Church in the Carolingian Age: the papacy and the Frankish; western monasticism. The papal reform in the eleventh century: reform movement against simony and clerical marriage, the papacy, the empire. The Eastern schism. The investiture controversy. Reformed orders and congregations: eremitic and cenobitic monasticism. Consolidation of the papal monarchy, orthodoxy, heresy and religious dissent. Clergy, lay people, and the cura animarum. The Church and the universities. The end of the papal monarchy, the Great Schism, the conciliarism, the relations between the Latin Church and the medieval states.
Attending students:
1. Teaching materials provided in classroom and available online (ISA);

2. A. Rapetti, Storia del monachesimo medievale, Bologna, Il Mulino, 2013;

3. One of the following texts:
a) C. Azzara, A. Rapetti, Storia della chiesa nel medioevo, Bologna, Il Mulino, 2009;
b.1) G.G. Merlo, Il cristianesimo medievale in Occidente, Roma-Bari, Laterza, 2012 together with
b.2) G. L. Potestà, G. Vian, Storia del cristianesimo, Bologna, Il Mulino, 2010, capp. IX-XII e XV,
c) Storia del cristianesimo, II. L'età medievale (secoli VIII-XV), a cura di M. Benedetti, Roma, Carocci, 2015, capp. 4-9, 12.

Non attending students:

1. A. Rapetti, Storia del monachesimo medievale, Bologna, Il Mulino, 2013;

2. One of the following texts:
a) C. Azzara, A. Rapetti, Storia della chiesa nel medioevo, Bologna, Il Mulino, 2009;
b.1) G.G. Merlo, Il cristianesimo medievale in Occidente, Roma-Bari, Laterza, 2012 insieme a
b.2) G. L. Potestà, G. Vian, Storia del cristianesimo, Bologna, Il Mulino, 2010, capp. IX-XII e XV,
c) Storia del cristianesimo, II. L'età medievale (secoli VIII-XV), a cura di M. Benedetti, Roma, Carocci, 2015, capp. 4-9, 12;

3. One of the following texts:
a) G. Cantarella, V. Poloni, R. Rusconi, Chiesa, chiese, movimenti religiosi, Roma-Bari, Laterza, 2001;
b) P. Golinelli, La pataria. Lotte religiose e sociali nella Milano dell’XI secolo, Novara, Europia, 1984 JOINTLY WITH
Introduzione, in G. Miccoli, Chiesa gregoriana: ricerche sulla riforma dell’XI secolo, nuova edizione a cura di A. Tilatti, Roma, Herder, 1999, pp. 1-59;
c) G. G. Merlo, Eretici ed eresie medievale, Bologna, Il Mulino, 20112 JOINTLY WITH
L. Paolini, Le piccole volpi. Chiesa ed eretici nel medioevo, Bologna, BUP, 2013;
d) G. Miccoli, Francesco d’Assisi: memoria, storia e storiografia, Milano, Biblioteca Francescana, 2010;
e) A. Paravicini Bagliani, Il trono di Pietro. Universalità del papato da Alessandro III a Bonifcio VIII, Roma, Carocci Editore, 2001;
f) A. Vauchez, Esperienze religiose nel medioevo, Roma, Viella, 2003.
Oral exam. Students are expected to acquire a good knowledge of the history of the medieval Latin Church and to connect and compare in an appropriate way the different features (institutions, crisis and reform, relation between ecclesiastical and secular power, religious movements and orders, monasticism, religious dissent). They will acquire independence of judgement by analyzing critically primary and secondary sources and the ability to communicate what they have learnt by using the suitable vocabulary.
The course will be held over 30 hours (6 ECTS) and classes will be focused on archival sources and historical researches in order to learn how to analyse critically history processes and to frame hypotheses and interpretation of facts as proposed by chosen topics.
Italian
Student consultation hours are once a week. Students can also write at arapetti@unive.it.
oral
Definitive programme.
Last update of the programme: 29/06/2018