Giles of Rome was the archbishop of Bourges and a loyal champion
of Pope Boniface VIII during the Franco-papal crisis of 1296--1303.
"On Ecclesiastical Power" was written at the height of the conflict
between Pope Boniface VIII and King Philip IV of France and
represents the earliest fully articulated and philosophically
developed defense of the "hierocratic" ideology of the medieval
papacy. Giles's theory that all government must be legitimized by
the pope was based on scriptural, philosophical, patristic, and
canonical sources, and his conclusion that the pope is the rightful
ruler and final judge of the world -- even in secular matters -- is
the definitive statement on papal power in the Middle Ages.
This book offers a new and complete critical edition of the
Latin text, based on a collation of five fourteenth-century
manuscripts. It is accompanied by a literal English translation and
a detailed introduction analyzing the context and content of the
treatise. The book takes into account the hitherto unconsidered
Cremona manuscript of "On Ecclesiastical Power" and will be
indispensable to scholars and students of the history of political
thought and international relations.
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