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The Proprietary Church in the Medieval West (Paperback)
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The Proprietary Church in the Medieval West (Paperback)
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Although there have been many regional studies of the proprietary
church or particular aspects of it, this is the first extensive
study of it covering most of western Europe, from the end of the
Roman Empire in the West to about 1200. The book aims at a broad
survey in varying degrees of intensity and with a shifting
geographical focus; and it asks questions that are as much social
and religious as legal or administrative.
The book vindicates, for village and estate churches, Ulrich
Stutz's basic concept of a church with its possessions, revenues,
and priestly office as an object of what we can reasonably call
property. But it largely rejects his and his followers' application
of this to great churches, and sees the position of intermediate
churches (such as small or middling monasteries) as various,
changeable, and ambivalent. Above all it turns away from Stutz's
view of the property relationship as a distinct institution or
system of "Germanic church law," presenting it rather as a fluid
set of assumptions and practices taking shape as customary
law.
Susan Wood considers also the changing background of ideas and the
bearing on it of important polemical writings (with some
questioning of their established interpretations). Finally the book
discusses how property in churches was imperfectly superseded by
the new canon-law patronage, in the increasingly bureaucratic
post-Gregorian Church.
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