This absorbing book explores the tensions within the Roman
Catholic church and between the church and royal authority in
France in the crucial period 1290-1321. During this time the crown
tried to force churchmen to accept policies many considered
inconsistent with ecclesiastical freedom and traditions--such as
paying war taxes and expelling the Jews from the kingdom. William
Jordan considers these issues through the eyes of one of the most
important and courageous actors, the Cistercian monk, professor,
abbot, and polemical writer Jacques de Therines. The result is a
fresh perspective on what Jordan terms "the story of France in a
politically terrifying period of its existence, one of unceasing
strife and unending fear."
Jacques de Therines was involved in nearly every controversy of
the period: the expulsion of the Jews from France, the relocation
of the papacy to Avignon, the affair of the Templars, the
suppression of the "heresies" of Marguerite Porete and of the
Spiritual Franciscans, and the defense of the "exempt" monastic
orders' freedom from all but papal control. The stands he took were
often remarkable in themselves: hostility to the expulsion of Jews
and spirited defense of the Templars, for example. The book also
traces the emergence of King Philip the Fair's (1285-1314) almost
paranoid style of rule and its impact on church-state relations,
which makes the expression of Jacques de Therines's views all the
more courageous."
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