- Title Pages
- Dedication
- Epigraph
- Foreword
- Abbreviations
- References to Canon Law
- Introduction
- Part 1 The Papal Reform Movement and the Conflict With the Empire (c. 1046–1122)
- 1 Christian Society in the Middle of the Eleventh Century
- 2 The Pattern of Social Change
- 3 Monastic Growth and Change
- 4 The Papal Reform 1046–1073
- 5 The Discord of Empire and Papacy 1073–1099
- 6 Greeks and Saracens
- 7 The Conflict Renewed: The Question of Investiture (1099–1122)
- Part II The Growth of Christendom (1122–98)
- 8 The Roman Church and the Empire in the Twelfth Century
- 9 The Government of the Church in the Twelfth Century
- 10 The New Monastic Orders
- 11 The Christian Frontier
- 12 The Message of the Churches
- 13 Christianity and Social Ideas
- 14 Dissent
- 15 The Formulation of the Faith
- 16 Property, Privilege, and Law
- Part III The Thirteenth Century
- 17 The Pontificate of Innocent III (1198–1216)
- 18 Friars, Beguines, and the Action Against Heresy
- 19 Proclaiming the Faith
- 20 Reason and Hope in a Changing World.
- 21 The Structure of Government
- 22 The Roman Church and the Lay Power in the Thirteenth Century
- Conclusions
- General
- Part I: The Papal Reform Movement and the Conflict With the Empire
- Part II: The Growth of Christendom (1122–98)
- Part III. The Thirteenth Century
- Index
The Roman Church and the Lay Power in the Thirteenth Century
The Roman Church and the Lay Power in the Thirteenth Century
- Chapter:
- (p.550) 22 The Roman Church and the Lay Power in the Thirteenth Century
- Source:
- The Papal Monarchy
- Author(s):
Colin Morris
- Publisher:
- Oxford University Press
Governments became more active, and there was more awareness of rights as vested in one single authority. They were formalized in established institutions, and two coherent jurisdictions, of church and state, were in confrontation especially over the development of the new phenomenon of papal taxation,. Frederick II renewed the intense hostility between papacy and Hohenstaufen over the control of Italy. Vigorous discussions continued over the nature of papal authority and the rights of the cardinals. The papacy became the victim of its own success: the exploitation of the church as a whole for revenue alienated sympathy and stifled its initiative for reform.
Keywords: Council of Lyon, criticism, emperor, Frederick II, Henry III, Innocent IV, Louis IX, papal taxation
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- Title Pages
- Dedication
- Epigraph
- Foreword
- Abbreviations
- References to Canon Law
- Introduction
- Part 1 The Papal Reform Movement and the Conflict With the Empire (c. 1046–1122)
- 1 Christian Society in the Middle of the Eleventh Century
- 2 The Pattern of Social Change
- 3 Monastic Growth and Change
- 4 The Papal Reform 1046–1073
- 5 The Discord of Empire and Papacy 1073–1099
- 6 Greeks and Saracens
- 7 The Conflict Renewed: The Question of Investiture (1099–1122)
- Part II The Growth of Christendom (1122–98)
- 8 The Roman Church and the Empire in the Twelfth Century
- 9 The Government of the Church in the Twelfth Century
- 10 The New Monastic Orders
- 11 The Christian Frontier
- 12 The Message of the Churches
- 13 Christianity and Social Ideas
- 14 Dissent
- 15 The Formulation of the Faith
- 16 Property, Privilege, and Law
- Part III The Thirteenth Century
- 17 The Pontificate of Innocent III (1198–1216)
- 18 Friars, Beguines, and the Action Against Heresy
- 19 Proclaiming the Faith
- 20 Reason and Hope in a Changing World.
- 21 The Structure of Government
- 22 The Roman Church and the Lay Power in the Thirteenth Century
- Conclusions
- General
- Part I: The Papal Reform Movement and the Conflict With the Empire
- Part II: The Growth of Christendom (1122–98)
- Part III. The Thirteenth Century
- Index