I second that emotion: modelling the anxious experiences of thirteenth-century Episcopal office

The episcopacy in the High Middle Ages (c.1100–1300) can be understood through the idea of a shared emotional language, as seen in two treatises written to advise new bishops. In them, episcopal office was largely defined by the emotions it provoked: it was a cause for sorrow, a burden akin to back-...

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Main Author: Byrne, P
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Brill 2019
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author Byrne, P
author_facet Byrne, P
author_sort Byrne, P
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description The episcopacy in the High Middle Ages (c.1100–1300) can be understood through the idea of a shared emotional language, as seen in two treatises written to advise new bishops. In them, episcopal office was largely defined by the emotions it provoked: it was a cause for sorrow, a burden akin to back-breaking agricultural service. The ideas most associated with episcopal office were anxiety, labour and endurance. Ideas about Christian service as painful labour became particularly important in the twelfth century, alongside the development of the institutional authority of the Church. As episcopal power began to look more threatening and less humble, this emotional register provided one means of distinguishing episcopal power from secular lordly power: both were authorities, but bishops were distinguished by sorrowing over office and ‘enduring’, not enjoying it.
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spelling oxford-uuid:0ca51802-9fd7-4da2-b4af-7a1c2cdbad0f2022-03-26T09:36:08ZI second that emotion: modelling the anxious experiences of thirteenth-century Episcopal officeJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:0ca51802-9fd7-4da2-b4af-7a1c2cdbad0fEnglishSymplectic Elements at OxfordBrill2019Byrne, PThe episcopacy in the High Middle Ages (c.1100–1300) can be understood through the idea of a shared emotional language, as seen in two treatises written to advise new bishops. In them, episcopal office was largely defined by the emotions it provoked: it was a cause for sorrow, a burden akin to back-breaking agricultural service. The ideas most associated with episcopal office were anxiety, labour and endurance. Ideas about Christian service as painful labour became particularly important in the twelfth century, alongside the development of the institutional authority of the Church. As episcopal power began to look more threatening and less humble, this emotional register provided one means of distinguishing episcopal power from secular lordly power: both were authorities, but bishops were distinguished by sorrowing over office and ‘enduring’, not enjoying it.
spellingShingle Byrne, P
I second that emotion: modelling the anxious experiences of thirteenth-century Episcopal office
title I second that emotion: modelling the anxious experiences of thirteenth-century Episcopal office
title_full I second that emotion: modelling the anxious experiences of thirteenth-century Episcopal office
title_fullStr I second that emotion: modelling the anxious experiences of thirteenth-century Episcopal office
title_full_unstemmed I second that emotion: modelling the anxious experiences of thirteenth-century Episcopal office
title_short I second that emotion: modelling the anxious experiences of thirteenth-century Episcopal office
title_sort i second that emotion modelling the anxious experiences of thirteenth century episcopal office
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