This subject surveys the history of Christianity in the countries of the classical Roman Empire and their immediate neighbours in north-western and eastern Europe and the Middle East. It covers the period from the breakup of the Western empire in the fifth century to the conquest of the Eastern Empire in the fifteenth century. Themes explored include church-state relations, concepts of Christian leadership, Christian scholarship, evangelism, pastoral care, the spiritual life in community and religious orders, and the tense relations between Eastern and Western Christendom.
HD/FL
One session
School of Theology
- Western monasticism and later monastic reforms - the evangelisation and re-evangelisation of Europe - Gregory the Great and the European role of the Papacy - the Christian ruler (Charlemagne) and the later conflict between Pope and Caesar - the Emperor Justinian and the consolidation of the Byzantine tradition - the scholar saint: the twelfth-century renaissance - relations between East and West and the Crusades - friars and heretics: preaching, piety and pastoral care - scholastic and monastic learning: intellectual crises of the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries - the Conciliar movement and opposition to the papacy - the fall of Byzantium: Orthodox traditions by the fifteenth century - new scholarship and new devotion: lay piety and Christian humanism
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The information contained in the 2018 CSU Handbook was accurate at the date of publication: August 2018. The University reserves the right to vary the information at any time without notice.