Criminal Clergy: The Honor of the Church and Crimes of Priests in Counter-Reformation Italy. Volume 1, Documents: the Sixteenth Century

Authors

Giovanni Romeo
University of Naples Federico II
Michele Mancino
University of Naples Federico II

Keywords:

Cultural history, Criminal History, Clergy

Synopsis

Logo_FedOAPress

Editore: FedOA Press (Federico II Open Access University Press).

Pagine: 194.

Lingua: Italiano.

NBN: http://nbn.depositolegale.it/urn:nbn:it:unina-22025

Abstract: With this rich anthology of sources, most of which are made available here for the first time, Michele Mancino and Giovanni Romeo add another element to the research project that began with their recent book (Clero criminale. L’onore della Chiesa e i delitti degli ecclesiastici nell’Italia della Controriforma, Laterza, Roma-Bari, 2013, 4th ed.). The two parts document from a range of perspectives the way in which the Tridentine project of combating the common crimes of the clergy was undone before the end of the sixteenth century. Instead, the Roman curia was mainly concerned with enforcing the right of delinquent priests to be judged only by ecclesiastical tribunals, a strategy intended to defend the honor of the clergy that was followed persistently over the long term. The material presented here describes a previously unknown historical precedent for the recent revelations about the treatment of pedophile priests.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Author Biographies

Giovanni Romeo, University of Naples Federico II

He is professor of early modern history at the University of Naples "Federico II". His main interests are the history of early modern religious intolerance, with a special focus on Italy in the age of the Counter-Reformation.

Michele Mancino, University of Naples Federico II

He is professor of early modern history at the University of Naples "Federico II". His research interests are in the history of the Counter-Reformation, especially in Italy.

Downloads

Published

June 17, 2014

Details about this monograph

ISBN-13 (15)

978-88-6887-000-3

Publication date (01)

2014-10-14

doi

10.6093/978-88-6887-000-3