Katedra Historii Średniowiecznej
Religion and War in the Middle Ages - nowa seria wydawnicza Religion and War in the Middle Ages - nowa seria wydawnicza

Religion and War in the Middle Ages - nowa seria wydawnicza

Pracownicy Katedry Historii Średniowiecznej, dr Radosław Kotecki oraz prof. Jacek Maciejewski zainicjowali nową serię wydawniczą poświęcona związkom religii i wojny w wiekach średnich (https://trivent-publishing.eu/84-religion-and-war).
Redaktorzy zachęcają do składania propozycji publikacji.

RELIGION AND WAR IN THE MIDDLE AGES  

Trivent Publishing, H-1119 Budapest, Etele u. 59-61
Imprint: Trivent Medieval

EDITORIAL BOARD

Martín Alvira Cabrer, Universidad Complutense Madrid
Marie-Madeleine de Cevins, Université Rennes 2
Edward L. Holt, Grambling State University
Carsten Selch Jensen, University of Copenhagen
Elizabeth Lapina, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Stefanie Rüther, Max Planck Institute for Legal History and Legal Theory
Mamuka Tsurtsumia, Tibilisi State University
Monica White, University of Nottingham

ABOUT THE SERIES 

This series publishes interdisciplinary scholarship about religious and ideological aspects of warfare in Medieval Age. It aims to contribute to a broader and in-depth understanding of the cultural phenomena which grew out of the interaction of religious imagination and martial activity like, among others, religious rituals of war, practices aimed at securing the divine aid in war, the concept of saintly patronage over the military enterprises and soldiers, as well as the role of clergy in wartime environment. Further, it seeks to explore the mentality and the perceptions about the relationship between armed violence and the supernatural, both through the study of specific practices and materiality, and through narrativist research into the meaning hidden in medieval historiographical and literary works.

The series challenges the application of the concepts of cores and peripheries, and both-side transmission of organizational patterns, social customs and religious-ideological concepts. It is intended as a platform to show how the relationship between religion and war has shaped and changed in the process of long duration in a vast territory of medieval world, and how and why it has weakened and faded in some places and gained prominence in others. To date, studies of the relationship between religion and war have been viewed primarily through the paradigms of holy war and crusade, which have proven ideological chameleons difficult to grasp. Rather than applying these largely artificial notions, the works published in this series will show through the lens of sources how, in the historical process, religion, ritual, eschatology and biblical thought have shaped the imaginary and practice of war, and, conversely, how war has determined religious customs, imaginary and rhetoric.

The series welcomes submissions (monographs and edited volumes) on Western Europe and Byzantine world, but is also particularly keen to regions less well studied within the themes of the series, situated in between those great centers of medieval Christianity.

Chronological scope: fourth to sixteenth centuries.

Geographical scope: wider medieval Europe from Iberia to Rus and from Scandinavia to Mediterranean; Byzantium and Near East.

Keywords: sacralization, liturgization, ritualization and theology of war; religious warfare; divine/saintly aid in war; wartime devotion; miraculous in the writing of war narrative; Bible and war; war as god's judgment; victory bringing relics and artifacts; church/clergy and war; holy warriors; religious-military rhetoric; the impact of religion and war on cultural and social identity.

Operacje:
24-01-2023, 17:10
publikacja: Radosław Kotecki
24-01-2023, 17:17
modyfikacja: Radosław Kotecki