Domesticating Saints in Medieval and Early Modern Rome - Maskarinec, Maya; - Prospero Internet Bookshop

Domesticating Saints in Medieval and Early Modern Rome
 
Product details:

ISBN13:9781512827019
ISBN10:15128270111
Binding:Hardback
No. of pages:336 pages
Size:254x178 mm
Weight:666 g
Language:English
Illustrations: 25 b/w + 18 color illus., 5 maps, 2 tables
700
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Domesticating Saints in Medieval and Early Modern Rome

 
Publisher: University of Pennsylvania Press
Date of Publication:
Number of Volumes: Print PDF
 
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Long description:

How elite Roman families used genealogy, architecture, and the urban fabric to appropriate the city?s saints for their own

Domesticating Saints in Medieval and Early Modern Rome explores the creative efforts of some of Rome?s most prominent noble families to weave themselves into Rome?s Christian past. Maya Maskarinec shows how, from late antiquity to early modernity, elite Roman families used genealogy, architecture, and the urban fabric to appropriate the city?s saints for their own, eventually claiming them as ancestors.

Over the course of the Middle Ages, there developed a pronounced sense that churches and their saints belonged to specific regions, neighborhoods, and even families. These associations, coupled with a resurgent interest in Rome?s Christian antiquity as well as in noble lineages, enabled Roman families to ?domesticate? the city?s saints and dominate the urban landscape and its politics into the early modern era. These families cultivated saintly genealogies and saintly topologies (exploiting, for example, the increasingly prolific identification of churches as the former residences of early Christian and late antique saints), cementing presumed connections between place, descent, and moral worth.

Drawing from sources spanning the fourth to the late sixteenth century, Maskarinec brings into conversation saints? lives, documentary evidence, family genealogies, monumental and domestic architecture, and medieval and early modern guidebooks, sources not often studied together. Bridging the divide between secular and sacred histories of Rome, Domesticating Saints in Medieval and Early Modern Rome repositions these materials within a new story, of how Romans made the city?s classical and Christian past their own and thereby empowered and immortalized their families.



"Maya Maskarinec is a brilliant scholar of early medieval Italy, who blends hard-nosed documentary research and skilled mining of hagiography with the ability to imaginatively reconstruct individual and cultural mentalities that guided and were guided by the historical processes she seeks to understand. Both deeply erudite and highly engaging and readable, Domesticating Saints in Medieval and Early Modern Rome is a fitting sequel to Maskarinec?s first book, City of Saints."