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Religious Horror and Holy War in Viking Age Francia

Religious Horror and Holy War in Viking Age Francia

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Hardback

£73.00

Publisher: Trivent Publishing
ISBN: 9786156405203
Number of Pages: 158
Published: 30/11/2021
Width: 14.8 cm
Height: 21 cm
Religious Horror and Holy War in Viking Age Francia explores how authorities in western Francia used horror rhetoric to cast Christian soldiers, who robbed the poor and the church, as monsters that devoured human flesh and drank human blood. Adapting modern literary horror approaches to medieval sources, this study reveals how such rhetoric served as a form of spiritual weaponry in the clergy's attempts to correct and condemn wayward military men. This investigation, therefore, unearths long-forgotten Carolingian thought about the dreadful spiritual reality of internal enemies during a time of political division and the Northmen's depredations. Yet such horror also informed a new understanding of Christian heroism that developed in relation to the wars fought against the invaders. This vision of heroic soldiers, which included military martyrs, culminated in ideas about holy war against the pagans. Thus Carolingian religious horror and holy war together belonged to a body of ideas about the spiritual, unseen side of the church's cosmic conflict against evil that foreshadowed later medieval Crusading thought.
  • Preface
  • PART ONE. ""And The Blood of Our Brothers Drips from Our Mouths"" – King Carloman II's Monsters & Carolingian Religious Horror
  • PART TWO. ""Men Devouring One another Drink their Neighbors' Blood"" – Spiritual Protections against Christian Monsters
  • PART THREE. ""Alas, Naked They Underwent the Savage Folk's Sword!"" – Heroism in Abbo of Saint-Germain's Wars of the City of Paris
  • PART FOUR. ""O, Francia, Protect Yourself!"" – Cosmic War in Abbo of Saint Germain's Sermons
  • Acknowledgements
  • Abbreviations
  • Bibliography
  • Index

    Matthew Bryan Gillis

    Matthew Bryan Gillis is associate professor in history at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville. The author of Heresy and Dissent in the Carolingian Empire: The Case of Gottschalk of Orbais (Oxford, 2017), he studies early medieval Europe and especially the religious and intellectual history of the Carolingian Empire in the eighth and ninth centuries. His aim is to develop new and creative ways of viewing authors, texts and ideas from that period in order to challenge our understanding of the medieval past. To that end, he is currently investigating horror imagery, concepts, narratives and rhetoric in Frankish poetic, theological and historical sources. His current book project explores the links between such horror and portrayals of Christian heroism in Viking Age France.