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Christ's War - (Artes Liberales) by Matthew Bryan Gillis (Hardcover)
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Highlights
- Christ's war examines Carolingian holy war from the forging of their empire in the eighth century to its dissolution in the late ninth century during the Northmen's attacks.
- About the Author: Matthew Bryan Gillis is Associate Professor of History at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville
- 280 Pages
- History, Military
- Series Name: Artes Liberales
Description
About the Book
Christ's war examines Carolingian holy war from the forging of their empire in the eighth century to its dissolution in the following century during the Northmen's attacks. The book offers important insights into the religious nature of Frankish warfare, while also contributing a fresh and innovative perspective on medieval holy war overall.Book Synopsis
Christ's war examines Carolingian holy war from the forging of their empire in the eighth century to its dissolution in the late ninth century during the Northmen's attacks. It argues that the Franks understood their wars to be holy when their soldiers were without sin and, therefore, were holy themselves. God heard their prayers as they begged for divine aid, and he helped them overcome and slaughter their foes. Therefore, the Carolingian vision of holy war differed from the pious, apocalyptic military pilgrimages of the subsequent Crusades. Latin poetry serves as an important source in this study for understanding holy war, including how poets dramatized glorious victories or horrifying defeats for their audiences. The book offers important insights into the religious nature of Frankish warfare, while also contributing a fresh and innovative perspective on medieval holy war overall.From the Back Cover
Christ's war reveals that the Carolingians waged holy warfare when their armies fought in a sinless state of righteousness and God, accordingly, granted them victory. The Franks thus forged their eighth- and ninth-century empire through a vision of holy war that differed from the apocalyptic military pilgrimages of the subsequent Crusades. Comparing battle narratives with theological, liturgical and sermon literature, this book explores how Carolingian notions of holy war shaped their military successes and conquests during the empire's rise under Charles Martel and King Pippin, and thereafter Frankish holy war took its fullest expression under Emperors Charlemagne and Louis the Pious.
Yet Christ's war also shows how civil war and humiliating defeats by the Northmen caused the Carolingians to blame such disasters on the impiety of their commanders and soldiers during the later ninth and early tenth century. Nevertheless, victorious leaders and their armies continued to be celebrated for their holiness, which brought divine favor on the battlefield. Key among the sources examined here is Latin poetry, since warfare found its most dramatic expression in verse. Correspondingly, this study also investigates how poets and other inventive authors crafted their narratives with powerful emotions, graphic violence and horror imagery to enrich the audience's imaginative experience of victory or defeat. In this fashion, Carolingian audiences participated vicariously in holy war as a pious literary pleasure. Christ's war offers these important insights into the religious nature of Frankish warfare, while also contributing a fresh and innovative perspective on medieval holy war.About the Author
Matthew Bryan Gillis is Associate Professor of History at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville