The Rome of Pope Paschal I
In the early ninth century, a critical time in Rome's transformation from ancient capital to powerful bishopric to new state capital, Pope Paschal I undertook a building campaign to communicate his authority and Rome's importance as an ancient and contemporary seat of power. Combining analysis of contemporary chronicles and documents, architecture, mosaics and new archaeology of medieval Rome, Caroline J. Goodson examines Paschal's urban project, revealing new patterns of popular saint veneration in resplendent new churches built using traditional architectural vocabularies. These transformations connect the city and the pope to the past and the present, in the same league as the Byzantine and Carolingian capitals and their emperors. By examining the relationships between the material world and political power in early medieval Rome, this innovative study reveals the importance of Rome's sacred and urban landscape in constructing papal rule and influence both in the city and beyond.
- Reveals the ways in which architecture and urban planning expressed political power in the early middle ages
- Combines art history, analysis of contemporary texts and recent Italian archaeological data
- Uncovers distinctive papal strategies of power in early medieval Rome
Reviews & endorsements
"...a welcom contribution to the new historiography on the last century of the Carolingians. It will appeal to a wide ranges of scholars, from specialists in religion and culture to historians of art and architecture." -Scott G. Bruce, Canadian Journal of History
Product details
July 2010Hardback
9780521768191
408 pages
229 × 152 × 24 mm
0.71kg
Available
Table of Contents
- 1. Paschal I and the history of Rome
- 2. Building in Rome
- 3. Constructing the Papal City
- 4. Beyond the basilica
- 5. Building the home of the saints
- 6. Transformations
- Bibliography.