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The Empire and the Papacy, 918-1273

Chapter 3: BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTE
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About This Book

A sweeping narrative traces political and ecclesiastical developments across western and southern Europe from the early tenth to the late thirteenth century, centring on the prolonged contest between imperial authority and papal power. It follows the revival of a Roman-style empire in Germany, the evolution of the papacy, and key conflicts such as investiture disputes and confrontations between emperors and popes. Parallel chapters examine the Byzantine Empire and its struggles with Turks, the Crusading movement and the Latin states in the East, and the shifting balance of power among western kingdoms. It surveys monastic reform, the rise of mendicant orders and universities, and institutional shifts that strengthened monarchies, with maps and genealogies to clarify chronology.

BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTE

To the general modern authorities for French history for this period must now be added the valuable new Histoire de France edited by M. Ernest Lavisse (Hachette), of which the three half-volumes covering this period are now published. They are: Les Premiers Capétiens (987–1137), by Achille Luchaire, II. ii.; Louis VII., Philippe Auguste, Louis VIII., by Achille Luchaire, III. i.; and Saint Louis, Philippe le Bel, les derniers Capétiens directs, by Ch. V. Langlois, III. ii. A large collection of facts covering the whole subject of this book will soon be available in the relevant volumes of the Cambridge Mediæval History. The maps in R. L. Poole’s Oxford Historical Atlas are very valuable for the elucidation of the historical geography of the period.