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Early Scholastic Christology 1050-1250 / Richard Cross.
- Format:
- Book
- Author/Creator:
- Cross, Richard, 1964- author.
- Series:
- Changing paradigms in historical and systematic theology.
- Oxford scholarship online.
- Changing paradigms in historical and systematic theology
- Oxford scholarship online
- Language:
- English
- Subjects (All):
- Jesus Christ--Person and offices--Early works to 1800.
- Jesus Christ.
- Physical Description:
- 1 online resource (305 pages)
- Edition:
- First edition.
- Place of Publication:
- Oxford : Oxford University Press, [2024]
- Summary:
- A study of the metaphysics and semantics of Christology between 1050 and 1250 that discusses figures such as Anselm of Canterbury, Hugh of St Victor, Peter Lombard, and Bernard of Clairvaux.
- Contents:
- Cover
- Half-Title
- Series
- Title
- Copyright
- Dedication
- Preface
- Contents
- List of Abbreviations
- Introduction: Two Christological trajectories in the early Church
- I.1 Some philosophical presuppositions
- I.2 Pre-.Conciliar Christology: Augustine
- I.3 Conciliar Christology
- I.3.1 The Council of Chalcedon
- I.3.2 Boethius
- I.3.3 Constantinople II
- I.3.4 John of Damascus
- I.4 The structure of what follows
- PART 1: FROM THE HOMO ASSUMPTUSTO CONCILIAR CHRISTOLOGY,1050-1180
- 1. The Augustinian tradition (1)
- 1.1 Augustinian Christology before the Victorines
- 1.1.1 Peter Damian
- 1.1.2 Lanfranc
- 1.1.3 Anselm of Canterbury
- 1.2 Early Victorine Christology, 1130-.50
- 1.2.1 Hugh of St Victor
- 1.2.2 The Summa sententiarum
- 1.3 Gerhoh of Reichersberg
- 1.4 Peter Lombard's report
- 2. The Augustinian tradition (2)
- 2.1 The impact of John of Damascus
- 2.1.1 Robert of Melun
- 2.1.2 The Apologia de Verbo incarnato
- 2.2 From the Council of Tours (1163) to Lateran III (1179)
- 2.2.1 John of Cornwall
- 2.2.2 Walter of St Victor
- 2.3 First stages in the fall of Augustinianism
- 2.3.1 The Sententiae divinitatis
- 2.3.2 Simon of Tournai
- 2.3.3 Alan of Lille
- 2.4 Concluding remarks
- 3. The Boethian tradition
- 3.1 Gilbert of Poitiers and the Council of Rheims
- 3.1.1 Gilbert of Poitiers
- 3.1.2 The Sententiae divinitatis
- 3.1.3 Peter of Vienna
- 3.1.4 Bernard of Clairvaux and the Council of Rheims (1148)
- 3.2 Peter Lombard's report
- 3.3 Simon of Tournai
- 3.4 Alan of Lille
- 3.5 An alternative analysis: John of Cornwall
- 4. Towards a third option: A mereological Christology
- 4.1 Anselm of Laon
- 4.2 Peter Abelard and the Council of Sens
- 4.2.1 Abelard's parts Christology
- 4.2.2 Abelard's Christology at the end of the 1130s
- 4.2.3 Abelard's opponents.
- 4.2.3.1 The Summa sententiarum
- 4.2.3.2 Thomas of Morigny
- 4.2.3.3 William of St Thierry, Bernard, and the Council of Sens (1141)
- 4.3 Abelard after the council
- 5. The non-aliquid Christology (1): The theory proposed
- 5.1 Roland of Bologna
- 5.2 Peter Lombard
- 5.3 Magister Udo
- 5.4 Bandinus
- 5.5 Gandulph of Bologna
- 5.6 Peter of Poitiers
- 6. The non-aliquid Christology (2): Apotheosis and anathema
- 6.1 The theory refined: The Summa 'Breves dies hominis'
- 6.1.1 The three theories
- 6.1.1.1 The habitus theory
- 6.1.1.2 Against the subsistence theory
- 6.1.1.3 Against the homo assumptus theory
- 6.1.2 Some innovations
- 6.2 The non-.aliquid Christology condemned
- 6.2.1 Homo assumptus objections
- 6.2.1.1 The early stages
- 6.2.1.2 The Apologia de Verbo incarnato
- 6.2.1.3 John of Cornwall
- 6.2.2 Subsistence objections: Simon of Tournai
- 6.2.3 Pope Alexander III's Christological letters of 1170 and 1177
- PART 2: CONCILIAR CHRISTOLOGY,1180-1250
- 7. The subsistence theory in the late twelfth century
- 7.1 The early stages
- 7.1.1 Everard of Ypres
- 7.1.2 The De homine assumpto
- 7.2 Peter Chanter
- 7.2.1 Against the homo assumptus Christology
- 7.2.2 Against the non-.aliquid Christology
- 7.2.3 The subsistence theory
- 7.3 Praepositinus of Cremona
- 7.3.1 Against the homo assumptus Christology
- 7.3.2 Against the non-.aliquid Christology
- 7.3.3 The subsistence theory
- 7.4 Stephen Langton
- 7.4.1 Against the non-.aliquid Christology
- 7.4.2 Against the homo assumptus Christology
- 7.4.3 The subsistence theory
- 8. University theology in early thirteenth-.century Paris
- 8.1 Two secular theologians
- 8.1.1 William of Auxerre
- 8.1.2 Philip the Chancellor
- 8.2 Early Franciscan Christology: Alexander of Hales
- 8.3 Early Dominican Christology
- 8.3.1 Roland of Cremona
- 8.3.2 Hugh of St Cher.
- 9. Dominican Christology in the 1240s: Varieties of the subsistence theory
- 9.1 Richard Fishacre
- 9.2 Albert the Great
- 10. Franciscan Christology in the 1240s: The homo assumptus briefly revived
- 10.1 John of La Rochelle and the Summa halensis
- 10.2 Richard Rufus of Cornwall
- Afterword
- Appendix: Summary chronology, c. 1050-.c. 1250
- Bibliography
- Primary sources
- Secondary literature
- Index.
- Notes:
- Includes bibliographical references and index.
- Description based on online resource and publisher information; title from PDF title page (viewed on August 15, 2024).
- ISBN:
- 9780198936046
- 0198936044
- 9780198936022
- 0198936028
- OCLC:
- 1452460562
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