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Why Can the Dead Do Such Great Things?: Saints and Worshippers from the Martyrs to the Reformation
Robert Bartlett
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Description for Why Can the Dead Do Such Great Things?: Saints and Worshippers from the Martyrs to the Reformation
Paperback. Num Pages: 808 pages, 8 color illus. 23 halftones. 3 line illus. 10 tables. 3 maps. BIC Classification: HRCM; HRCS. Category: (P) Professional & Vocational; (U) Tertiary Education (US: College). Dimension: 148 x 229 x 48. Weight in Grams: 1052.
From its earliest centuries, one of the most notable features of Christianity has been the veneration of the saints--the holy dead. This ambitious history tells the fascinating story of the cult of the saints from its origins in the second-century days of the Christian martyrs to the Protestant Reformation. Robert Bartlett examines all of the most important aspects of the saints--including miracles, relics, pilgrimages, shrines, and the saints' role in the calendar, literature, and art. The book explores the central role played by the bodies and body parts of saints, and the special treatment these relics received. From the ... Read moreroutes, dangers, and rewards of pilgrimage, to the saints' impact on everyday life, Bartlett's account is an unmatched examination of an important and intriguing part of the religious life of the past--as well as the present. Show Less
Product Details
Publisher
Princeton University Press
Place of Publication
New Jersey, United States
Shipping Time
Usually ships in 4 to 8 working days
About Robert Bartlett
Robert Bartlett is professor of mediaeval history at the University of St. Andrews in Scotland.
Reviews for Why Can the Dead Do Such Great Things?: Saints and Worshippers from the Martyrs to the Reformation
Winner of the 2015 Otto Grundler Book Prize, The Medieval Institute of Western Michigan University Winner of the 2013 PROSE Award in European and World History, Association of American Publishers [A]n indispensible point of departure for anyone interested in the cult of the saints in the Middle Ages. The book is based on an awe-inspiring familiarity with the hagiographical ... Read moresources of both Eastern and Western churches, and is packed with intelligent, measured, and well-informed discussions of everything from the hierarchy of precedence of feasts in the old Roman calendar to the managerial problems of running a shrine. Students, scholars, and the general reader will all find it invaluable.
Eamon Duffy, New York Review of Books Robert Bartlett's monumental study provides a comprehensive account of the development of the cult of the saints from the cult of martyrs (those who had died as witnesses for their faith during the Roman persecutions) and illustrates the centrality of saintly devotion in the lives and beliefs of Christians across Europe over the whole medieval period... Bartlett has a gift for succinct summary, both of complex (and confusing) narratives and for explaining theological controversy; his obvious abilities as a teacher appear throughout and his book will manifestly appeal to students... Robert Bartlett's achievement lies in his capacity to draw out the distinctive, and often amusing, attributes of different saints while showing how the cult of saints operated in medieval Europe.
Sarah Foot, Times Literary Supplement [M]assive, erudite compendium of saint lore ... For a book so deeply grounded in original research ... The volume is remarkably accessible.
Barbara Newman, London Review of Books It is a treat ... to see such erudition amassed this way; it is hard to imagine any aspect of the cult of the saints that Bartlett has left out in this extraordinarily comprehensive text. Yet there is enormous entertainment here as well... [W]ho, and when and where
this enormous and humane reference work gives all that, along with stories that are appalling and ghoulish and mysterious and funny.
Rob Hardy, The (Columbus, OH) Dispatch [T]here is much to enjoy in the array of human behaviour, sacred and by our standards profane or just downright mad, chronicled in Bartlett's excellent study.
Diarmaid MacCulloch, Guardian [T]his magisterial work of scholarship.
Richard Holloway, Independent Devotion to the saints is manifestly still alive and well in the Catholic Church, and Bartlett's impressive compendium will serve to explain the cult's historical origins and evolution.
John Cornwell, Financial Times Rich in original research, full of illuminating case studies, Why Can the Dead Do Such Great Things? is a major achievement from a distinguished medieval historian and a gold mine for those interested in religious history.
Helen Fulton, Times Higher Education Bartlett convincingly explains how the 12th-century papacy sought to control a potentially anarchic process by demanding strict examination of cases, of which only about half were successful... With great thoroughness, Bartlett examines issues such as types of saint, relics, miracles, hagiography and doubt, more as an observer than as judge... Some of Bartlett's most valuable insights relate to the diversity of ways in which saints were revered and what they reveal about visions of the social order.
Constant Mews, Sydney Morning Herald This is a remarkable book, which is thankfully both wonderfully informative and wonderfully readable... His book is just the kind of great scholarly synthesis that was once the norm, but which may well become rarer than now in the future. This is a long and very detailed book, but the patience of the reader in encompassing nearly 800 closely printed pages will be well rewarded.
Peter Costello, Irish Catholic Why Can the Dead Do Such Great Things is an excellent survey of the cult of the saints in the pre-modern period. The reader looking for explanations of the social and cultural functions of the holy dead could do far worse.
Frank McGough, Origins It is hard to overemphasize the scholarship evident in this book... One could associate a work such as this with a certain dryness of tone but this is not the case. The book is very engaging and at the same time quite modular, that is, allowing the readers to jump around to concentrate on their areas of special interest. Bartlett is one of the world's leading medieval historians and he brings his expertise to bear on this very ambitious project.
Richard Rymarz, Catholic Books Review [M]agisterial... [A] fascinating and illuminating read... Bartlett's book will also be welcome to those who have experienced something of the power of the cult of the saints in their own time and place... [H]is style balances rigor and a near-encyclopedic breadth with accessibility and humor... Why Can the Dead Do Such Great Things? will remain a classic study of the saints, their cults and their faithful for a long time... Robert Bartlett's masterpiece.
Holly J. Grieco, America Bartlett's work is astonishingly comprehensive, and the balance he strikes between narration and analysis is admirable.
David J Collins, Theological Studies Bartlett is not content to simply refer to the findings of others second-hand. Rather, he returns to the sources, the great majority of them in Latin, and does the spade-work himself. This particular approach, and the concern for meticulous research that it evinces, puts Bartlett's magisterial study in a different league from so many others. The result is a volume that is at once staggeringly scholarly and yet, owing to Bartlett's light touch, surprisingly accessible. No library should be without a copy.
Salvador Ryan, Irish Theological Quarterly Bartlett writes with relish for his subject, tells its marvelous stories well, injects judicious doses of good humor, and leaves one with the sense that the cult of the saints is a pervasive feature of Christianity's historical texture.
Anne Thayer, Sehepunkte The history book I most enjoyed this year was also my first of 2014. I tucked into Robert Bartlett's Why Can The Dead Do Such Great Things (Princeton University Press) on New Year's Day and could not have hoped for a more stimulating festive read. A sweeping study of medieval saints, covering the entire Christian world from Late Antiquity to the Reformation, it is also a compendium of anecdotes, such as one rarely finds in a work of scholarship. Whether it be St Modwenna of Burton and her red cow, the Bishop of Lincoln who bit off two chunks of Mary Magdalene's arm, or Queen Bathildis cleaning out toilets, all of human
and much of divine
life is here.
Tom Holland, History Today This is a fascinating book and one to which to return.
Martin Wellings, Methodist Recorder In addition to being readable and fascinating, Bartlett's book forms a virtual curriculum on medieval religion in particular and medieval history in general.
Thomas F. X. Noble, American Historical Review Bartlett has provided readers interested in hagiography and the medieval cult of the saints with a magisterial and wholly engrossing book.
Rachel Koopmans, Biography With this book Robert Bartlett serves up a wondrous synthesis: awesome in its breadth, saturating in its detail, and delightful in its humanity... This is a book that has a long reach and should hold a place in every medievalist's library.
Anne E. Lester, Catholic Historical Review This is a very important book that offers the first comprehensive study of the cult of the saints from late antiquity to the Reformation in both Western and Eastern Christianity. Such work rests on an extraordinary knowledge of the textual and iconographic sources and of the vast scholarship that exists on these topics... An impressive achievement.
Andre Vauchez, Speculum The author of this study has produced what is to this reviewer's knowledge the first textbook on the premodern cult of the saints and at
I cannot resist the temptation
a miraculously low price. Luckily, Robert Bartlett is more than equal to the task... Bartlett's writing is measured and deft, as one would expect from a scholar of his caliber.
David Defries, The Historian Show Less