
Heresy And Dissent In The Carolingian Empire Recounts The History Of An Exceptional Ninth-century Religious Outlaw, Gottschalk Of Orbais. Frankish Christianity Required Obedience To Ecclesiastical Superiors, Voluntary Participation In Reform, And The Belief That Salvation Was Possible For All Baptized Believers. Yet Gottschalk-a Mere Priest-developed A Controversial, Augustinian-based Theology Of Predestination, Claiming That Only Divine Election Through Grace Enabled Eternal Life. Gottschalk Preached To Christians Within The Frankish Empire-including Bishops-and Non-christians Beyond Its Borders, Scandalously Demanding They Confess His Doctrine Or Be Revealed As Wicked Reprobates. Even After His Condemnations For Heresy In The Late 840s, Gottschalk Continued His Activities From Prison Thanks To Monks Who Smuggled His Pamphlets To A Subterranean Community Of Supporters. This Study Reconstructs The Career Of The Carolingian Empire's Foremost Religious Dissenter In Order To Imagine That Empire From The Perspective Of Someone Who Worked To Subvert Its Most Fundamental Beliefs. Examining The Surviving Evidence (including His Own Writings), Matthew Gillis Analyzes Gottschalk's Literary And Spiritual Self-representations, His Modes Of Argument, His Prophetic Claims To Martyrdom And Miraculous Powers, And His Shocking Defiance To Bishops As Strategies For Influencing Contemporaries In Changing Political Circumstances. In The Larger History Of Medieval Heresy And Dissent, Gottschalk's Case Reveals How The Carolingian Empire Preserved Order Within The Church Through Coercive Reform. The Hierarchy Compelled Christians To Accept Correction Of Perceived Sins And Errors, While Punishing As Sources Of Spiritual Corruption Those Rare Dissenters Who Resisted Its Authority.
This book investigates how the ninth-century priest Gottschalk of Orbais challenged the religious and political orthodoxy of the Carolingian Empire through his controversial theology of predestination. Matthew Bryan Gillis, a scholar of medieval history, utilizes surviving primary source documents, including Gottschalk's own writings and ecclesiastical records, to analyze the mechanisms of dissent within a highly controlled religious hierarchy. The work argues that Gottschalk's defiance was not merely theological but a strategic subversion of the Carolingian project of coercive reform and institutional order.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars and historians recognize this work as a significant contribution to the study of medieval dissent and the internal pressures of the Carolingian Church. Readers frequently note the academic rigor and the detailed reconstruction of Gottschalk's subversive strategies against the ecclesiastical hierarchy.
Page Count:
336
Publication Date:
2017-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0192518275
ISBN-13:
9780192518279
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