Del i serien Routledge Research in Early Modern History
Post-Tridentine Apostolic Nunciatures (1562–1605)
- Nyhet
A Prosopographical and Comparative Study
Inbunden, Engelska, 2026
2 939 kr
Kommande
This book offers the first comprehensive prosopographical and comparative study of permanent apostolic nunciatures in post-Tridentine Europe (1562–1605), substantially extending earlier chronological repertories.During this period of institutional reconfiguration, apostolic nuncios operated at the intersection of spiritual leadership and secular politics. Rather than treating diplomacy as a series of bilateral exchanges, the study analyses the nunciature system as a transregional network through which the Holy See projected universal claims, managed confessional divisions, and shaped the political order of early modern Europe. Drawing on a dataset of one hundred and four nuncios, the book combines quantitative analysis with institutional and intellectual history. It reconstructs patterns of recruitment, education, social background, and career advancement, showing how diplomatic service related to episcopal promotion and advancement within the Roman Curia, including the cardinalate and the papacy. The study also examines the functioning of nunciatures at major European courts – from Iberia and France to the Holy Roman Empire and Poland-Lithuania – and highlights their role in implementing Catholic Reform. Finally, it presents the nunciature as a ‘writing workshop’ that generated political knowledge, legal reflection, and detailed mappings of confessional Europe.The volume will interest scholars and graduate students of early modern, Church, and diplomatic history and provides a solid empirical basis for understanding papal diplomacy and European state formation in the age of confessional conflict.
Produktinformation
- Utgivningsdatum2026-10-01
- Mått156 x 234 x undefined mm
- FormatInbunden
- SpråkEngelska
- SerieRoutledge Research in Early Modern History
- Antal sidor260
- FörlagTaylor & Francis Ltd
- ISBN9781041106753