Sleep of Behemoth

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A01=Jehangir Malegam
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Author_Jehangir Malegam
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Category1=Non-Fiction
Category=HBJD
Category=HBLC1
Category=NHDJ
christian peace
COP=United States
Delivery_Delivery within 10-20 working days
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eq_history
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high middle ages violence
history of peace
history of violence
investiture conflict
Language_English
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peace and complacency
peace of god
Price_€50 to €100
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revolutionary peacemaking
softlaunch
western europe and peace

Product details

  • ISBN 9780801451324
  • Weight: 907g
  • Dimensions: 155 x 235mm
  • Publication Date: 15 Mar 2013
  • Publisher: Cornell University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
  • Language: English
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In The Sleep of Behemoth, Jehangir Yezdi Malegam explores the emergence of conflicting concepts of peace in western Europe during the High Middle Ages. Ever since the early Church, Christian thinkers had conceived of their peace separate from the peace of the world, guarded by the sacraments and shared only grudgingly with powers and principalities. To kingdoms and communities they had allowed attenuated versions of this peace, modes of accommodation and domination that had tranquility as the goal. After 1000, reformers in the papal curia and monks and canons in the intellectual circles of northern France began to reimagine the Church as an engine of true peace, whose task it was eventually to absorb all peoples through progressive acts of revolutionary peacemaking. Peace as they envisioned it became a mandate for reform through conflict, coercion, and insurrection. And the pursuit of mere tranquility appeared dangerous, and even diabolical.

As Malegam shows, within western Christendom's major centers of intellectual activity and political thought, the clergy competed over the meaning and monopolization of the term "peace," contrasting it with what one canon lawyer called the "sleep of Behemoth," a diabolical "false" peace of lassitude and complacency, one that produced unsuitable forms of community and friendship that must be overturned at all costs. Out of this contest over the meaning and ownership of true peace, Malegam concludes, medieval thinkers developed theologies that shaped secular political theory in the later Middle Ages. The Sleep of Behemoth traces this radical experiment in redefining the meaning of peace from the papal courts of Rome and the schools of Laon, Liège, and Paris to its gradual spread across the continent and its impact on such developments as the rise of papal monarchism; the growth of urban, communal self-government; and the emergence of secular and mystical scholasticism.

Jehangir Yezdi Malegam is Andrew W. Mellon Assistant Professor of History at Duke University.

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