History of the Church in the Middle Ages


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About The Book

<p>Conceptually well organized stylistically clear intellectually thoughtful and pedagogically useful. </p><p>- <strong>Thomas Head</strong> <em>Speculum</em></p><p>For its humane and learned approach to its enormous canvas as well as for the cogency with which it penetrates at speed to the essentials of a vanished historical epoch this History of the Church in the Middle Ages deserves a very wide audience indeed.</p><p>- <strong>Barrie Dobson</strong> <em>English Historical Review</em> </p><p>To have written a scholarly and very readable history of the Western Church over a millennium is a remarkable tour de force for which Donald Logan is to be warmly congratulated.</p><p>- <strong>C.H Lawrence</strong> <em>The Tablet</em></p><p>A feat of historical synthesis most confident in its telling of the coming of Christianity. Books like Logan's are needed more than ever before. </p><p>- <strong>Miri Rubin</strong> <em>TLS</em></p><p>In this fascinating survey F. Donald Logan introduces the reader to the Christian church from the conversion of the Celtic and Germanic peoples to the discovery of the New World. He reveals how the church unified the people of Western Europe as they worshipped with the same ceremonies and used Latin as the language of civilized communication. From remote rural parish to magnificent urban cathedral <em>A History of the Church in the Middle Ages</em> explores the role of the church as a central element in determining a thousand years of history.</p><p>This new edition brings the book right up to date with recent scholarship and includes an expanded introduction exploring the interaction of other faiths - particularly Judaism and Islam - with the Christian church. </p>
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