IMC 2009: Sessions
Session 1610: Orthodoxy and Heterodoxy in Papal and Magnate Policy in the Angevin Dominion in South-Eastern Europe at the End of the 13th and at the Beginning of the 14th Century
Thursday 16 July 2009, 11.15-12.45
Sponsor: | Project Latin Sources, Studies & Manuals for Social & Economic History, Institute of Historical & Social Research, Croatian Academy of Sciences & Arts, Zagreb |
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Organiser: | Damir Karbić, Institute of Historical & Social Sciences, Croatian Academy of Sciences & Arts, Zagreb |
Moderator/Chair: | Damir Karbić, Institute of Historical & Social Sciences, Croatian Academy of Sciences & Arts, Zagreb |
Paper 1610-a | The Place of Orthodoxy and Heterodoxy in the Policy of the Šubici of Bribir (Language: English) Index terms: Crusades, Ecclesiastical History, Politics and Diplomacy, Religious Life |
Paper 1610-b | Ex-King Stephen Dragutin of Rascia/Servia and his Family between Orthodoxy, Catholicism, and Heresy (Language: English) Index terms: Byzantine Studies, Ecclesiastical History, Politics and Diplomacy, Religious Life |
Paper 1610-c | Papal Policy and its Envoys and Agents in Croatia, Slavonia, Bosnia, and Serbia at the End of the 13th and at the Beginning of the 14th Century (Language: English) Index terms: Byzantine Studies, Ecclesiastical History, Politics and Diplomacy, Religious Life |
Abstract | Session explores the ways how the phenomena of Orthodoxy and Heterodoxy shaped political situation on the borderland between Western and Eastern Christianity during the period of succession crisis and the establishment of Angevin rule in the Southern and South-Eastern parts of the Kingdom of Hungary and neighbouring territories at the end of the 13th and at the beginning of the 14th century. Within that frame, the policies of Croatian, Hungarian, Bosnian and Serbian/Rascian magnates and rulers (in the first place the Šubici and the family of Stephen Dragutin) towards orthodoxy (in general and Greek Orthodoxy stricto sensu), heresies and religious movements, ecclesiastical organisation and the role and actions of papal curia will be discussed. |