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IMC 2021: Sessions

Session 1722: Marriage in Medieval Theology around 1300

Thursday 8 July 2021, 14.15-15.45

Sponsor:Internationale Gesellschaft für Theologische Mediävistik (IGTM)
Organiser:Pavel Blažek, Historisches Institut, Friedrich-Schiller-Universität, Jena
Moderator/Chair:Line Cecilie Engh, Istituto di Norvegia, Roma / Institutt for filosofi, ide- og kunsthistorie og klassiske språk, Universitetet i Oslo
Paper 1722-aPeter of La Palu's Unusual Ontology of Marriage
(Language: English)
Philip L. Reynolds, Candler School of Theology, Emory University
Index terms: Gender Studies, Philosophy, Sexuality, Theology
Paper 1722-bDurandus of Saint-Pourçain's Critique of Thomas Aquinas's Theology of Marriage
(Language: English)
Pavel Blažek, Historisches Institut, Friedrich-Schiller-Universität, Jena
Index terms: Biblical Studies, Philosophy, Sexuality, Theology
Abstract

Research into the medieval theology of marriage has traditionally focused on the 12th and 13th centuries (up to Thomas Aquinas and Bonaventure), while subsequent - often not less fruitful and innovative - doctrinal developments and debates have received much less scholarly attention. The session hopes to help remedy this situation. It explores the hitherto unstudied contributions to the theology of marriage by three renowned theologians active at the university of Paris around 1300, setting them against the background of previous and contemporary doctrinal developments and debates. Paper-a (Reynolds) expounds and contextualizes the unusual enquiry into the ontology of the bond of marriage by Peter of La Palu. In his Sentences commentary, this Dominican theologian proposes that being married to someone is not a relation in the Aristotelian sense, as commonly supposed, but rather a quality inhering in the embodied soul. Paper-b (Blažek) discusses the critiques to the theology of marriage of Thomas Aquinas found in the various redactions of the Sentences commentary of Durandus of Saint-Pourçain.