The battle for Christendom : the Council of Constance, the East-West conflict, and the dawn of modern Europe
(2008)

Nonfiction

eBook

Provider: hoopla

Details

PUBLISHED
[United States] : ABRAMS Books, 2008
Made available through hoopla
DESCRIPTION

1 online resource

ISBN/ISSN
9781468315257 (electronic bk.) MWT12381807, 1468315250 (electronic bk.) 12381807
LANGUAGE
English
NOTES

The fifteenth century Council of Constance ends the Catholic Church's papal schism and sets Europe on its path to the Renaissance in this in-depth history. At the dawn of the fifteenth century, the Ottoman Empire posed an existential threat to Christian Europe. Meanwhile, the Catholic Church was in chaos, with three Popes claiming the Chair of Saint Peter and dangerous stirrings of reform. In an attempt to save the Christian world, Emperor Sigismund of the Holy Roman Empire called the nations of Europe together for a conference at Constance, beside the Rhine. In The Battle for Christendom, historian Frank Welsh demonstrates that the 1414 Council of Constance was one of the most pivotal events in European history. The last event of the medieval world, the months of fierce debate and political maneuvering heralded the dawn of the Renaissance and the rise of humanism. Yet it would also bring about darker events, as the first moments of the Protestant Reformation began with the burning of the Czech divine, Jan Hus. The story rises to a climax on the battlements of Constantinople in 1453 where, despite all of Sigismund's attempts to repel the Ottomans, the East rose up once more. In Welsh's lively retelling, The Battle for Christendom is an enthralling history that holds lessons for our own times of international turmoil

Mode of access: World Wide Web

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