Front cover image for Emperor and priest : the imperial office in Byzantium

Emperor and priest : the imperial office in Byzantium

Gilbert Dagron (Author), Jean Birrell (Translator)
"The figure of the Byzantine emperor, a ruler who sometimes was also designated a priest, has long fascinated the western imagination. This book studies in detail the imperial union of 'two powers' against a wide background of relations between church and state and religious and political spheres." "While in the medieval west the Empire was broken down into its various temporal realms, leaving spiritual matters to the papacy, the Byzantine east preserved the structures of an empire whose ruler - the anointed successor of David - received directly from God his mission to lead his Christian subjects. In this sense, the emperor was a priest, albeit 'of another priesthood' or a quasi-bishop. Historians have continued the debate on this subject since the time of the Reformation, declaring 'caesaropapism' to be a malady of the east. Yet the ambiguities and nuances of this divided imperial role can still be perceived today. Presenting much unfamiliar material in complex, brilliant style, as much for western medievalists as for Byzantinists, it will attract all historians concerned with royal and ecclesiastical sources of power."--Jacket
Print Book, English, 2003
Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, U.K., 2003
Church history
xi, 337 pages : illustrations, map ; 24 cm.
9780521801232, 9780521036979, 0521801230, 0521036976
52058135
Heredity, legitimacy, and succession
Proclamations and coronations
Ceremonial and memory
Constantine the Great : imperial sainthood
Leo III and the iconoclast emperors : Melchizedek or AntiChrist?
Basil the Macedonian, Leo VI, and Constantine VII : ceremonial and religion
The kingship of the patriarchs (eighth to eleventh centuries)
The canonists and liturgists (twelfth to fifteenth centuries)
"Caesaropapism" and the theory of the "two powers"
Epilogue : the house of Judah and the house of Levi
Translated from the French