Lexington Books
Pages: 242
Trim: 6¼ x 9⅜
978-1-4985-4886-1 • Hardback • October 2017 • $117.00 • (£90.00)
978-1-4985-4887-8 • eBook • October 2017 • $111.00 • (£85.00)
Matthew Wranovix is lecturer in the Department of History at the University of New Haven.
Chapter 1: Education
Chapter 2: The Priest in the Parish, Diocese, and Territory
Chapter 3: Parish Libraries and Personal Collections
Chapter 4: A Professional Library
Chapter 5: Reading Interests
Wranovix has produced a thought-provoking and well-documented argument, with ramifications that go beyond the narrow history of priestly life in the diocese of Eichstätt. . . . Priests and Their Books in Late Medieval Eichstättoffers a glimpse into an extremely important sector of Christian society at a time of rapid change and challenges. It provides a useful direction to the study of spiritual and intellectual life in the critical period of the late fifteenth and early sixteenth centuries.
— Renaissance Quarterly
This is very much a book about books, and anyone interested in book culture and habits of reading in the later Middle Ages will find it illuminating. But it also a book about the life and livelihood and intellectual interests of those priests charged with parish-level pastoral care, and by extension, it is a book that expands our understanding of the late medieval parish broadly speaking. It is impressively researched, rich in content, and provides an important perspective on the parish landscape in German-speaking territory.
— Speculum: A Journal of Medieval Studies
This outstanding and eminently readable study of the parish clergy in the late medieval diocese of Eichstätt takes the evidence of their book ownership as its starting point, but goes well beyond to present a finely worked evaluation of the education, personal expectations, and professional lives of the clergy in the generations before the Reformation. . . . Priests and Their Books in Late Medieval Eichstättremains one of the most thoughtful and enjoyable works I have read in some time.
— American Historical Review
Matthew Wranovix’s valuable, deeply-informed, and lively book upends old stereotypes of the late medieval parish clergy by exploring their reading habits. His sweeping survey of the pastoral primers, devotional guides, episcopal mandates, and canonical texts available to priests and how they used them is, in effect, a crash course in medieval pastoral care. Beyond that, his granular examination of Ulrich Pfeffel’s pastoral and personal library opens an unrivaled window into the mental world of a fairly ordinary fifteenth-century pastor and preacher. What emerges from this important book is a refreshing, intensely humane portrait of the professional and devotional life of parish priests, the workhorses of medieval Christianity. Priests and Their Books in Late Medieval Eichstätt offers us a much-needed ground-level view of the parish clergy and the books they used.
— John Shinners, Saint Mary’s College, Notre Dame
Several important recent books have begun to reshape our understanding of fifteenth-century religion and culture. Matthew Wranovix has written another. Focusing on the diocese of Eichstätt, this study shows how late medieval parish priests were something other than the stereotypically ignorant and decadent figures so familiar in older scholarship. Through careful reading of a wide range of sources in both manuscript and print, including unedited visitation records and the books and texts owned and used by the priests themselves, Wranovix shows how parish priests, like their lay counterparts, enjoyed broadening educational horizons; how they rose to the demands of increasing bureaucratic responsibilities placed on them by bishops and patrons; and above all how they richly embraced the fifteenth century’s culture of books, reading, and writing. Scholars of the later middle ages, the early Reformation, and the history of the book alike will find this study both useful and suggestive for future research.
— James Mixson, University of Alabama
On the surface of Matthew Wranovix’s new book is a careful local study of the book ownership of parish priests in one diocese in fifteenth-century Germany. But don’t let its modest title fool you. Beneath the surface is a broad and masterful exploration of the social position of late medieval clergy that also makes an important contribution to our understanding of fifteenth-century book culture. Anyone who still believes that decrepit clergy paved the way for the Reformation needs to read this book.
— Daniel Hobbins, University of Notre Dame