Papacy and Eastern Christian Traditions Working Group: Christopher Schabel, "The Greeks are Heretics! The Dominican Reign of Terror in the Early Fifteenth Century."

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Location: Hesburgh Library, 715J Medieval Institute (View on map )

As the first meeting of the semester for the working group, the Papacy and Eastern Christian Traditions, Prof. Christopher Schabel will join us for an in-person talk entitled "The Greeks are Heretics! The Dominican Reign of Terror in the Early Fifteenth Century." Prof. Schabel is an associate researcher in the Department of History and Archeology at the University of Cyprus and a director of research at the French National Center for Scientific Research. The abstract for his talk is included below.

Please RSVP at this link if you are able, in order to let us know how many people to expect. Edith Lagarde (elagarde@nd.edu) will send out a follow-up email closer to the date with zoom info for those who wish to join online.


Abstract provided by Prof. Schabel: Putin’s Russia frequently taps into a deep Orthodox current of resentment against the West, which is commonly traced back to 1054 or even to Photios. This obviously adds to the significance of the activities of such entities as the Notre Dame working group The Papacy and Eastern Christian Traditions and the database Repertorium Auctorum Polemicorum. One crucial phase in this long history is the prelude to the Councils of Basel and Florence, in which the Dominicans were the dominant Western participants. Dominican university theologians never cared much for the Greeks, but this Echthrohellenic attitude was not shared by most other regulars and seculars in the medieval faculties of theology. I will argue that the earlier Dominican theologians’ hard line against the Greeks became even harder among the Dominican polemicists in the decades before the councils. This is clear in the writings of the inquisitor Philip of Pera from the late 1350s and, more extremely, in two other polemical works inspired by Philip and written in the early fifteenth century. It was in this atmosphere that the Dominicans managed to take over control of Western doctrinal discussions at Florence, helping doom the union agreement that was signed in 1439.

 

Originally published at historyofphilosophy.nd.edu.