scholarly journals Tres Thomae: Tomás Moro según Alonso de Villegas, Pedro de Ribadeneyra y Fernando de Herrera

2021 ◽  
Vol 73 (147) ◽  
pp. 163-173
Author(s):  
Víctor Lillo Castañ

En el presente trabajo se analizan tres esbozos biográficos sobre Tomás Moro escritos, respectivamente, por Alonso de Villegas, en la Tercera parte del Flos Sanctorum (1588); Pedro de Ribadeneyra, en la Historia ecclesiástica del scisma del reino de Inglaterra (1588-1595); y Fernando de Herrera, en su Tomás Moro (1592). En la primera parte del trabajo se identifican las fuentes que tuvieron a su alcance Villegas, Ribadeneyra y Herrera y, a continuación, se estudian individualmente las biografías de Tomás Moro de cada uno de ellos con la finalidad de dar cuenta de las notables diferencias que las separan. Como defendemos aquí, dichas diferencias se deben, en parte, a las distintas fuentes empleadas por estos escritores, pero también al tenso clima de controversia religiosa presente en la Europa de la segunda mitad del S. XVI.

2021 ◽  
pp. 1-8
Author(s):  
Mattias Gassman

Abstract A passage in Macarius Magnes’ Apocriticus (2,14 Volp) has recently been adduced to support the long-controverted hypothesis that a senatus consultum was issued against the Christians in the year 35. The note reviews the evidence and finds it wanting. Of the texts usually adduced, Tertullian, Apologeticum 5,1–3 does not describe a senatus consultum, Eusebius, Historia ecclesiastica 5,21,4 and the Greek and Armenian Acta Apollonii say nothing about Tiberius, and Jerome, Chronicon 35–36 post Christum appears to be an elaboration from Tertullian. The Macarian passage, in turn, refers to a “common judgment” and describes the condemnation of Christians by all respectable persons, especially the senatus populusque Romanus. It does not describe the promulgation of a formal senatus consultum.


Author(s):  
John Watkins

This chapter focuses on interdynastic marriage in Roman successor states beyond the Alps, the kingdoms of the Merovingian Franks and the Anglo-Saxons during the northern European conversions to Christianity. It considers religious conversion stories that document the expansion of a Latin-based, premodern diplomatic society, beginning with a discussion of Historiae, Gregory of Tours's account of the Burgundian princess Clothilde's conversion of her Frankish husband, Clovis, and its place in the history of marriage diplomacy. The chapter proceeds by analyzing Bede's Historia ecclesiastica, which suggests that clerics may have supplanted royal women as actors in the expansion of diplomatic society after the great conversions. Gregory of Tours and Bede both advocated interdynastic marriage as a vehicle for the Christianization of Europe. Clerical marriage was a regular feature of diocesan life in sixth-century Francia, and Gregory frequently refers to the wives of priests and of his brother bishops.


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