000 01724cam a2200217 4500500
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041 _afre
042 _adc
100 1 0 _aChiama, Anne
_eauthor
245 0 0 _aCompetition or joint management? Death, a key issue in relations between the secular Church and regular communities (Provence, twelfth-fourteenth centuries)
260 _c2019.
500 _a58
520 _aThe increasing power of military and mendicant orders in the three Provençal ecclesiastical provinces from the thirteenth century onwards is traditionally portrayed as a blow to the influence of the secular Church, prelates, and cathedral chapters, occurring within complex and changing local and regional geopolitical contexts. Various examples taken from a corpus of ecclesiastical sources that are still largely unpublished show that relations between the religious communities were often fractious. This often resulted in conflicts—sometimes lengthy ones—, as well as arbitrations, between the different elements of the Provençal clergy regarding the sharing of funeral rights between each community, the distribution of the revenue associated with the administration of death, and even the process of managing the dead and celebrating their memory. Through the lens of funeral operations, we examine this notion of competition and even rivalry between the communities.
690 _aGrasse
690 _aProvençal dioceses
690 _afuneral rights
690 _aconflicts
690 _amanagement of death
786 0 _nLe Moyen Age | Volume CXXIV | 3 | 2019-10-29 | p. 721-732 | 0027-2841
856 4 1 _uhttps://shs.cairn.info/journal-le-moyen-age-2018-3-page-721?lang=en&redirect-ssocas=7080
999 _c571453
_d571453