Chapter Atto da Pistoia, monaco e abate maggiore dell’Ordine benedettino vallombrosano. Le attuali prospettive della storiografia
Abstract
Atto da Pistoia (last decades of the eleventh century-1153), abbot general of the Benedictine Vallombrosan monks and bishop of Pistoia, a local saint recognised as such from the seventeenth century onwards, was a churchman and hagiographer, a contemplative man, and an active pastor in the religious and political life of his time. He is undoubtedly one of the most interesting and perhaps least known figures of the twelfth century. The paper highlights his characteristics as a man of government, above all as the leader of the Vallombrosan Order, whose institutional structures, hagiographic memory and territorial diffusion in Central-Northern Italy and Sardinia he consolidated, taking into account the most recent historiographical investigations on the personage and the perspectives of interpretation opened up by research on Vallombrosan monasticism.
Keywords
Vallombrosan monasticism; monks-bishops relationship in the twelfth century; relations between the papacy and regular orders; Pope Innocent II; the cult of St James the GreaterDOI
10.36253/979-12-215-0335-7.05ISBN
9791221503357, 9791221503357Publisher
Firenze University PressPublisher website
https://www.fupress.com/Publication date and place
Florence, 2024Series
Fragmentaria. Studi di storia culturale e antropologia religiosa, 8Classification
General and world history