From the disciple Peter to the reigning Benedict, accomplished British historian Norwich (The Middle Sea: A History of the Mediterranean, 2006, etc.) fashions a spirited, concise chronicle of the accomplishments of the most noteworthy popes.
The author is comfortable navigating this vast terrain, which is  essentially the history of Christianity—and he even manages to make  theĆ numbing litany of events palatable. Moreover, Norwich is not above  questioning historical interpretation, such as over the controversy over  John Paul I's death in 1978—was he murdered? With Jesus' pronouncement  to his disciple Simon, that "Thou art Peter, and on this rock I will  build my church," the leaders of the fledgling Christian church began to  organize themselves. Norwich doesn't dwell on St. Paul, but subsequent  church elders in the first two centuries CE were Levantines—centered in  the Greek-speaking world of the eastern Mediterranean—working to  establish churches despite Roman persecution and mostly in Asia. The  emperor Constantine's adoption of Christianity in the fourth century,  and construction of a basilica dedicated to St. Peter on the Vatican  Hill, boosted Christianity's profile enormously. However, marauding  hordes laid waste to Rome over the centuries, and early popes had to  solidify doctrine and orthodoxy, notably in the time of Gregory the  Great and Leo II (who crowned Charlemagne). Norwich lingers over the  schism between the Western and Eastern churches, the leaders of the  Crusades, the seven popes who resided in Avignon, the rebuilding of the  Roman Church during the Renaissance beginning under Nicholas V, the  "monsters" (Alexander, Julius), the patrons of the arts (Leo X) and the  rulers during the Counter-Reformation, who checked the tide of  Protestantism. The author gracefully navigates through the challenges of  the Age of Reason, revolution, the Risorgimento and the World Wars, examining the papal responses—e.g., Pius XII's silence in the face of the persecution of the Jews.
Norwich doesn't skirt controversies, ancient and present, in this broad, clear-eyed assessment. - Kirkus Reviews (Check Catalog)
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