Excommunication in Thirteenth-Century England
Communities, Politics, and Publicity
Felicity Hill
Table of Contents
Introduction
PART I: INDIVIDUALS
1. The Spiritual Effects of Excommunication: Instilling Fear
2. Belief, Fear, and Conscience
PART II: COMMUNITIES
3. Exclusion from the Community of the Faithful
4. Apathy, Rejection, and Divided Loyalties
PART III: PUBLICITY
5. Publicity, Reputation, and Scandal
6. Violence, Excommunication, and Dispute Settlement: Thame, 1292-1294
7. Ecclesiastical Broadcasting in the Thirteenth Century: The Origins of the Great
Conclusion
APPENDIX I: IPSO FACTO SENTENCES TO BE REGULARLY PRONOUNCED IN THIRTEENTH-CENTURY ENGLAND
APPENDIX II: WILLIAM OF PAGULA'S LIST OF IPSO FACTO SENTENCES (OCULIS SACERDOTIS, C. 1320)