Introduction

War and Peace in the Late Middle Ages

Authors

  • Christopher M Bellitto Kean University Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/rst.27184

Keywords:

Islam, just war, Nicholas of Cusa, reform, interreligious dialogue

Abstract

Whither just war? It is a question scholars and activists have been asking with particular intensity and reappraisal in the last two generations. We turn here to the late medieval period, especially around the time when Muslim forces finally achieved in 1453 an earlier goal: the occupation of Constantinople. This fifteenth-century event, along with the decades before and after, focused the 19th biennial meeting of the American Cusanus Society and the International Seminar on Pre-Reformation Theology held at United Lutheran Seminary in  Gettysburg PA during the autumn of 2023. Three panels of papers and two workshops on texts studied war, peace, and religious violence. While participants looked closely at the life and works of Nicholas of Cusa (1401–1464), they also considered major events during the long late Middle Ages in Europe and the Middle East. The goal was to reevaluate options and actions for war and peace during this crucible moment in history with an eye toward applying historical lessons. This special issue features five articles that grew out of presentations at the 2023 conference by emerging and established scholars; the sixth is on a related topic (by this author). The journal articles in this special issue continue the prolific publication record of the American Cusanus Society, which since 1991 has published, mostly with Brill, over a dozen volumes of essays originating with papers from the Society’s Gettysburg conferences as well as the annual meetings of the Renaissance Society of America and the International Congress on Medieval Studies at Western Michigan University and Leeds. 

References

Christiansen, Drew and Carole Sargent, eds. 2023. Forbidden: Receiving Pope Francis’s Condemnation of Nuclear Weapons. Washington DC: Georgetown University Press.

———. 2020. A World Free from Nuclear Weapons. Washington DC: Georgetown University Press.

Duclow, Donald F, Rita George-Tvrtkovic, and Thomas M. Izbicki, eds. 2019. Revista Española de Filosofía medieval 26/1.

Harwood, Max. 2021. “Living Death: Imagined History and the Tarrant Manifesto.” Emotions: History, Culture, Society 5 (1): 25-50.

Jones, Chris and Madi Williams. 2020. “Pacific Perspectives: Why Study Europe’s Middle Ages in Aoteroa New Zealand?” In Making the Medieval Relevant, edited by Chris Jones, et al, 151-69. Berlin: DeGruyter.

Kwon, David Chiwon. 2023. Justice After War: Jus Post Bellum in the 21st Century. Washington DC: Georgetown University Press.

Ramsey, Paul. 1968. The Just War: Force and Political Responsibility. New York: Scribner.

Russell, Bertrand. 1959. Common Sense and Nuclear War. London: George Allen and Unwin.

Winright, Tobias and Laurie Johnston, eds. 2015. Can War Be Just in the 21st Century? Ethicists Engage the Tradition. Maryknoll NY: Orbis Books.

Downloads

Published

2024-09-12

Issue

Section

Editor Foreword

How to Cite

Bellitto, C. M. (2024). Introduction: War and Peace in the Late Middle Ages. Religious Studies and Theology, 42(2), 131–135. https://doi.org/10.1558/rst.27184