Abstract To inquire into the relevance of the apostles in whichever period of the history of the Christian Church may seem redundant. The interest in the doctores and praedicatores of the Church throughout the ages follows a cyclical movement, however, which indicates that the appropriation of the apostles as role models was more active and more specific in some periods than in others. In the age of the Carolingian reforms, roughly coinciding with the second half of the eighth and the entire ninth century, the apostles as founders and teachers of the Church constituted a central role model for those involved in the attempts at reform. The relevance of the apostles in this particular period shows itself not only in religious texts and traditions, but also and perhaps even more markedly in the closely related, even inseparable domains of politics and intellectual culture. This is revealed not just by the appearance and growth of manuscripts transmitting the apocryphal Acts of all twelve apostles to the Latin speaking world ( Virtutes apostolorum ), but also by the reception of these narratives in sources that pertain to the intellectual, political, and religious flourishing of this age.
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Els Rose
Sacris Erudiri
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Els Rose (Wed,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69e320cc40886becb653fde0 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1484/j.se.5.153404
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