<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br>The Cult of the Saints played a vital role in the political life of Italian city states in the Middle Ages. The saints were a unifying force for a city, and brought prestige and power to its rulers, therefore the Cult of the Saints was bound up with the civic agenda, and worship was politically charged. Laymen - able men of affairs, orthodox and "kirchentreu", increasingly assumed responsibility for ensuring that "celestial guarantees" were obtained for a city's well-being, despite the traditionally powerful influence of the church. This book is therefore not a hagiography, but an intensely political study of an age in which religious experience was seen as part of everyday life, and in which it seemed natural to medieval politicians to involve the saints in politics.<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Author </b></p></br></br><b>Diana Webb </b>was Senior Lecturer in History at Kings College London, UK. Her previous books include <i>Patrons and Defenders: the Saints in the Italian City States</i> (1996); <i>Pilgrims and Pilgrimage in Medieval Europe</i> (1999); <i>Pilgrimage in Medieval England </i>(2000); <i>Medieval European Pilgrimage </i>(2002); and <i>Saints and Cities in Medieval Italy</i> (2006).
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