TY - GEN AB - Photios’s contribution to the "Introduction to the law" is a "proem" and two titles on secular and religious duties which interpret the power of the patriarch as superior to that of the emperor. The "Introduction to the law" was abrogated after its promulgation. Hincmar’s "Collection concerning Churches and Chapels" also illustrates an ecclesiastical attempt to legally support the Church. I examine two 'Eastern' and two 'Western' sources: in each case, the first source represents a ninth-century attempt by an ecclesiastic to insert himself into affairs of state, the second source is an eleventh-century text shedding light on the reception of these ideas. Considering the study’s limits, I do not impose theoretical frameworks onto the sources and work with a broad notion of 'legal'. A situational model explores the question of institution and reveals that the motivation behind the definition of religious and political duties was in both ninth-century initiatives not unification in law. AU - Mösch, Sophia DA - 2022 DO - 10.17879/12099533424 KW - weltliche und religiöse Zuständigkeiten KW - Institutionalisierung KW - Rezeption KW - Photios I. KW - Hinkmar von Reims KW - religious and secular duties KW - institution KW - reception KW - Photios I of Constantinople KW - Hincmar of Reims LA - eng PY - 2022 TI - Two Ninth-Century Ecclesiastical Initiatives to Legally Define Religious and Secular Duties: Photios I of Constantinople’s Εἰσαγωγὴ τοῦ νόμου and Hincmar of Reims’s Collectio de ecclesiis et capellis UR - https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:hbz:6-12099533936 Y2 - 2024-11-21T23:32:59 ER -