"[T]he wide-ranging view of the Church and violence in medieval times has produced ... an important discussion with the picture that emerges based on the extensive, and recently fast-accreting, literature."âHalina Manikowska, Acta Poloniae Historica 112 (2015)"This splendid set of essays, by an international group of scholars specialized in a wide range of times and places comprising medieval Europe, concerns medieval violence, affecting âthe Churchâ. In well-designed thematic sections, the book considers violence perpetrated against and by clerics, affecting their surrounding world, and as a subject of contemporary ideas perceptions. The result contributes to recent debates on the image, representation, and reality of medieval violence."âPiotr GĂłrecki, University of California, Riverside"These discussions show tremendous range: from representations of fictive violence in texts to actual violence on the ground to normative discussions of violence in the law. The sources plumbed exhibit a similar variety, from the literary â even the Carmina Burana! â to the soberest of record sources. The kind of violence also varies, from that against persons to that against property. Some essays focus on the roots of violence while others focus on responses to it. Specialistsâ queries regarding this or that piece will not obviate the richness of this collection. That international character helps make possible another virtue: the volumeâs unusual geographic range, bringing together western and eastern Europe. That strength is worth the price."âMichael Burger, Dean of the School of Liberal Arts at Auburn University at Montgomery"The subject matter ranges in date from the sixth to the fifteenth century and covers almost all of Europe [...] The introduction also includes useful brief summaries of each of the articles. Together they throw light on many different aspects of violence in the Middle Ages. [...] As a whole ... this volume makes a useful and interesting contribution to an important subject."âGiles Constable, Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton; Journal of Ecclesiastical History, 67:2 (2016)"Some very interesting discussions emerge from this collection of 19 texts, which has been edited by RadosĹaw Kotecki and Jacek Maciejewski. [...] This certainly brings some interesting new dimensions to the problem for the next phase of the 'Ecclesia et Violentia' project."âBeata JabĹonowska, University of Warsaw; PrzeglÄ d Historyczny, 106:4 (2015)