Papal Diplomacy in the Modern Age
By (Author) Peter Kent
By (author) John Francis Pollard
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
20th June 1994
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Diplomacy
General and world history
327.20945634
Hardback
302
Width 156mm, Height 235mm
624g
This volume brings together some of the leading scholars of Vatican history to examine papal diplomacy in the 19th and 20th centuries. Essays consider the role of the Vatican in the major events of the modern era (the unification of Italy, World Wars I and II, the Holocaust, the war in Vietnam, the Nicaraguan revolution). Other essays examine the way in which the Papacy conducts its relations with secular states, specifically addressing its relationship with Ireland, Canada, the United States, and Yugoslavia. And three essays consider the place of the Vatican in the politics of the contemporary Middle East. This important work provides a sense of the complex nature of the Papacy's involvement in the political and diplomatic issues of the modern world.
The book is a good introduction to the subject.-Perspectives on Political Science
This book is not only interesting reading--it provides the details of an almost forgotten aspect of international relations forged by the only religiously oriented entity currently enjoying legal capacity as an international person. It provides a useful analysis of a "State" without a military arm, occupying a microscopic territory on a world map filled with powerful States, and at a time when many commentators fear that religious fundamentalism may be a potential replacement for conflicts suppressed during the Cold War.-American Society of International Law
The book is a good introduction to the subject.Perspectives on Political Science
"The book is a good introduction to the subject."-Perspectives on Political Science
"This book is not only interesting reading--it provides the details of an almost forgotten aspect of international relations forged by the only religiously oriented entity currently enjoying legal capacity as an international person. It provides a useful analysis of a "State" without a military arm, occupying a microscopic territory on a world map filled with powerful States, and at a time when many commentators fear that religious fundamentalism may be a potential replacement for conflicts suppressed during the Cold War."-American Society of International Law
PETER C. KENT is Professor of History and Dean of Arts at the University if New Brunswick in Canada. He is the author of The Pope and the Duce (1981). JOHN F. POLLARD is Professor and Department Head of History at Anglia Polytechnic University in England. He is the author of The Vatican and Italian Fascism, 1929-32 (1985).