| HISTORICKÝ ČASOPIS |
3/2025 |
| VEDECKÝ ČASOPIS O DEJINÁCH SLOVENSKA A STREDNEJ EURÓPY |
| VEDECKÝ ČASOPIS O DEJINÁCH SLOVENSKA A
STREDNEJ EURÓPY
VYDÁVA HISTORICKÝ ÚSTAV SLOVENSKEJ AKADÉMIE VIED, V. V. I. ISSN 0018-2575 (print) ISSN 2585-9099 (online) EV 3084/09 Všetky obsahy sú čitateľom voľne dostupné podľa licencie Creative Commons CC BY 4.0. Indexovanie a abstraktovanie: Web of Science Core Collection: Arts & Humanities Citation Index Additional Web of Science Indexes: Current Contents Arts & Humanities Scopus CEEOL CEJSH EBSCO Historical Abstracts ESF (HUM) ERIH plus |
AKTUÁLNE ČÍSLO | REDAKCIA | POKYNY PRE AUTOROV | ARCHÍV | PREDPLATNÉ | O ČASOPISE | PUBLIKAČNÁ ETIKA | VÝZVY Rulers as Milites Christi on the Verge of the Eleventh and Twelfth Centuries: Reception of Religious Patterns and Political Conceptions on the Edge of the Medieval Latin West. Historický časopis, 2025, 73, 3, pp. 459-487, Bratislava. Abstract: This article examines the adoption and adaptation of the miles Christi (soldier of Christ) ideal in Central Europe during the eleventh and twelfth centuries, a pivotal era in the formation of Christianized monarchies in Hungary, Poland, and Bohemia. The study investigates how spiritual warfare, originally rooted in monastic and ascetic traditions, was gradually reinterpreted and appropriated by secular elites—particularly rulers— who were increasingly portrayed as Christian warriors in defending both faith and polity. Drawing on a wide range of narrative, normative, and hagiographic sources, the following pages trace the ideological development of miles Christi through the lives and legacies of key figures such as King Stephen I of Hungary, Bolesław III of Poland, and other Central European rulers and saints, arguing that the concept functioned not merely as a rhetorical embellishment, but as a foundational component of political legitimacy, royal sanctity, and dynastic identity. The research here underscores the heuristic value of spiritual and martial metaphors in medieval historiography and explores how these ideals influenced social order, the self-representation of elites, and ecclesiastical alignments in the region. Ultimately, the article demonstrates that the miles Christi ideal was central to the sacralization of kingship and the integration of Central European realms into the Latin Christian world. Keywords: Medieval Central Europe. Rulers. Miles Christi. Arpadian Hungary. King Stephen of Hungary. Cultural patterns. Social order. DOI: https://doi.org/10.31577/histcaso.2025.73.3.2
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