The Medieval Idea of Legitimacy and the King’s Two Bodies
The Medieval Idea of Legitimacy and the King’s Two Bodies
Author(s): Lorena StuparuSubject(s): History
Published by: Trivent Publishing
Keywords: king; state; mystical body; political body; symbolism of duality; sacred legitimacy;
Summary/Abstract: Based on Ernst Kantorowicz’s work The King’s Two Bodies, this paper intends to show that the idea of the sacred nature of political power, of the legitimacy which transcends the secular institutions is still alive in collective mentality. Analyzing the symbolism of the duality of the king’s body (divine and human), Ernst Kantorowicz argues that the ideological foundations of the modern state are founded on in the idea that the kingdom is a mystical body whose head is the king – this is possible through the divine hypostasis of his body. According to the fundamental Christian ideology of kingship, in the first centuries of the Middle Ages, the king is human by nature and divine by grace. Also according to medieval mentality, the human side of the king embodies a veritable quantity of opposite characteristics – the mystery of the modern state can be interpreted on the level of a political philosophy which does not exclude the theological dimension of the secular society.
Journal: Philosophy, communication, media sciences
- Issue Year: 1/2015
- Issue No: 1
- Page Range: 72-81
- Page Count: 10
- Language: English