Edward Murray Peters (born 21 May 1936) is an emeritus professor of
University of Pennsylvania who specialized in the religious and political history of early Europe.
He has done in-depth research regarding heresy, repression and the limits and treatment of intellectual inquiry in the low Middle Ages. He has also done deep research on historiography criticising, improving and reviewing the methods that traditional historiography has applied to the low medieval time period.[1][2]
Heresy and Authority in Medieval Europe, University of California Press, 1980[8]
The Magician, the Witch, and the Law, University of Pennsylvania Press, 1978[9]
Monks, Bishops and Pagans: Christian Culture in Gaul and Italy, 500–700. University of Pennsylvania Press, 1975.[10]
Christian Society and the
Crusades, 1198-1229: Sources in Translation, including "The Capture of Damietta" by Oliver of Paderborn, University of Pennsylvania Press, 1971[11]
References
^McGaha, Michael (1989). «Review of Inquisition». Journal of the American Academy of Religion 57 (2): 424-427
^University of Pennsylvania. Edward Peters. Henry Charles Lea Professor of History Emeritus
^Peters, Edward (2004). Europe and the Middle Ages . Pearson Prentice Hall.
ISBN9780130967725.
^Peters, Edward (1998). The First Crusade: "The Chronicle of Fulcher of Chartres" and Other Source Materials. University of Pennsylvania Press.
ISBN0812216563.
^Tomás y Valiente, Francisco (1987). «Review of Torture». The Journal of Modern History 59 (4): 804-806.
^MacKay, Angus (1990). «Review of Historia de la Inquisición en España y America... ; Inquisition». The Journal of Modern History 62 (2): 411-414.
^Peters, Edward (1980). Heresy and Authority in Medieval Europe. University of Pennsylvania Press.
ISBN0812211030.
^Peters, Edward (1971). Christian Society and the Crusades, 1198-1229: Sources in Translation, Including "The Capture of Damietta" by Oliver of Paderborn . University of Pennsylvania Press.
ISBN0812210247