Beatrices Last Smile, Mark Gregory Pegg
Beatrices Last Smile, Mark Gregory Pegg
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Beatrice's Last Smile
A New History of the Middle Ages

Author: Mark Gregory Pegg

Narrator: Richard Burnip

Unabridged: 21 hr 12 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Recorded Books

Published: 08/15/2023


Synopsis

Mark Gregory Pegg’s history of the Middle Ages opens and closes with martyrdom, the first that of a young Roman mother in a North African amphitheater in 203 and the second a French girl burned to death beside the Seine in 1431. Both Vibia Perpetua and Jeanne la Pucelle died for their Christian beliefs, yet that for which they willingly sacrificed their lives connects and separates them. Both were divinely inspired, but one believed her deity shared the universe with other gods, and the other knew that her Creator ruled heaven and earth. Between them, across the centuries, lives were shaped by the ebb and flow of the divine and the human. Here is the story of people struggling in life and in death to understand themselves and their relationship to God.

Beatrice’s Last Smile interweaves vivid portraits of such individuals to offer a sweeping and immersive story. Some are of enduring renown—Augustine, Muhammad, Charlemagne, Heloise—and others are obscure. An Egyptian youth fighting demons in the desert as the first monk; a Briton becomes a holy man after enslavement in Ireland; an emperor in Constantinople watches as rioters torch the city; an old Syrian monk advises the English on sex; the soul of a Merovingian noble flies through the night sky to heaven; an Irish warrior surfs the waves like a dolphin as he flees the Vikings; a crusader’s boots squelch with blood on the streets of Jerusalem; a troubadour sings of love; a Muslim lord expresses admiration of the Templars; a pope proclaims that Christendom encompasses alltime and space; a barefoot Franciscan friar visits the Great Khan of the Mongols; a Parisian rabbi argues for the holiness of the Talmud; and a poet laments being alive amid the horror of the Black Death. Together, they take readers from the vastness of the Roman Empire to small communities between the Mediterranean and the North Sea, from the nomads of the Asian steppes to the triumphant Church of Latin Christendom.

Beatrice’s Last Smile offers a pulsating history of the West: the passionate belief in the old gods that yields to a cosmos shaped by one; the transition from a penitential culture to a confessional one; the universal obsession with imitating Christ. The book is named for the moment in Dante Alighieri’s Divine Comedy when his long-dead love, Beatrice, smiles one final time at Dante in paradise before turning away to look eternally upon the face of God.

Mark Gregory Pegg’s epic narrative captures a millennium within that fleeting smile, in ways that modern readers will find illuminating and haunting.

Reviews

Goodreads review by Brian

Pegg is a good storyteller; he knows how to anchor a narrative with human stories. An historian who "believe(s) in historical truth", who is - for example - ready to weigh the veracity of Islam's origins. He is equally penetrating about Christian assumptions, pointing to the fact that under Constant......more

Goodreads review by Gary

Strangely compiled book that covers the creation of Europe through a Latin Christian perspective. The author has read many representative books of the time period and summarizes them for the reader. There was a large overlap with this book and the Great Course series I’ve recently watched “Warriors,......more

Goodreads review by Clay

Sometimes it makes sense to narrow the focus -- and with a subject as sprawling as the Middle Ages, Mark Gregory Pegg made the wise choice to single out the evolving ideas of Christianity as the central pole of "Beatrice's Last Smile." Naturally, this means leaving a lot out, but the benefit is that......more