Introduction
Key forces
- When the Western Roman Empire collapsed, bishops and monastic communities stepped into the administrative vacuum, giving the Church a durability that no other institution matched.
- Papal authority developed gradually through claims, confrontations, and compromises, reaching its peak under Innocent III in the early thirteenth century.
- Monasticism, anchored by the Rule of Saint Benedict, provided the Church with a network of communities that shaped education, agriculture, and culture across medieval Europe.
- The Avignon papacy exposed the limits of the Church's independence, beginning a crisis of legitimacy that would eventually lead to the reformations of the sixteenth century.

















