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Pope Joan
  

Pope Joan (Paperback)

by Lawrence Durrell (Author)
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (8 customer reviews)

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First published in the 1950s, this modern masterpiece is Lawrence Durrell's translation and adaptation of Emmanuel Royidis's classic Papissa Joanna--the story of history's only female pope. The story's source is a ninth-century legend: a girl disguised as a monk makes her way from Greece to Rome, is elevated to the throne of St. Peter, and rules over Christendom for a time as Pope John VIII. --This text refers to an alternate Paperback edition.

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Comic Masterpiece Brilliantly Translated and Adapted, Jan 26 2001
By A Customer
This review is from: Pope Joan (Paperback)
"Pope Joan" or "Papissa Joanna" was originally written and published in 1886 by the Greek author Emmanuel Royidis. The book tells the story of Pope John VIII, the purported female Pope who ruled Christendom for a period of two years, five months and four days in the middle of the ninth century. "Pope Joan" is a comic masterpiece of irreverence towards the medieval Church and the accepted pieties of its revisionist historians. Indeed, insofar as Royidis continued to propagate the legend of Pope Joan, to claim that the work contained only "facts and events proved beyond discussion", the text itself ingeniously combines history and legend, as well as brilliant wit, to subvert claims of authority. As Lawrence Durrell notes in his Preface to his brilliant English translation and adaptation, "the authorities of the Orthodox Church were horrified by what seemed to them to be the impious irony of its author-and no less by the gallery of maggot-ridden church fathers which he described so lovingly." Not suprisingly, Royidis was excommunicated from the Orthodox Church and his book was banned in Greece.

The first three parts of "Pope Joan" tell the story of Joanna prior to her arrival in Rome, before she became an historical personage. Set in the ninth century, the narrative captures the European world in disarray after the death of Charlemagne, captures a time when civilization was tenuous and the Church provided one of the few viable social structures. It is this part of the narrative that is unambiguously fictional, the imagined story of Joanna's life in Germany and then in Greece. After her parents die, Joanna clandestinely enters a monastery where she meets the monk Frumentius and develops a romantic relationship with him. When her true sexual identity is surmised, Joanna and Frumentius flee one monastery and then another, eventually ending up in Greece. Joanna soon becomes tired of her romance and her intellectual brilliance attracts the attention of Church leaders throughout Greece. She leaves Frumentius and departs alone for Rome, where the legend, some say the history, of Pope Joan begins. She becomes a papal secretary renowned for her intellect and, when Pope Leo IV dies, she ascends to the papacy. Pope Joan becomes pregnant and dies after giving birth during a procession through the streets of Rome.

While the general outline of the narrative may seem only mildly interesting, the brilliant translation and prose of Lawrence Durrell, together with the biting, irreverent wit of Royidis, make "Pope Joan" an unsurpassed work of comic genius. A flavor for this wit and style can be found in a short passage describing what ensued after Pope Joan gave birth: "Great was the consternation when a premature infant was produced from among the voluminous folds of the papal vestments . . . Some hierarchs who were profoundly devoted to the Holy See sought to save the situation and change horror and disgust to amazement by crying out 'A miracle! A miracle!' They bellowed loudly calling the faithful to kneel and worship. But in vain. Such a miracle was unheard of; and indeed would have been a singular contribution to the annals of Christian thaumaturgy which, while it borrowed many a prodigy from the pagans, had not yet reached the point where it could represent any male saint as pregnant and bringing forth a child."

While the apologist position has consistently denied the historicity of Pope Joan, there is at least some suggestion that the legend is indeed a fact. As Durrell suggests in his Preface, one telling point is that Platina includes a biography of Pope John VIII in his "Lives of the Popes". And no less an authority than The Catholic Encyclopedia states that Platina's "Lives of the Popes" is "a work of no small merit, for it is the first systematic handbook of papal history." Historical disputation aside, however, "Pope Joan" stands as a brilliant work of comic writing and masterful translation, a masterpiece of Royidis and Durrell.

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars The story is false, Nov 15 1997
By A Customer
This review is from: Pope Joan (Paperback)
'Pope Joan' supposedly reigned between the pontificates of LeoIV and BenedictIII. In fact, there was no significant gap between these popes, that is, the often-cited 25 mos did not occur. 'Pope Joan' was the invention of Stephen of Bourbon, a 13th century Dominican friar. At this time in history, friars who espoused poverty were in conflict with the opulence of the papacy. Evidently, what Stephen composed was a piece of anti-papist propaganda. In his version, the mythical female pope had no name, and was elected in about 1100. The version we have today was created by various accretions and mutations, and grew so elaborate that it was even accepted by the Council of Constance in 1415. The story is found in the works of Boccaccio and Petrarch, and in various chronicles, but that does not make it true. Ironically, it was a Calvinist, David Blondel, who debunked the myth in a work of 1647 entitled 'Familiar Enlightenment of the Question: Whether a Woman Had Been Seated on the Papal Throne in Rome'. As always, truth is infinitely more interesting than fiction. In the early tenth century, two women of the house of Theophylact, Theodora and her daughter Marozia, wielded such influence in Rome that they were able to place whomever they pleased on the papal throne. Their exploits are related scandalously by Luitprand of Cremona, whose works have not yet been translated into English. The power of these women probably stimulated the creation of the Pope Joan myth.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Droll and Delightful, Jun 6 2004
This review is from: Pope Joan (Paperback)
This is one of the funniest books I have ever read. It is well crafted and expertly translated, the final product is rich, dense, and wonderfully funny writing that requires and rewards the full attention of the reader.

Don't read this book if you are looking for the history of Pope Joan, you won't find it here - this book is historical fiction, and Royidis weaves the myth - legend - facts - whatever about the story of a female pope into a satirical 9th century romp through Christendom, from England to Athens and finally to Rome. Royidis's backdrop is tribal Europe, Europe before modern science, where Christianity was just another form of supersitition having to compete with all sorts of paganism and witchery for the hearts and minds of the less than faithful.

Christianity in general and Catholicism in particular has always had a problem with human sexuality and female sexuality in particular, and Royidis uses the story of Joan to poke all sorts of fun and ribaldry at Catholicism and Christianity - and unctuous hypocritical Catholic and Christian leaders. It is almost like shooting fish in a barrel, but Royidis manages to do it imaginatively each and every time. His observations of the 9th century from the 19th century resonate well here in the 21st, it seems we are as slave to superstition and hypocrisy as our forebearers were.

This is a fun to read, funny book, about a bellylaugh per page. I recommend highly!

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Most recent customer reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars This is the Pope Joan book you should buy, not the Cross one
People that buy the Cross version are buying the wrong book. Look instead to the beautifully written, gleefully and irreverently funny version by Emmanuel Rhodes, written over a... Read more
Published on Oct 27 1999

5.0 out of 5 stars Literate debauchery is the work of a genius...
I enjoyed Cross's version of this story, especially the historical detours into the state of law and medicine in the Dark Ages. Read more
Published on Jul 8 1999

5.0 out of 5 stars A fun, satirical read
I purchased this book at the same time that I purchased Donna Woolfolk Cross's book. For a long time I didn't read it, thinking it would be too dry and difficult, being a... Read more
Published on May 27 1998

5.0 out of 5 stars Highly Enjoyable
Forget the veracity of the events in question...this book is beautifully written, extremely thoughtful, provocative and quite humorous (which is why Mr. Read more
Published on Jan 21 1998

5.0 out of 5 stars Believable fiction of an astounding tale.
For many centuries, the tale of the 9th century Pope, John VIII, who was secretly a woman has been passed by word-of-mouth throughout Western Europe's common classes, secretly... Read more
Published on Nov 5 1997

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