http://www.amazon.com/Kings-Two-Bodies-Ernst-Kantorowicz/dp/0691017042
The
King's Two Bodies by Ernst
Kantorowicz
In
1957 Ernst Kantorowicz published a book that would be the guide for generations
of scholars through the arcane mysteries of medieval political theology. In The King's Two Bodies, Kantorowicz traces the historical
problem posed by the "King's two bodies"--the body politic and the
body natural--back to the Middle Ages and demonstrates, by placing the concept
in its proper setting of medieval thought and political theory, how the
early-modern Western monarchies gradually began to develop a "political
theology."
The
king's natural body has physical attributes, suffers, and dies, naturally, as
do all humans; but the king's other body, the spiritual body, transcends the
earthly and serves as a symbol of his office as majesty with the divine right
to rule. The notion of the two bodies allowed for the continuity of monarchy
even when the monarch died, as summed up in the formulation "The king is
dead. Long live the king."
Bringing
together liturgical works, images, and polemical material, The King's Two
Bodies explores the long Christian past behind this "political theology."
It provides a subtle history of how commonwealths developed symbolic means for
establishing their sovereignty and, with such means, began to establish early
forms of the nation-state.
Kantorowicz
fled Nazi Germany in 1938, after refusing to sign a Nazi loyalty oath, and
settled in the United States. While teaching at the University of California,
Berkeley, he once again refused to sign an oath of allegiance, this one
designed to identify Communist Party sympathizers. He resigned as a result of the
controversy and moved to the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, where
he remained for the rest of his life, and where he wrote The King's Two Bodies.