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Benedict XV. A pope in the world of the ‘useless slaughter’ (1914–1918). Edited by Giovanni Cavognini and Giulia Grossi and directed by Alberto Melloni. 2 vols. Pp. 852 + 853–1707. Turnhout: Brepols, 2020. €185. 978 2 503 58287 0; 978 2 503 58288 7

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  30 March 2022

Michael J. Walsh*
Affiliation:
Heythrop College, London
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Abstract

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Reviews
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Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2022

The content of these handsomely produced volumes is almost identical with the Italian edition (rev. this Journal lxx [2019], 673–5), except that the ninety essays, divided into four not particularly helpful sections, are now presented in English regardless of the language – rarely English – in which they were originally written. While this may encourage a slightly wider diffusion of this collection, it is difficult to imagine that many scholars who are studying this no longer ‘unknown pope’ will not have at least a reading knowledge of the languages in which the text was originally composed. The high production standard of the original has been maintained, though the essays are no longer in double column, there is no slip case, the binding is now green rather than red and on the front of each volume there is a somewhat frightening picture depicting, one presumes, the ‘useless slaughter’ of which Benedict xv spoke. There is one welcome change: abstracts of the essays have been appended at the end of the second volume. There are some minor quibbles with both editions. For instance, and as I remarked in the original review, from reading the chapter entitled ‘Churches in war: faith under fire’ one might be forgiven for thinking that Great Britain had not taken part in World War I, or that much has been written on the impact of that war on the Churches in Britain. And one might have hoped that the appearance of a new edition would have encouraged the publishers to print a more thorough index: that in the book is of names only. None the less, as the original review concluded, for those concerned not just with papal history but also with ecumenism, diplomacy and the Catholic Church's relations with Judaism, these two volumes are a rich resource.