Miles Pattenden, a Research Fellow at Wolfson College, Oxford, is a historian of Early Modern Catholicism. He is the author of Pius IV and the Fall of the Carafa: Nepotism and Papal Authority in Counter-Reformation Rome (OUP, 2013) and the co-editor of several volumes, including The Spanish Presence in Sixteenth-Century Italy (2015) and The Companion to the Early Modern Cardinal (forthcoming).
...the book represents a courageous attempt to provide a concise treatment of a topic that continues to arouse the passionate interest of international scholarship. * Maria Antonietta Visceglia, Sapienza University of Rome, Catholic Historical Review * this is a most valuable work in English on broad aspects of papal history, not least in the seventeenth century, which is not particularly well covered in that language. * Oliver Logan, European History Quarterly * an important contribution to scholarship on the early modern papacy * Christopher P. Gillett, Europe Now * This new study offers far more than its title suggests. While this book explores how popes were elected in early modern Italy, it will be remembered more for its discussion of 'the problems selection by election created for the cardinals and others who invested in the papacy as an institution'....As befits such a complex and multifaceted thesis, this study's argument is very carefully positioned in relation to recent research. Anyone looking for a primer on the current historiography of the papacy would do well to read this volume ... [it] builds an interesting new world out of a more holistic interpretation of the current scholarship. This is no small task, but he does it with patience and precision, and to the benefit of the larger field. * Jennifer Mara Desilva, Renaissance and Reformation * fascinating, and extremely well-researched ... It is a study of the making of popes that no future historian of the papal office can afford to ignore. * Michael J. Walsh, Irish Theological Quarterly * an amazing book, which will be an essential tool for serious scholarship on the papacy for many years to come. * Anthony F. D'Elia, History *