Brepols Online Books Medieval Monographs Collection 2011 - bob2011mome
Collection Contents
2 results
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Vies de saints, légendes de soi
show More to view fulltext, buy and share links for:Vies de saints, légendes de soi show Less to hide fulltext, buy and share links for: Vies de saints, légendes de soiEntre 1312/1316 et 1329, le dominicain Bernard Gui rédige une collection de Vies de saints intitulée Speculum sanctorale. Située dans une histoire des légendiers dominicains, cette œuvre montre l’évolution de l’hagiographie de cet ordre. Alors que les hagiographes dominicains du XIIIe siècle répondent à des besoins ponctuels en privilégiant tantôt la sainteté locale tantôt la sainteté universelle, Bernard Gui cherche à faire la synthèse entre ces différentes voies. Il produit alors une somme hagiographique dont la composition minutieuse supporte les enjeux identitaires de la promotion des saints de l’ordre, des cultes locaux et universels.
Agnès Dubreil-Arcin a soutenu sa thèse de doctorat à Toulouse en 2007 et le présent ouvrage en est la version remaniée. Elle est membre du comité d’organisation des colloques d’histoire religieuse médiévale de Fanjeaux.
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Virtual Pilgrimages in the Convent
show More to view fulltext, buy and share links for:Virtual Pilgrimages in the Convent show Less to hide fulltext, buy and share links for: Virtual Pilgrimages in the ConventBy: Kathryn M. Rudy‘Walking in Christ’s footsteps’ was a devotional ideal in the late Middle Ages. However, few nuns and religious women had the freedom or the funding to take the journey in the flesh. Instead they invented and adjusted devotional exercises to visit the sites virtually. These exercises, largely based on real pilgrims’ accounts, made use of images and objects that helped the beholder to imagine walking alongside Christ during his torturous march to Calvary. Some provided scripts whereby votaries could animate paintings and sculptures. Others required the nun to imagine her convent as a miniature model of Jerusalem. This volume is grounded in more than a dozen texts from manuscripts written by medieval nuns and religious women, which appear here transcribed and translated for the first time, and a multiplicity of (occasionally three-dimensional) images. They attest to the ubiquity and variety of virtual pilgrimages among religious women and help to reveal the functions of certain late medieval devotional images.
Kathryn M. Rudy, Lecturer at the University of St Andrews, is an authority on Northern European illuminated manuscripts and prints. She has written about indulgences and the functions of images.
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