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1882
Volume 8, Issue 1
  • ISSN: 2034-3515
  • E-ISSN: 2034-3523

Abstract

Abstract

A twelfth-century chapter book made for the nuns of Admont (MS Admont 567) contains an unstudied line-drawing depicting a monk ascending a ladder next to a list of vices crowned with the word ‘curiositas’ (curiosity). This article uncovers the textual source for this list of vices in Bernard of Clairvaux’s treatise (), written in the 1120s, and explores the history of curiosity as a sinful quality in monastic thought between the fourth and twelfth centuries. It shows that, despite the absence of inquisitiveness as a cause for concern in the , early medieval monks repeatedly expressed dire warnings about curiosity as a dangerous and potentially lethal pursuit in cloistered communities, but none more so than the Cistercians, who in the twelfth century deployed the accusation of curiosity to great effect against their rivals, the Cluniacs. It concludes by situating the line-drawing of the ascending monk in the context of the threat posed by curiosity in the double monastery of twelfth-century Admont, where the potential for improper interaction between male and female religious was a source of considerable anxiety.

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2019-01-01
2025-12-06

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