Hagiography and the History of Latin Christendom, 500–1500: Reading Medieval Sources, cartea 4
Samantha Kahn Herricken Limba Engleză Hardback – 18 dec 2019
Contributors are Ellen Arnold, Helen Birkett, Edina Bozoky, Emma Campbell, Adrian Cornell du Houx, David Defries, Albrecht Diem, Cynthia Hahn, Samantha Kahn Herrick, J.K. Kitchen, Jamie Kreiner, Klaus Krönert, Mathew Kuefler, Katherine J. Lewis, Giovanni Paolo Maggioni, Charles Mériaux, Paul Oldfield, Sara Ritchey, Catherine Saucier, Laura Ackerman Smoller, and Ineke van ‘t Spijker.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9789004417267
ISBN-10: 9004417265
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0.82 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Seria Reading Medieval Sources
ISBN-10: 9004417265
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0.82 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Seria Reading Medieval Sources
Cuprins
Acknowledgments
List of Illustrations
List of Abbreviations
Notes on Contributors
Introduction
Samantha Kahn Herrick
Part 1
Creating and Transmitting Texts
1 Constructing the Text: a Comparative Study of Two Saints’ Lives Written c.1200
Helen Birkett
2 From “Real Life” to Saint’s Life: Biography and Hagiography in the Vitae of Bernardino of Siena and Vincent Ferrer
Laura Ackerman Smoller
3 Understanding Pictorial Hagiography (with Comments on the Illustrated Life of Wandrille)
Cynthia Hahn
4 Saints’ Lives on the Move: the Circulation of Apostolic Legends
Samantha Kahn Herrick
5 Thirteenth-Century Legendae Novae and the Preaching Orders: a Communication System
Giovanni Paolo Maggioni
Part 2
Constructing Religious Life, History and the Self
6 Vita Vel Regula: Multifunctional Hagiography in the Early Middle Ages
Albrecht Diem
7 Bishops, Monks and Priests: Defining Religious Institutions by Writing and Rewriting Saints’ Lives (Francia, 6th–11th centuries)
Charles Mériaux
8 Singing the Lives of the Saints: Hagiographical-Historical Intersections in Music and Worship
Catherine Saucier
9 “Impressed by Their Stamp”: Hagiography and the Cultivation of the Self
Ineke van ’t Spijker
Part 3
Power and Violence
10 Gaul’s Insiders: Hagiography and Entitlement
Jamie Kreiner
11 St Gerald of Aurillac, Sex and Violence in Medieval Hagiography
Mathew Kuefler
12 The Unconvincing Martyrdom of William Longsword, Norman Count of Rouen (r. 928–42)
David Defries
13 Hagiography, Relics and Secular Politics in Western Europe 6th–13th Centuries
Edina Bozóky
Part 4/b>
Urban Life and the Natural World
14 Hagiography and Inter-Urban Rivalry: the Vita of St Eucharius, First Bishop of Trier, and Its Use in “Political” Quarrels during the Tenth Century
Klaus Krönert
15 Hagiography and Urban Life: Evidence from Southern Italy
Paul Oldfield
16 Hagiography and the Exotic: “Foreign Saints” in High Medieval Lucca
Adrian Cornell du Houx
17 Environmental History and Hagiography
Ellen Arnold
Part 5/b>
Gender, Health and Beauty
18 Hagiography, Gender, and the Power of Social Norms
Emma Campbell
19 A King, Not a Servant: the Prose Life of St Katherine of Alexandria and Ideologies of Masculinity in Late Medieval England
Katherine J. Lewis
20 Health, Healing, and Salvation: Hagiography as a Source for Medieval Healthcare
Sara Ritchey
21 The Beautiful Dead: Materiality, Resurrection and the Aesthetics of Holy Corpses
J.K. Kitchen
Hagiography Index
List of Illustrations
List of Abbreviations
Notes on Contributors
Introduction
Samantha Kahn Herrick
Part 1
Creating and Transmitting Texts
1 Constructing the Text: a Comparative Study of Two Saints’ Lives Written c.1200
Helen Birkett
2 From “Real Life” to Saint’s Life: Biography and Hagiography in the Vitae of Bernardino of Siena and Vincent Ferrer
Laura Ackerman Smoller
3 Understanding Pictorial Hagiography (with Comments on the Illustrated Life of Wandrille)
Cynthia Hahn
4 Saints’ Lives on the Move: the Circulation of Apostolic Legends
Samantha Kahn Herrick
5 Thirteenth-Century Legendae Novae and the Preaching Orders: a Communication System
Giovanni Paolo Maggioni
Part 2
Constructing Religious Life, History and the Self
6 Vita Vel Regula: Multifunctional Hagiography in the Early Middle Ages
Albrecht Diem
7 Bishops, Monks and Priests: Defining Religious Institutions by Writing and Rewriting Saints’ Lives (Francia, 6th–11th centuries)
Charles Mériaux
8 Singing the Lives of the Saints: Hagiographical-Historical Intersections in Music and Worship
Catherine Saucier
9 “Impressed by Their Stamp”: Hagiography and the Cultivation of the Self
Ineke van ’t Spijker
Part 3
Power and Violence
10 Gaul’s Insiders: Hagiography and Entitlement
Jamie Kreiner
11 St Gerald of Aurillac, Sex and Violence in Medieval Hagiography
Mathew Kuefler
12 The Unconvincing Martyrdom of William Longsword, Norman Count of Rouen (r. 928–42)
David Defries
13 Hagiography, Relics and Secular Politics in Western Europe 6th–13th Centuries
Edina Bozóky
Part 4/b>
Urban Life and the Natural World
14 Hagiography and Inter-Urban Rivalry: the Vita of St Eucharius, First Bishop of Trier, and Its Use in “Political” Quarrels during the Tenth Century
Klaus Krönert
15 Hagiography and Urban Life: Evidence from Southern Italy
Paul Oldfield
16 Hagiography and the Exotic: “Foreign Saints” in High Medieval Lucca
Adrian Cornell du Houx
17 Environmental History and Hagiography
Ellen Arnold
Part 5/b>
Gender, Health and Beauty
18 Hagiography, Gender, and the Power of Social Norms
Emma Campbell
19 A King, Not a Servant: the Prose Life of St Katherine of Alexandria and Ideologies of Masculinity in Late Medieval England
Katherine J. Lewis
20 Health, Healing, and Salvation: Hagiography as a Source for Medieval Healthcare
Sara Ritchey
21 The Beautiful Dead: Materiality, Resurrection and the Aesthetics of Holy Corpses
J.K. Kitchen
Hagiography Index
Notă biografică
Samantha Kahn Herrick, Ph.D. (2002), Harvard University, is Associate Professor of History at Syracuse University. She has published widely on medieval hagiography, including Imagining the Sacred Past: Hagiography and Power in Early Normandy (Harvard, 2007).
Recenzii
"Bilan bienvenu des avancés de la recherche dans le domaine des textes hagiographiques, souvent anonymes et mal datés, mais qui nous renseignent sur la ville, la violence, l’autre, le monachisme ... et l’évolution de l’idéal de sainteté qui reflète l’évolution de la société.Les chapitres écrits par les spécialistes qui résument leurs travaux s’organisent dans des thématiques: création des textes, développement des pratiques, efforts des hagiographes pour moraliser la politique, place des cités et de l’environnement". Anne Wagner, in Francia Recensio, 2020 | 3.
"In this book, Samantha Kahn Herrick offers a brief and invaluable introduction to modern critical encounters with the genre [of hagiography], starting with Hippolyte Delehaye, and collecting insights from Marc Bloch, Peter Brown, Patrick Geary, and Felice Lifschitz, to set a platform for the chapters to follow. The book doesn’t disappoint in showcasing current trends in the study of the hagiography of Latin Christendom, understood in its broadest sense, from the fifth to the fifteenth centuries. [...] A strong theme of the book is that medieval politics was in considerable part a liturgical phenomenon, a fact that only increases our need to engage with this vast literature as evidence for political history, as well as ecclesiastical history and the history of religious cultures. In all three areas, the book makes a satisfying contribution." Simon Yarrow, in The Medieval Review, 23.03.21. See the full review here.
"In this book, Samantha Kahn Herrick offers a brief and invaluable introduction to modern critical encounters with the genre [of hagiography], starting with Hippolyte Delehaye, and collecting insights from Marc Bloch, Peter Brown, Patrick Geary, and Felice Lifschitz, to set a platform for the chapters to follow. The book doesn’t disappoint in showcasing current trends in the study of the hagiography of Latin Christendom, understood in its broadest sense, from the fifth to the fifteenth centuries. [...] A strong theme of the book is that medieval politics was in considerable part a liturgical phenomenon, a fact that only increases our need to engage with this vast literature as evidence for political history, as well as ecclesiastical history and the history of religious cultures. In all three areas, the book makes a satisfying contribution." Simon Yarrow, in The Medieval Review, 23.03.21. See the full review here.