ISBN:
9004171258
,
9789004171251
Language:
English
Pages:
XIX, 292 S.
,
Ill.
Series Statement:
Studies in the history of Christian traditions 142
Series Statement:
Studies in the history of Christian traditions
DDC:
274/.03
Keywords:
Johnson, Penelope D
;
Religion and sociology History To 1500
;
Monastic and religious life History Middle Ages, 600-1500
;
Civil society Europe
;
History
;
To 1500
;
Religion and civil society Europe
;
History
;
To 1500
;
Social capital (Sociology) Europe
;
History
;
To 1500
;
Europe Religious life and customs
;
Europe Church history
;
600-1500
;
Aufsatzsammlung
;
Konferenzschrift 2006
;
Festschrift
;
Aufsatzsammlung
;
Konferenzschrift 2006
;
Festschrift
;
Europa
;
Sozialgeschichte
;
Kirchengeschichte 500-1300
Note:
Gender, power, and patronage : the impact of Penelope D. Johnson on medieval studies ; Penelope D. Johnson, the Boswell thesis, and Negotiating community and difference in medieval Europe
,
Living with a saint : monastic identity, community, and the ideal of asceticism in the life of an Irish saint
,
A tale of two dioceses : prologues as letters in the Vitae authored by Jacques de Vitry and Thomas de Cantimpré
,
"Within the walls of paradise" : space and community in the Vita of Umiliana de' Cerchi (1219-1246)
,
Architectural mimesis and historical memory at the Abbey of Mont-Saint-Michel
,
Holy women and the needle arts : piety, devotion, and stitching the sacred, ca. 500-1150
,
The politics of gender and ethnicity in East Francia : the case of Gandersheim, ca. 850-950
,
Noble women's power as reflected in the foundations of Cistercian houses for nuns in thirteenth-century Northern France : Port-Royal, les Clairets, Moncey Lieu and Eau-lez-Chartres
,
"Inseparable companions" : Mary Magdalene, Abelard, and Heloise
,
Book, body, and the construction of the self in the Taymouth hours
,
Abbott Erluin's blindness : the monastic implications of violent loss of sight
,
Blanche of Artois and Burgundy, Château-Gaillard, and the Baron de Joursanvault
,
The matter of others : menstrual blood and uncontrolled semen in thirteenth-century kabbalists' polemic against Christians, "bad" Jews, and Muslims
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