The Hibernensis

The Hibernensis
Author :
Publisher :
Total Pages : 645
Release :
ISBN-10 : 9780813231938
ISBN-13 : 0813231930
Rating : 4/5 (38 Downloads)

Synopsis The Hibernensis by : Roy Flechner

Thecla and Medieval Sainthood

Thecla and Medieval Sainthood
Author :
Publisher : Cambridge University Press
Total Pages : 359
Release :
ISBN-10 : 9781009020657
ISBN-13 : 100902065X
Rating : 4/5 (57 Downloads)

Synopsis Thecla and Medieval Sainthood by : Ghazzal Dabiri

Saint Thecla was one of the most prominent figures of early Christianity who provided a model of virginity and a role-model for women in the early Church. She was the object of cult and of pilgrimage and her tale in the Acts of Paul and Thecla made a tremendous impact on later hagiographies of both female and male saints. This volume explores this impact on medieval hagiographical texts composed in Armenian, Coptic, Ethiopic, Greek, Irish, Latin, Persian, and Syriac. It investigates how they evoked and/or invoked Thecla and her tale in constructing the lives and story worlds of their chosen saints and offers detailed original readings of the lives of various heroines and heroes. The book adds further depth and nuance to our understanding of Thecla's popularity and the spread of her legend and cult.

Henry Bradshaw Society

Henry Bradshaw Society
Author :
Publisher :
Total Pages : 146
Release :
ISBN-10 : PRNC:32101067869014
ISBN-13 :
Rating : 4/5 (14 Downloads)

Synopsis Henry Bradshaw Society by :

Animal Encounters

Animal Encounters
Author :
Publisher : University of Pennsylvania Press
Total Pages : 281
Release :
ISBN-10 : 9780812206302
ISBN-13 : 0812206304
Rating : 4/5 (02 Downloads)

Synopsis Animal Encounters by : Susan Crane

Traces of the living animal run across the entire corpus of medieval writing and reveal how pervasively animals mattered in medieval thought and practice. In fascinating scenes of cross-species encounters, a raven offers St. Cuthbert a lump of lard that waterproofs his visitors' boots for a whole year, a scholar finds inspiration for his studies in his cat's perfect focus on killing mice, and a dispossessed knight wins back his heritage only to give it up again in order to save the life of his warhorse. Readers have often taken such encounters to be merely figurative or fanciful, but Susan Crane discovers that these scenes of interaction are firmly grounded in the intimate cohabitation with animals that characterized every medieval milieu from palace to village. The animal encounters of medieval literature reveal their full meaning only when we recover the living animal's place within the written animal. The grip of a certain humanism was strong in medieval Britain, as it is today: the humanism that conceives animals in diametrical opposition to humankind. Yet medieval writing was far from univocal in this regard. Latin and vernacular works abound in other ways of thinking about animals that invite the saint, the scholar, and the knight to explore how bodies and minds interpenetrate across species lines. Crane brings these other ways of thinking to light in her readings of the beast fable, the hunting treatise, the saint's life, the bestiary, and other genres. Her substantial contribution to the field of animal studies investigates how animals and people interact in culture making, how conceiving the animal is integral to conceiving the human, and how cross-species encounters transform both their animal and their human participants.

The Celtic Languages in Contact

The Celtic Languages in Contact
Author :
Publisher : Universitätsverlag Potsdam
Total Pages : 347
Release :
ISBN-10 : 9783940793072
ISBN-13 : 3940793078
Rating : 4/5 (72 Downloads)

Synopsis The Celtic Languages in Contact by : Hildegard L. C. Tristram

Typological Hierarchies in Synchrony and Diachrony

Typological Hierarchies in Synchrony and Diachrony
Author :
Publisher : John Benjamins Publishing Company
Total Pages : 442
Release :
ISBN-10 : 9789027264459
ISBN-13 : 9027264457
Rating : 4/5 (59 Downloads)

Synopsis Typological Hierarchies in Synchrony and Diachrony by : Sonia Cristofaro

Typological hierarchies are widely perceived as one of the most important results of research on language universals and linguistic diversity. Explanations for typological hierarchies, however, are usually based on the synchronic properties of the patterns described by individual hierarchies, not the actual diachronic processes that give rise to these patterns cross-linguistically. This book aims to explore in what ways the investigation of such processes can further our understanding of typological hierarchies. To this end, diachronic evidence about the origins of several phenomena described by typological hierarchies is discussed for several languages by a number of leading scholars in typology, historical linguistics, and language documentation. This evidence suggests a rethinking of possible explanations for typological hierarchies, as well as the very notion of typological universals in general. For this reason, the book will be of interest not only to the broad typological community, but also historical linguists, cognitive linguists, and psycholinguists.

Making Laws for a Christian Society

Making Laws for a Christian Society
Author :
Publisher : Routledge
Total Pages : 196
Release :
ISBN-10 : 9781351267236
ISBN-13 : 135126723X
Rating : 4/5 (36 Downloads)

Synopsis Making Laws for a Christian Society by : Roy Flechner

This is the first comprehensive study of the contribution that texts from Britain and Ireland made to the development of canon law in early medieval Europe. The book concentrates on a group of insular texts of church law—chief among them the Irish Hibernensis—tracing their evolution through mutual influence, their debt to late antique traditions from around the Mediterranean, their reception (and occasional rejection) by clerics in continental Europe, their fusion with continental texts, and their eventual impact on the formation of a European canonical tradition. Canonical collections, penitentials, and miscellanies of church law, and royal legislation, are all shown to have been 'living texts', which were continually reshaped through a process of trial and error that eventually gave rise to a more stable and more coherent body of church laws. Through a meticulous text-critical study Roy Flechner argues that the growth of church law in Europe owes as much to a serendipitous 'conversation' between texts as it does to any deliberate plan overseen by bishops and popes.