The laity in the Middle Ages
religious beliefs and devotional practices
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Author
Contributions
- Bornstein, Daniel Ethan, 1950- - Contributor
Publication
1993 - University of Notre Dame Press, Notre Dame, Indiana
Language
English
Word Count
87,500 words, Guess
Page Count
350 pages
Identifiers
- Open LibraryOL1744716M
- ISBN-100268012970
- OCLC Control Number27073311
- OCLC Control Numberlaityinmiddleage0000vauc
- Library of Congress Control Number92053746
and 2 more
- LibraryThing45259
- Goodreads2235446
Classifications
- DDC262/.15/0902
- LCCBR275.L27 V3813 1993
Description
In these lively and incisive essays, Andre Vauchez, a leading French historian of medieval religious life, explores the religious beliefs and devotional practices of laypeople in medieval Europe. Vauchez's previous books established him as an authority on medieval sanctity. In The Laity in the Middle Ages he turns his attention to the various forms of devotion that flourished on the fringes of officially recognized sanctity. The recurrent theme is the struggle, never entirely successful, of the Christian laity to carve out for themselves a religious role that would confer spiritual dignity on the circumstances and concerns of their daily lives. This volume grapples with some of the most important and most difficult issues in medieval history: the nature of popular devotion, the role of religion in civic life, the sociology of religious attitudes and practices, and the relationship between the intersecting spheres of lay and clerical culture. The essays that examine how spiritual ideals of chastity shaped the social practice of marriage and how the intimate experiences of female visionaries and mystics impinged on the formal structure of the Church are a noteworthy addition to the rapidly growing body of literature on women in the Middle Ages.
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