I
really miss
having access to current scholarly journals as they come out. I know some
lovely people who help me get hold of things I REALLY want, but I loathe having
to self censor what I want to get hold of. Anyways, today I am just making a
note of articles I would love to see but won't ask for at present, either
because they are not directly related to writing up a PhD/MPhil/MRes/MA
application, or because they're in a language that I can't (yet?) read... The
list also contains some articles I'm fairly sure I've read, but think I
probably will need to re-read while writing up so that I have their facts
straight in my head (nothing like not fact checking to get you a swift kick
into the NO pile!). What set this off? Well a
post
from Magistra about one of the sessions I attended at the IMC led me
to wondering whether
Elizabeth Archibald had
published anything on the subject of her talk since I last checked. I couldn't
find anything, unfortunately.
Hygiene / Cleanliness / Bathing / Washing + "Middle
Ages" / Medieval / Mediaeval
Author(s):
|
Sura, A.
|
Article Title:
|
Women's hygiene I Woman's care of her body
in the late middle ages
|
|
Journal title:
|
CASOPIS LEKARU CESKYCH
|
ISSN:
|
0008-7335
|
Year:
|
2011
|
Volume/Issue:
|
VOL 150, PART 7
|
Page(s):
|
405-406
|
Publication
frequency:
|
Monthly: 9-14 issues per year
|
|
Publisher:
|
Czechoslovakia: , 2011
|
Dewey Class:
|
610
|
LC Class:
|
K3
|
BLDSC shelfmark:
|
3061.400000
|
In Czech
Author(s):
|
Rawcliffe, C.
|
Article Title:
|
A Marginal Occupation? The Medieval
Laundress and her Work
|
|
Journal title:
|
GENDER AND HISTORY
|
ISSN:
|
0953-5233
|
Year:
|
2009
|
Volume/Issue:
|
VOL 21, NUMB 1
|
Page(s):
|
147-169
|
Publication
frequency:
|
Thrice yearly: 3 issues per year
|
|
Publisher:
|
United Kingdom: Blackwell Publishing Ltd,
2009
|
Language:
|
English
|
Dewey Class:
|
305.3
|
LC Class:
|
TD881
|
BLDSC shelfmark:
|
4096.401350
|
Abstract:
|
Drawing upon
a wide range of primary sources, this article argues that a study of the
medieval laundress can illuminate wider social attitudes to hygiene as well
as to low status women. Having considered the many types of laundry workers
active in England and northern France between c.1300 and 1550, it examines
the techniques they used, as well as the hazards encountered through exposure
to difficult conditions. Such factors, along with the freedom of movement
enjoyed by many laundresses, often harmed their collective reputation. That
responses to those who dealt with the community's dirty clothing were highly
ambivalent is reflected in contemporary writing about laundresses, and in the
measures taken to regulate them. Finally, we turn to remuneration. The
sporadic survival of financial evidence means that our knowledge of wage
rates remains impressionistic. But some laundry workers were surprisingly
well rewarded. This confirms the value placed, in elite households at least,
upon the cleanliness of personal linen.
|
Author(s):
|
Ewert, U.C.
|
Article Title:
|
Water, Public Hygiene and Fire Control in
Medieval Towns : Facing Collective Goods Problems while Ensuring the Quality
of Life
|
|
Journal title:
|
HISTORICAL SOCIAL RESEARCH
|
ISSN:
|
0172-6404
|
Year:
|
2007
|
Volume/Issue:
|
VOL 32; NUMB 4; ISSU 122
|
Page(s):
|
222-251
|
Publication
frequency:
|
Quarterly: 4 issues per year
|
|
Publisher:
|
Germany: UNIVERSITY OF COLOGNE, 2007
|
Language:
|
German
|
Dewey Class:
|
940; 301
|
LC Class:
|
HM1
|
BLDSC shelfmark:
|
4316.845000
|
Author(s):
|
Eckart, W. U.
|
Article Title:
|
Hospitals and their Critiques in Medieval
and Early Modern Europe
|
|
Journal title:
|
ZENTRALBLATT FUR HYGIENE UND UMWELTMEDIZIN
|
ISSN:
|
0934-8859
|
Year:
|
1994
|
Volume/Issue:
|
VOL 195, NUMB 4
|
Page(s):
|
267
|
Publication
frequency:
|
Monthly: 9-14 issues per year
|
|
Publisher:
|
Germany: GUSTAV FISCHER VERLAG, 1994
|
Dewey Class:
|
616.98
|
LC Class:
|
QR46
|
BLDSC shelfmark:
|
9508.530000
|
Article Title:
|
Public hygiene and sanitary engineering in the history of the
city (part two : Medieval town)
|
|
Journal title:
|
INGEGNERIA AMBIENTALE
|
ISSN:
|
0394-5871
|
Year:
|
1998
|
Volume/Issue:
|
VOL 27, NUMB 9
|
Page(s):
|
394-400
|
Publication
frequency:
|
Monthly: 9-14 issues per year
|
|
Publisher:
|
Italy: CIPA SRL - CENTRO DI INGEGNERIA PER
LA, 1998
|
Dewey Class:
|
628
|
LC Class:
|
QC457
|
BLDSC shelfmark:
|
4500.650000
|
Author(s):
|
Rugani, B. ; Pulselli, R. M. ; Niccolucci, V. ; Bastianoni, S.
|
Article Title:
|
Environmental performance of a XIV Century
water management system : An emergy evaluation of cultural heritage
|
|
Journal title:
|
RESOURCES CONSERVATION AND RECYCLING
|
ISSN:
|
0921-3449
|
Year:
|
2011
|
Volume/Issue:
|
VOL 56, NUMB 1
|
Page(s):
|
117-125
|
Publication
frequency:
|
Monthly: 9-14 issues per year
|
|
Publisher:
|
Netherlands: Elsevier Science B.V.,
Amsterdam., 2011
|
Language:
|
English
|
Dewey Class:
|
363.7282
|
LC Class:
|
TD794
|
BLDSC shelfmark:
|
7777.606950
|
Abstract:
|
In the late
Middle Ages, the city of Siena (Italy) had a high population density and had
to face the problem of supplying water within the city walls for housing,
crafts, economic and commercial activities, as well as for the risk of fire.
A network of underground drifts, namely ''Bottini'', was then built,
achieving a total length of about 25km in the late XIV Century. The Bottini
have been capturing and conducting rain water from the countryside to the
fountains in the city centre for centuries, and still provide an average
9.5Ls^-^1 of clean water, though it is not drinkable nowadays. Currently,
water provided by the ancient aqueduct is only used to fill a set of monumental
fountains, and is then wasted. In this paper, we have investigated the
environmental performance of the water supply in Siena, comparing results
from the analysis of the historical Bottini and the contemporary water supply
system. In particular, an emergy evaluation was developed in order to account
for the environmental resource use of the water management system,
considering both the historical and the modern aqueducts, and providing
information on their ''sustainability''. Specific emergy, measured in units
of equivalent solar energy (solar emergy Joules - seJ) per liter of water
provided, as well as the Environmental Loading Ratio and the Emergy
Investment Ratio, were used as indices of environmental performance. Results
have shown that the Bottini have a lower environmental impact in terms of
rate of renewability with respect to the contemporary system. Based on
statistics on water use in urban centres (drinking, washing, gardening,
etc.), we argued that keeping the Bottini alive is not only a good practice
for the conservation of a precious cultural heritage, but could be a
potential opportunity for improving urban ecology.
|
Author(s):
|
Caskey, J.
|
Article Title:
|
Stean and Santeas in the Domestic Realm :
Baths and Bathing in Southern Italy in the Middle Ages
|
|
Journal title:
|
JOURNAL- SOCIETY OF ARCHITECTURAL HISTORIANS
|
ISSN:
|
0037-9808
|
Year:
|
1999
|
Volume/Issue:
|
VOL 58, NUMB 2
|
Page(s):
|
170-195
|
Publication
frequency:
|
Quarterly: 4 issues per year
|
|
Publisher:
|
United States: SOCIETY OF ARCHITECTURAL
HISTORIANS, 1999
|
Language:
|
English
|
Dewey Class:
|
722
|
LC Class:
|
NA1
|
BLDSC shelfmark:
|
4880.770000
|
Author(s):
|
Cuffel, A.
|
Article Title:
|
Polemicizing Women's Bathing Among Medieval
and Early Modern Muslims and Christians
|
|
Journal title:
|
TECHNOLOGY AND CHANGE IN HISTORY : The
Nature and Function of Water, Baths, Bathing, and Hygiene from Antiquity
through the Renaissance
|
ISSN:
|
1385-920X
|
Year:
|
2009
|
Volume/Issue:
|
VOL 11
|
Page(s):
|
171-190
|
Editors(s):
|
Kosso, C. ; Scott, A.
|
Publication
frequency:
|
Annual: 1 issue per year
|
|
Publisher:
|
Netherlands: unknown, 2009
|
Language:
|
English
|
Dewey Class:
|
609
|
BLDSC shelfmark:
|
8758.548000
|
Author(s):
|
Butler, L.
|
Article Title:
|
"Washing Off the Dust" : Baths and
Bathing in Late Medieval Japan
|
|
Journal title:
|
MONUMENTA NIPPONICA
|
ISSN:
|
0027-0741
|
Year:
|
2005
|
Volume/Issue:
|
VOL 60, NUMB 1
|
Page(s):
|
1-42
|
Publication
frequency:
|
Quarterly: 4 issues per year
|
|
Publisher:
|
Japan: MONUMENTA NIPPONICA, 2005
|
Language:
|
English
|
Dewey Class:
|
952; 390
|
LC Class:
|
DS821.A1
|
BLDSC shelfmark:
|
5966.230000
|
Not Europe but could be useful cross comparison?
Author(s):
|
Pettitt, T.
|
Article Title:
|
`Skreaming like a pigge halfe stickt' :
vernacular topoi in the carnivalesque martyrdom of Edward II
|
|
Journal title:
|
ORBIS LITTERARUM
|
ISSN:
|
0105-7510
|
Year:
|
2005
|
Volume/Issue:
|
VOL 60, NUMB 2
|
Page(s):
|
79-108
|
Publication
frequency:
|
Bi-monthly: 5-8 issues per year
|
|
Publisher:
|
Denmark: Blackwell Publishing Ltd, 2005
|
Language:
|
English
|
Dewey Class:
|
809
|
LC Class:
|
D839
|
BLDSC shelfmark:
|
6277.865000
|
Abstract:
|
Matching the
literary and rhetorical topoi of medieval Latin and neoclassical literature,
early European traditional culture deployed narrative, iconographic and
dramatic formulas which effectively functioned as `vernacular' topoi. Through
repeated occurrence each acquired distinctive resonances which then did not
need to be expressed more elaborately in a given work, so leaving modern
scholarship the task of reconstructing them. At least three such vernacular
topoi - mock shaving, consignment to a cesspit, and impaling on a spit -
occur in the sufferings Marlowe associates with the death of the King in
Edward II, either by adapting his historical sources, or by choosing between
alternatives. Exploration of their occurrences in medieval and folkloristic
sources reveals that these topoi invoke liminality by subjecting ambivalent
creatures (fools, pigs, babewyns) to transgressive experience (cooking,
`washing' in filth) in interstitial environments (carnival, sewers,
manuscript margins). Their presence reinforces, even as it is triggered by,
Edward's own liminality in relation to a number of categories, and is
compatible with recent suggestions linking Marlowe's play to the sufferings
of Christ developed in Baroque religiosity.
|
"bathing in filth" - interesting tangent
Author(s):
|
Harris, A. ; Henig, M.
|
Article Title:
|
Hand-washing and Foot-washing, Sacred and
Secular, in Late Antiquity and the Early Medieval Period
|
|
Journal title:
|
BAR BRITISH SERIES : Intersections: The
Archaeology and History of Christianity in England, 400-1200 Papers in Honour
of Martin Biddle and Birthe Kjolbye-Biddle
|
ISSN:
|
0143-3032
|
Year:
|
2010
|
Volume/Issue:
|
505
|
Page(s):
|
25-38
|
Editors(s):
|
Henig, M. ; Ramsay, N.
|
Publication
frequency:
|
Annual: 1 issue per year
|
|
Publisher:
|
United Kingdom: HOLYWELL PRESS - OXFORD,
2010
|
Language:
|
English
|
Dewey Class:
|
930.1
|
LC Class:
|
BX6276.A1
|
BLDSC shelfmark:
|
1863.185600
|
Author(s):
|
Strocchia, S.T.
|
Article Title:
|
Biow, Douglas, The Culture of Cleanliness in
Renaissance Italy
|
|
Journal title:
|
SPECULUM -MASSACHUSETTS-
|
ISSN:
|
0038-7134
|
Year:
|
2008
|
Volume/Issue:
|
VOL 83, NUMB 1
|
Page(s):
|
172-173
|
Publication
frequency:
|
Quarterly: 4 issues per year
|
|
Publisher:
|
United States: MEDIEVAL ACADEMY OF AMERICA,
2008
|
Language:
|
English
|
Dewey Class:
|
909.07
|
LC Class:
|
PN661
|
BLDSC shelfmark:
|
8411.178000
|
Slightly late, but still useful I hope
Women on the Welsh
Borders:
Wales + Marches |
Women / Marriage / Families [Nothing for Corbet or Le Strange]
Author(s):
|
Richards, G.
|
Paper Title:
|
Medieval Welsh women : the daughters of
Llywelyn Fawr (Llywelyn the Great - 1173-1240)
|
Keywords:
|
Celts ; Civilization, Celtic ; Celtic
studies
|
|
Conference:
|
Australian Conference of Celtic Studies;
Nation and federation in the Celtic world
|
Conference
description:
|
4th
|
Conference venue:
|
Sydney, Australia
|
Conference date:
|
2001; Jun
|
Additional info:
|
Includes bibliographical references
|
Journal title:
|
SYDNEY SERIES IN CELTIC STUDIES
|
ISBN:
|
9781864875157 ; 1864875151
|
Year:
|
2003
|
Volume/Issue:
|
6
|
Page(s):
|
22-34
|
Editors(s):
|
O'Neill, P.
|
|
Publisher:
|
Sydney; University of Sydney, 2003
|
Date published:
|
2003
|
Language:
|
English
|
Material type:
|
Papers
|
BLDSC shelfmark:
|
8578.026000
|
Author(s):
|
Winward, F.
|
Article Title:
|
Some Aspects of the Women in The Four
Branches
|
|
Journal title:
|
CAMBRIAN MEDIEVAL CELTIC STUDIES
|
ISSN:
|
0260-5600
|
Year:
|
1997
|
Volume/Issue:
|
34
|
Page(s):
|
77-106
|
Publication
frequency:
|
Semi-annual: 2 issues per year
|
|
Publisher:
|
United Kingdom: CMCS AT THE DEPARTMENT OF
WELSH, 1997
|
Language:
|
English
|
Dewey Class:
|
942
|
BLDSC shelfmark:
|
3015.935400
|
Author(s):
|
Lloyd-Morgan, C.
|
Article Title:
|
More written about than writing? Welsh women
and the written word
|
|
Journal title:
|
CAMBRIDGE STUDIES IN MEDIEVAL LITERATURE
|
ISSN:
|
0959-5767
|
Year:
|
1998
|
Volume/Issue:
|
VOL 33
|
Page(s):
|
149-165
|
Publication
frequency:
|
Irregular: Frequency variable
|
|
Publisher:
|
United Kingdom: CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS,
1998
|
Language:
|
English
|
Dewey Class:
|
820.1
|
BLDSC shelfmark:
|
3015.995100
|
Author(s):
|
Wales, S. K.
|
Article Title:
|
A Trilogy of Medieval Women Warriors
|
|
Journal title:
|
SOCIAL EDUCATION
|
ISSN:
|
0037-7724
|
Year:
|
1994
|
Volume/Issue:
|
VOL 58, NUMB 2
|
Page(s):
|
74
|
Publication
frequency:
|
Monthly: 9-14 issues per year
|
|
Publisher:
|
United States: NATIONAL COUNCIL FOR THE
SOCIAL STUDIES, 1994
|
Dewey Class:
|
370.115
|
LC Class:
|
H62.A1
|
BLDSC shelfmark:
|
8318.087000
|
Author(s):
|
Griffiths, R. A.
|
Paper Title:
|
Wales and the Marches
|
Keywords:
|
fifteenth century England ; politics
|
|
Conference:
|
Fifteenth century England 1399-1509: studies
in politics and society
|
Conference
description:
|
Colloquium
|
Conference venue:
|
Cardiff
|
Conference date:
|
1970; Sep
|
Additional info:
|
See also 75/5207 for 1st ed
|
ISBN:
|
0750911980 ; 9780750911986
|
Page(s):
|
145-172
|
Editors(s):
|
Chrimes, S. B. ; Ross, C. ; Griffiths, R. A.
|
|
Publisher:
|
Stroud; Alan Sutton, 1995
|
Date published:
|
1995
|
Language:
|
English
|
Material type:
|
Papers
|
BLDSC shelfmark:
|
96/23892; Fifteenth
|
Author(s):
|
Lieberman, M.
|
Article Title:
|
The Medieval `Marches' of Normandy and Wales
|
|
Journal title:
|
ENGLISH HISTORICAL REVIEW
|
ISSN:
|
0013-8266
|
Year:
|
2010
|
Volume/Issue:
|
VOL 125, NUMB 517
|
Page(s):
|
1357-1381
|
Publication
frequency:
|
Bi-monthly: 5-8 issues per year
|
|
Publisher:
|
United Kingdom: Oxford University Press,
2010
|
Language:
|
English
|
Dewey Class:
|
942
|
LC Class:
|
DA20
|
BLDSC shelfmark:
|
3774.700000
|
Abstract:
|
This article
explores the striking links and parallels which existed between the frontiers
of Normandy and of Wales, particularly between 1066 and 1204. It takes its
cue from the fact that both frontiers were identified as `marches' at that
time. It argues that while the frontier of Normandy was not a precursor of
the March of Wales, experiences made by the Normans on their `home frontier'
did help shape their contribution to the making of the Welsh March. Moreover,
this essay contends that during the twelfth century, the borders of Normandy
and of Wales evolved, in important respects, along similar lines. Thus, both
`marches' came to be characterized by an exceptional density of castles and
uniquely long-established castellan dynasties controlling compact lordships
(to the best of their ability). By 1204, these features had helped foster the
notion that the marches of Normandy and Wales were similar kinds of
frontiers, despite the differences that undeniably existed between them. By
implication, the famous liberties of the Welsh Marcher lords were, at first,
irrelevant to the concept of the `march' of Wales. This supports Professor
Sir Rees Davies's view that the Welsh Marcher liberties only became an issue
in the thirteenth century. Finally, therefore, this article argues that it
was the very features shared by the Norman and Welsh `marches', rather than
claims to immunity, which first paved the way for the inclusion of the
conquest lordships of southern Wales within the region identified as Marchia
Wallie.
|
Author(s):
|
Suppe, F.
|
Paper Title:
|
Interpreter Families and Anglo-Welsh
Relations in the Shropshire-Powys Marches in the Twelfth Century
|
Keywords:
|
Normans ; Anglo-Saxons ; Anglo-Norman studies
; Battle
|
|
Conference:
|
Battle conference on Anglo-Norman studies
|
Conference
description:
|
30th
|
Conference venue:
|
Gregynog, Wales
|
Conference date:
|
2007; Aug
|
Additional info:
|
Includes bibliographical references
|
Journal title:
|
ANGLONORMAN STUDIES
|
ISSN:
|
0954-9927
|
ISBN:
|
9781843833796 ; 1843833794
|
Year:
|
2008
|
Volume/Issue:
|
VOL 30
|
Page(s):
|
196-212
|
Editors(s):
|
Lewis, C.P.
|
|
Publisher:
|
Woodbridge; Boydell & Brewer, 2008
|
Date published:
|
2008
|
Language:
|
English
|
Material type:
|
Papers
|
BLDSC shelfmark:
|
0902.847000
|
Paternoster beads /
Lay devotional items
Paternoster* /
Rosar* || M/M/"MA"
Author(s):
|
Hoskin, P. M.
|
Article Title:
|
The Accounts of the Medieval Paternoster
Gild of York
|
|
Journal title:
|
NORTHERN HISTORY
|
ISSN:
|
0078-172X
|
Year:
|
2007
|
Volume/Issue:
|
VOL 44, PART 1
|
Page(s):
|
7-34
|
Publication
frequency:
|
Semi-annual: 2 issues per year
|
|
Publisher:
|
United Kingdom: THE UNIVERSITY OF LEEDS,
2007
|
Language:
|
English
|
Dewey Class:
|
942
|
LC Class:
|
DA20
|
BLDSC shelfmark:
|
6151.004000
|
Author(s):
|
Winston-Allen, A.
|
Paper Title:
|
Exempla in German Rosary Handbooks :
Spirituality and Self-Help in Late Medieval Popular Piety
|
Keywords:
|
patristic studies ; mediaeval studies ;
renaissance studies ; PMR
|
|
Conference:
|
Patristic, mediaeval and renaissance studies
|
Conference
description:
|
Annual international conference
|
Conference venue:
|
Villanova; PA [unconfirmed]
|
Conference date:
|
1994
|
Sponsor(s):
|
Villanova University; Augustinian Historical
Institute
|
Additional info:
|
Includes papers from the 1993 PMR conference
|
Journal title:
|
PROCEEDINGS OF THE PMR CONFERENCE
|
ISSN:
|
0272-8710
|
Year:
|
1993
|
Volume/Issue:
|
VOL 18
|
Page(s):
|
25-34
|
Editors(s):
|
Gersbach, K. A. ; Van Fleteren, F. ;
Schnaubelt, J. C.
|
|
Publisher:
|
Villanova University, 1993
|
Date published:
|
1996
|
Language:
|
English
|
Material type:
|
Papers
|
BLDSC shelfmark:
|
6848.810000
|
Various reviews of Anne Winston-Allen's Stories of the
the Rose : The Making of the Rosary in the Middle Ages (1998/89)
(Lay Piety)
Author(s):
|
Clarke, P. D.
|
Article Title:
|
New evidence of noble and gentry piety in
fifteenth-century England and Wales
|
|
Journal title:
|
JOURNAL OF MEDIEVAL HISTORY
|
ISSN:
|
0304-4181
|
Year:
|
2008
|
Volume/Issue:
|
VOL 34, NUMB 1
|
Page(s):
|
23-35
|
Publication
frequency:
|
Quarterly: 4 issues per year
|
|
Publisher:
|
Netherlands: Elsevier Science B.V.,
Amsterdam., 2008
|
Language:
|
English
|
Dewey Class:
|
909.07
|
LC Class:
|
D111
|
BLDSC shelfmark:
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5017.570000
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Abstract:
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There has been much recent
examination of late medieval lay piety in order to understand the background to
Henry VIII's reformation, notably Colin Richmond's studies of the
`privatised' religion of the English gentry. Such work has largely
over-looked papal sources and the associated issue of
relations between English and Welsh society and the papacy. This article
seeks to remedy this neglect by presenting new evidence from the registers of
the papal penitentiary. In the late middle ages the papal penitentiary was
the highest office in the western Church concerned with matters of conscience
and the principal source of papal absolutions, dispensations and licences.
Petitions seeking such favours were copied in its registers, and this article
especially concerns petitions from English and Welsh gentry seeking licences
to have a portable altar or to appoint a personal confessor (littere
confessionales). It also examines their requests for various other favours
that illustrate their piety, notably regarding fasting, chastity and
pilgrimage. The article contests Richmond's notion of `privatised' gentry
religion and similar distinctions between elite and popular or personal and
collective religion. It appends translations of three significant documents
from the penitentiary registers and a statistical table concerning requests
for littere confessionales.
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Author(s):
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Mecham, J. L.
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Article Title:
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Teaching &Learning Guide for :
Breaking Old Habits: Recent Research on Women, Spirituality and the Arts in
the Middle Ages
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Journal title:
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HISTORY COMPASS
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ISSN:
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1478-0542
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Year:
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2007
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Volume/Issue:
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VOL 5, NUMB 4
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Page(s):
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1447-1454
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Publication
frequency:
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Bi-monthly: 5-8 issues per year
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Publisher:
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United Kingdom: BLACKWELL PUBLISHING LTD,
2007
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Language:
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English
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Dewey Class:
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900
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LC Class:
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D1
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BLDSC shelfmark:
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4317.961600
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Author(s):
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Duffy, E.
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Article Title:
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Elite and Popular Religion : the Book of
Hours and Lay Piety in the Later Middle Ages (presidential address)
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Journal title:
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STUDIES IN CHURCH HISTORY -LONDON- : ELITE
AND POPULAR RELIGION
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ISSN:
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0424-2084
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Year:
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2006
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Volume/Issue:
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VOL 42
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Page(s):
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140-161
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Editors(s):
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Cooper, K. ; Gregory, J.
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Publication
frequency:
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Annual: 1 issue per year
|
|
Publisher:
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United Kingdom: , 2006
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Language:
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English
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Dewey Class:
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270
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LC Class:
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PR9180
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BLDSC shelfmark:
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8489.930000
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Author(s):
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Wasyliw, P. H.
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Paper Title:
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The Pious Infant : Developments in Popular
Piety during the High Middle Ages
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Keywords:
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lay spirituality ; postmodern era ; medieval
; modern lay sanctity
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Conference:
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Toward a lay spirituality for the postmodern
era; Lay sanctity, medieval and modern a search for models
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Conference
description:
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Conference
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Conference date:
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1992; Oct
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Additional info:
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Held at the International Schoenstatt Center
in Wisconsin; See also 99/22160 for further papers from the conference
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ISBN:
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0268013306 ; 9780268013301
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Page(s):
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105-116
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Editors(s):
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Astell, A. W.
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Publisher:
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Notre Dame, Ind.; University of Notre Dome
Press, 2000
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Date published:
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2000
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Language:
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English
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Material type:
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Papers
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BLDSC shelfmark:
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m00/19373
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Snippets from Mecham (above):
Pitarakis,
B., ‘Female Piety in Context: Understanding Developments in Private Devotional
Practices’, in Maria Vassilaki (ed.), Images of the Mother of God: Perceptions of the
Theotokos in Byzantium (Aldershot:
Ashgate, 2005), 153–166.
Smith,
M. F., R. Fleming, and P. Halpin, ‘Court and Piety in Late Anglo-Saxon
England’, Catholic
Historical Review,
87/4 (2001): 569–602.
Lay Piety &
Patronage: Women & Books of Hours
Inglis,
E., The Hours of Mary of Burgundy: Codex Vindobonensis 1857,
Vienna, Österreichische Nationalbibliothek (London: H. Miller, 1995).
Reading:
Penketh,
S., ‘Women and Books of Hours’, in Jane H. M. Taylor and Lesley Smith (eds.), Women and the Book:
Assessing the Visual Evidence (Toronto: Toronto University Press, 1996), 266–280.
Stanton,
A. R., ‘From Eve to Bathsheba and Beyond: Motherhood in the Queen Mary
Psalter’, in Jane H. M. Taylor and Lesley Smith (eds.),Women and the Book: Assessing
the Visual Evidence (Toronto:
Toronto University Press, 1996), 172–189.
Lay Piety &
Patronage: Women & the Parish
French,
K. L., ‘I Leave My Best Gown as a Vestment’: Women’s Spiritual Interests in the
Late Medieval English Parish’, Magistra: A Journal of Women’s Spirituality in History, 4/1 (1998): 57–77.
French,
K. L., ‘Maidens’ Lights and Wives’ Stories: Women’s Parish Guilds in Late
Medieval England’, Sixteenth Century Journal, 29/2 (1998): 399–425.
Lay Piety &
Pilgrimage
Schein,
S., ‘Bridget of Sweden, Margery Kempe and Women’s Jerusalem Pilgrimages in the
Middle Ages’, Mediterranean
Historical Review,
14/1 (1999): 44–58.
Webb,
D., ‘Freedom of Movement? Women Travelers in the Middle Ages’, in Christine
Meek and Catherine Lawless (eds.), Studies on Medieval and Early Modern Women (Dublin: Four Courts
Press, 2003), 75–89.
Domestic
Spirituality
Petroff,
E., Medieval Women’s Visionary Literature, ch. 8.
Webb,
D. M., ‘Woman and Home: The Domestic Setting of Late Medieval Spirituality’, in
W. J. Sheils and Diana Wood (eds.), Women in the Church: Papers Read at the 1989
Summer Meeting and the 1990 Winter Meeting of the Ecclesiastical History
Society (Oxford:
Blackwell, 1990), 159–174.
New
Developments: Women & the Devotio Moderna
·
Record Number: 21337
·
Author(s)/Creator(s): As-Vijvers , Anne Margreet W.
·
Title: Weaving Mary's Chaplet: The Representation of the Rosary in
Late Medieval Flemish Manuscript Illumination
·
Source: Weaving, Veiling, and Dressing: Textiles and Their Metaphors
in the Late Middle Ages. Edited by Kathryn M. Rudy and Barbara
Baert. Brepols, 2007. Pages 41 - 79.
·
Article Type: Essay
·
Year of Publication: 2007.
·
Language: English
·
ISSN/ISBN: 2503515274
·
Record Number: 21096
·
Author(s)/Creator(s): Härdelin , Alf.
·
Title: In the Sign of the Rosary: Swedish Brigittines and
Carthusians in Co-operation
·
Source: Medieval Spirituality in Scandinavia and Europe: A
Collection of Essays in Honour of Tore Nyberg. Edited by Lars Bisgaard,
Carsten Selch Jensen, Kurt Villads Jensen, and John Lind. Odense
University Press, 2001. Pages 285 - 293.
·
Article Type: Essay
·
Year of Publication: 2001.
·
Language: English
·
ISSN/ISBN: 8778385881
·
Record Number: 17474
·
Author(s)/Creator(s): King , Catherine.
·
Title: Medieval and Renaissance Matrons, Italian-style [Women were
able to commission art and architecture in fourteenth and fifteenth century
Italy in a variety of ways, even if their involvement in the production of
images and construction of buildings wasn’t as widespread as men’s. For
instance, wealthy widows could control the making of large, public images such
as funerary altarpieces, while nuns could commission artwork and buildings
through convent endowments. Through their acts of patronage, these “matrons”
challenged conventional expectations that women inhabit a small, private
sphere. The author also analyzes how women chose to represent themselves
visually within the works they commissioned. Title note supplied by Feminae.].
·
Source: Zeitschrift für Kunstgeschichte 55, ( 1992): Pages 372
- 393.
·
Article Type: Journal Article
·
Geographic Area: Italy
·
Century: 14- 15
·
Primary Evidence: Painting; Guariento, “Crucifixion witih donatrix, Maria
Bovolina, Kneeling,” circa 1360, tempura on panel (Bassano del Grappa, Museo
Civico). Painting;“Coronation of Mary with attendant saints,” 1370-1, wood
panel (London, National Gallery). Commissioned by Benedic
·
Illustrations: Thirteen Figures. Figure One Guariento, “Crucifixion with
donatrix, Maria Bovolina, Kneeling,” circa 1360, tempera on panel (Bassano del
Grappa, Museo Civico). This large crucifix features its patroness Maria de’
Bovolini holding a rosary while kneeling at the right hand of Christ; she occupies
the space in the image conventionally reserved for a male donor or spectator.
Figure Two Guariento, “Crucifixion with donatrix, Maria Bovolina, Kneeling,”
circa 1360, tempera on (Bassano del Grappa, Museo Civico). Detail of Maria
Bovolina. Her family’s coat of arms is at the base of the cross opposite her.
Figure Three “Coronation of Mary with attendant saints,” 1370-1, wood panel
(London, National Gallery). Commissioned by Benedictine nuns of San Pier
Maggiore in Florence for their high altar. Center panel depicts the Coronation
of Mary with saints, and above in the upper tier are panels depicting the
Adoration of the Shepherds and Kings, the Resurrection, the Three Marys at the
Sepulchre, Ascension and Pentecost; the Trinity is at the apex. Figure Four “Fina
Buzzacarina presented to the Virgin and Child by Saint John the Baptist and
other saints,” late fourteenth century, tomb arch (Baptistry, Padua). Painting
depicts Fina kneeling before the seated Virgin and Child; Fina takes the place
of honor at the right hand of Christ, to the viewer’s left. She is surrounded
by both male and female saints. Figure Five Main dome, late fourteenth century
(Padua, Baptistry). Altar-chapel dome depicts Christ surrounded by the
Apostles; main dome depicts Christ as Creator, surrounded by angels and saints.
Figure Six Carlo Crivelli, “Virgin and Child with Saints Sebastian, Francis,
and the donatrix, Oradea Becchetti,” 1491, wood (London, National Gallery). The
patroness wears a widow’s dress and holds a rosary while kneeling before the
Virgin and Child; although she is a small figure in the painting, the patroness
is acknowledged by a large inscription at the base of the painting. Figure
Seven Francesco Bonsignori, “Virgin and Child with Saints Zeno, Christopher,
Jerome, and Onofrio, and the donatrix Altabella Avogaro,” 1484, tempera on
canvas (Verona, Museo Civico). Instead of being placed next to the Virgin and
Child within the frame of the painting itself, the patroness is portrayed as if
standing in front of the frame of the painting. Figure Eight Chapel of the
Annunciation, by the Church of San Michele in Isola, Venice. The chapel
commissioned by Margareta Vitturi is on the left-hand corner of the church’s
facade. Figure Nine Fra Angelico, “Deposition with Saints Dominic, Catherine,
and the Beata Villana,” 1436, panel (Florence, Museo di San Marco,). Figure Ten
San Zaccaria, Venice. Photograph shows the Church of San Zaccaria as it appears
today. Figure Eleven “Design for statue of Virgil,” circa 1499, ink and paper
(Paris, Louvre, Cabinet des Dessins). Drawing depicts Isabella d’Este’s plan
for a sculpted monument for the poet Virgil. Figure Twelve Andrea Mantegna,
“Minerva chases the Vices from the garden of Virtue,” 1502 (Paris, Louvre). On
the right is the prison of the mother of Virtue; in foreground the vices stand
in a pond while Minerva (holding a shield) and Diana drive them from the
garden. Fortitude, Justice, and Temperance are depicted as female
personifications looking down on the scene from heaven. Figure Thirteen San
Paolo alle Monache, Parma. Photograph gives an aerial view of the church.
·
Year of Publication: 1992.
·
Language: English
·
ISSN/ISBN: 00442992