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Saints of north-east England, 600-1500 / edited by Margaret Coombe, Anne Mouron, and Christiania Whitehead.
Van Pelt Library BX4659.G7 S355 2017
Available
- Format:
- Book
- Series:
- Medieval church studies ; 39.
- Medieval church studies ; volume 39
- Language:
- English
- Subjects (All):
- Christian saints--England, North East.
- Christian saints.
- England, North East--Church history.
- Genre:
- Biographies.
- Physical Description:
- xviii, 360 pages : illustrations ; 25 cm.
- Place of Publication:
- Turnhout : Brepols, [2017].
- Summary:
- During the seventh and early eighth centuries a number of influential saints? cults were established within the Anglo-Saxon kingdom of Northumbria, most notably the cult of St Cuthbert served by the monks of Lindisfarne. Reacting to the Danish incursions of the ninth century, the Lindisfarne community gradually migrated south to Durham, where, in the early eleventh century, the relics of further Northumbrian saints were collected to join those of Cuthbert. Following the re-foundation of the Durham church as a Benedictine house in 1083, the community sought to legitimise itself by stressing its links with an ancient, saintly past. A century later, the cults of new hermit saints such as Godric of Finchale and Bartholomew of Farne, extensively modelled on St Cuthbert?s example, were added to the north-eastern Durham 'familia'.00This volume takes an interdisciplinary approach to these north-eastern saints, offering a comprehensive snapshot of new scholarship within the field. The first section focuses on the most eminent saints and hagiographers of Anglo-Saxon Northumbria: Cuthbert, Wilfrid and Bede. The second section examines their utility for the twelfth-century, Anglo-Norman community at Durham, and surveys the cults which emerged alongside, including the early saint-bishops of Hexham Augustinian priory. The third section reviews the material culture which developed around these saints in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries: their depiction in stained glass, their pilgrimages and processions, and the use of their banners in the Anglo-Scottish wars. A concluding essay re-evaluates the north-eastern cult of saints from post-Reformation perspectives.
- Contents:
- Part 1 Anglo-Saxon Northumbria
- Bede's Northern Saints / Sarah Foot Foot, Sarah 19
- The Saint in his Setting: The Physical Environment of Shrines in Northern Britain before 850 / Alan T. Thacker Thacker, Alan T. 41
- Cuthbert and Boisil: Irish Influence in Northumbria / Sarah McCann McCann, Sarah 69
- Exiles and the Exilic Experience in Stephen of Ripon's Vita Sancti Wilfridi / Alice Hicklin Hicklin, Alice 89
- St Cuthbert and the South: A North of England Saint and South of England Reformers in the Late Tenth and Early Eleventh Centuries / Alison Hudson Hudson, Alison 111
- Part 2 The Long Twelfth Century
- Measuring Time and Topography in the Cult of Saint Cuthbert at Durham / Dominic Marner Marner, Dominic 135
- 'Æðele Geferes': Northern Saints in a Durham Manuscript / Helen Appleton Appleton, Helen 153
- The Hexham Bishop-Saints: Cults, History, and Power / David Rollason Rollason, David 177
- Godric and the Wild Man: The Resonances of Asceticism in Reginald of Durham's Vita of Godric of Finchale / Dominic Alexander Alexander, Dominic 197
- What a Performance: The Songs of St Godric of Finchale / Margaret Coombe Coombe, Margaret 219
- Part 3 Visual and Material Culture
- Banners of the Northern Saints / Richard Sharpe Sharpe, Richard 245
- Sacred Journeys/Sacred Spaces: The Cult of St Cuthbert / Allan Doig Doig, Allan 305
- Northern Saints and the Painted Glass of Durham Cathedral in the Later Middle Ages / Lynda Rollason Rollason, Lynda 327.
- ISBN:
- 2503567150
- 9782503567150
- OCLC:
- 993760545
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