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This collective volume examines the concept, theory, practice, and representations of the liturgy in the Middle Ages, including its sacramental developments, its religious and political implications, its forms of ritualization, and its doctrinal presumptions. It aims to create a space for interdisciplinary dialogue between history, theology, canon law, art history, political philosophy, and symbolic anthropology. It privileges the examination of the transferences between the spiritual and the temporal, the sacred and the profane, the political and the religious.
Religion & beliefs --- ritual practice --- sacrament --- character --- in persona Christi --- Aquinas --- image --- figura --- medieval liturgy and drama --- poetry in medieval liturgy --- sacraments and medieval liturgy --- interdisciplinarity --- Eve --- Romanesque sculpture --- time --- space --- liturgy --- original sin --- iconography --- Genesis --- semiotic --- sacred drama --- Catalonia --- medieval law --- royal funerals --- Renaissance --- propaganda --- succession crisis --- papacy --- Julius II --- Hispanic monarchy --- Isabella and Ferdinand --- Habsburgs --- martyrology --- calendars --- encyclopaedic writing --- Frankish empire --- Carolingians --- Libri vitae --- commemoration --- manuscripts --- Salzburg --- Reichenau Abbey --- 9 October --- conquest of Valencia --- James I --- crusades --- Festa de l’Estendard --- liturgy of Jerusalem --- Ildefonsus of Toledo --- Adaulfus of Compostela --- miracle of punishment --- successor --- church --- cathedral --- chair (cathedra) --- chasuble --- conquest --- mosque --- ritual --- medieval Iberia --- n/a --- Festa de l'Estendard
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This collective volume examines the concept, theory, practice, and representations of the liturgy in the Middle Ages, including its sacramental developments, its religious and political implications, its forms of ritualization, and its doctrinal presumptions. It aims to create a space for interdisciplinary dialogue between history, theology, canon law, art history, political philosophy, and symbolic anthropology. It privileges the examination of the transferences between the spiritual and the temporal, the sacred and the profane, the political and the religious.
ritual practice --- sacrament --- character --- in persona Christi --- Aquinas --- image --- figura --- medieval liturgy and drama --- poetry in medieval liturgy --- sacraments and medieval liturgy --- interdisciplinarity --- Eve --- Romanesque sculpture --- time --- space --- liturgy --- original sin --- iconography --- Genesis --- semiotic --- sacred drama --- Catalonia --- medieval law --- royal funerals --- Renaissance --- propaganda --- succession crisis --- papacy --- Julius II --- Hispanic monarchy --- Isabella and Ferdinand --- Habsburgs --- martyrology --- calendars --- encyclopaedic writing --- Frankish empire --- Carolingians --- Libri vitae --- commemoration --- manuscripts --- Salzburg --- Reichenau Abbey --- 9 October --- conquest of Valencia --- James I --- crusades --- Festa de l’Estendard --- liturgy of Jerusalem --- Ildefonsus of Toledo --- Adaulfus of Compostela --- miracle of punishment --- successor --- church --- cathedral --- chair (cathedra) --- chasuble --- conquest --- mosque --- ritual --- medieval Iberia --- n/a --- Festa de l'Estendard
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This collective volume examines the concept, theory, practice, and representations of the liturgy in the Middle Ages, including its sacramental developments, its religious and political implications, its forms of ritualization, and its doctrinal presumptions. It aims to create a space for interdisciplinary dialogue between history, theology, canon law, art history, political philosophy, and symbolic anthropology. It privileges the examination of the transferences between the spiritual and the temporal, the sacred and the profane, the political and the religious.
Religion & beliefs --- ritual practice --- sacrament --- character --- in persona Christi --- Aquinas --- image --- figura --- medieval liturgy and drama --- poetry in medieval liturgy --- sacraments and medieval liturgy --- interdisciplinarity --- Eve --- Romanesque sculpture --- time --- space --- liturgy --- original sin --- iconography --- Genesis --- semiotic --- sacred drama --- Catalonia --- medieval law --- royal funerals --- Renaissance --- propaganda --- succession crisis --- papacy --- Julius II --- Hispanic monarchy --- Isabella and Ferdinand --- Habsburgs --- martyrology --- calendars --- encyclopaedic writing --- Frankish empire --- Carolingians --- Libri vitae --- commemoration --- manuscripts --- Salzburg --- Reichenau Abbey --- 9 October --- conquest of Valencia --- James I --- crusades --- Festa de l'Estendard --- liturgy of Jerusalem --- Ildefonsus of Toledo --- Adaulfus of Compostela --- miracle of punishment --- successor --- church --- cathedral --- chair (cathedra) --- chasuble --- conquest --- mosque --- ritual --- medieval Iberia --- ritual practice --- sacrament --- character --- in persona Christi --- Aquinas --- image --- figura --- medieval liturgy and drama --- poetry in medieval liturgy --- sacraments and medieval liturgy --- interdisciplinarity --- Eve --- Romanesque sculpture --- time --- space --- liturgy --- original sin --- iconography --- Genesis --- semiotic --- sacred drama --- Catalonia --- medieval law --- royal funerals --- Renaissance --- propaganda --- succession crisis --- papacy --- Julius II --- Hispanic monarchy --- Isabella and Ferdinand --- Habsburgs --- martyrology --- calendars --- encyclopaedic writing --- Frankish empire --- Carolingians --- Libri vitae --- commemoration --- manuscripts --- Salzburg --- Reichenau Abbey --- 9 October --- conquest of Valencia --- James I --- crusades --- Festa de l'Estendard --- liturgy of Jerusalem --- Ildefonsus of Toledo --- Adaulfus of Compostela --- miracle of punishment --- successor --- church --- cathedral --- chair (cathedra) --- chasuble --- conquest --- mosque --- ritual --- medieval Iberia
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The late tenth-century Old English Metrical Calendar (traditionally known as Menologium) summarises, in the characteristic heroic diction and traditional metre of Old English poetry, the majorcourse of the Anglo-Saxon liturgical year. It sets out, in a methodical structure based on the basic temporal framework of the solar/natural year, the locations of the major feasts widely observed inlate Anglo-Saxon England. Such a work could have been a practical timepiece for reading the dates of the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, for which it serves as a kind of prologue in the manuscript. The clearlydomestic perspective of the poem, which fits in the manuscript context, is also noteworthy, while the poem also reveals various interesting characteristics in its grammar, vocabulary and prosody. This is the first full modern edition of the poem, and is accompanied by a facing translation. The introduction provides an extensive discussion of matter, content, style, and context, while the commentary offers further information. The volume also includes the texts and translations of a number of analogous works. Kazutomo Karasawa is Professor of English philology at Komazawa University, Tokyo.
Christian martyrs --- Martyrologium (Anglo-Saxon) --- Martyrs --- Martyrdom --- Christianity --- Martyrologium Saxonice --- Martyrology, Old English --- Old English Martyrology --- Altenglische Martyrologium --- Menologium (Anglo-Saxon) --- Old English metrical calendar --- Calendrier anglo-saxon --- Anglo-Saxon Chronicle. --- Anglo-Saxon England. --- Anglo-Saxon liturgy. --- Anglo-Saxon poetry. --- Christian festivals. --- Christian worship. --- Domestic perspective. --- English philology. --- Grammar. --- Kazutomo Karasawa. --- Liturgical year. --- Menologium. --- Old English Metrical Calendar. --- Prosody. --- Solar/natural year. --- Vocabulary. --- cultural history. --- liturgical practices. --- liturgical traditions. --- liturgical year. --- manuscript studies. --- medieval Christianity. --- medieval liturgy. --- religious texts.
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