In twelfth-century northern England, the historical imagination was dominated by the region’s most powerful and most popular saint. Both the bishops of Durham and the priors of the Benedictine convent attached to Durham cathedral drew on St. Cuthbert’s renowned history and well-established authority to underline their own spiritual legitimacy. Involvement with the saint’s cult was not limited to the ecclesiastical elite or the monks of the cathedral convent, however. Throughout the twelfth century, lay interest in the religious life dramatically increased, and saints ’ cults were a popular focus of lay religious energy. Reginald of Durham’s Libellus de admirandis beati Cuthberti virtutibus, complied in the 1160s and 70s, provides a richly d...
Schmitt Jean-Claude. Finucane (Ronald C.) Miracles and Pilgrims. Popular Beliefs in Medieval England...
CROOK John English medieval shrines Woodbridge ; New York : The Boydell press, 2011, XXIV-342 p. Col...
The tenth century Benedictine Reform of Anglo-Saxon England was led by a powerful trio of bishops wh...
St Cuthbert's literary cult was conceived in the late seventh and early eighth century with the prod...
This article draws attention to a hitherto neglected but extensive and important body of hagiographi...
During the twelfth century, Durham Cathedral Priory founded a dependent daughter house at Coldingham...
For some years following the death of Saint William the cult flourished and many people came to the ...
Why was there a proliferation of saint-making in late tenth- and early eleventh-century England? New...
This paper investigates the social, political, and religious changes and tensions which surrounded t...
By the fifteenth century St Andrew had been firmly established as the formal patron saint of Scotlan...
PhDThis thesis investigates the social and religious roles of two twelfth-century hermits connected...
This thesis charts the history of the cult of St Æthelthryth of Ely, arguing that its longevity and ...
A late twelfth-century manuscript that once belonged to the Abbey at Sawley in Yorkshire, but was pr...
In 1170 the murder of Archbishop Thomas Becket in his own Cathedral sent shockwaves through Europe, ...
Anglo-Norman Durham was home to a considerable body of historical texts during the period to c. 1130...
Schmitt Jean-Claude. Finucane (Ronald C.) Miracles and Pilgrims. Popular Beliefs in Medieval England...
CROOK John English medieval shrines Woodbridge ; New York : The Boydell press, 2011, XXIV-342 p. Col...
The tenth century Benedictine Reform of Anglo-Saxon England was led by a powerful trio of bishops wh...
St Cuthbert's literary cult was conceived in the late seventh and early eighth century with the prod...
This article draws attention to a hitherto neglected but extensive and important body of hagiographi...
During the twelfth century, Durham Cathedral Priory founded a dependent daughter house at Coldingham...
For some years following the death of Saint William the cult flourished and many people came to the ...
Why was there a proliferation of saint-making in late tenth- and early eleventh-century England? New...
This paper investigates the social, political, and religious changes and tensions which surrounded t...
By the fifteenth century St Andrew had been firmly established as the formal patron saint of Scotlan...
PhDThis thesis investigates the social and religious roles of two twelfth-century hermits connected...
This thesis charts the history of the cult of St Æthelthryth of Ely, arguing that its longevity and ...
A late twelfth-century manuscript that once belonged to the Abbey at Sawley in Yorkshire, but was pr...
In 1170 the murder of Archbishop Thomas Becket in his own Cathedral sent shockwaves through Europe, ...
Anglo-Norman Durham was home to a considerable body of historical texts during the period to c. 1130...
Schmitt Jean-Claude. Finucane (Ronald C.) Miracles and Pilgrims. Popular Beliefs in Medieval England...
CROOK John English medieval shrines Woodbridge ; New York : The Boydell press, 2011, XXIV-342 p. Col...
The tenth century Benedictine Reform of Anglo-Saxon England was led by a powerful trio of bishops wh...