The great Benedictine historian William of Malmesbury has divided scholarly interpretation over recent decades. For some, William was a precocious scholarly talent who steered around or subverted the constraining absurdities of the providential orthodoxy. For others, his explicit expressions of faith in God’s providence, despite its often vexatious reverses, betray a sincere piety and reverence for the hidden justice of divine cosmic rationality. These conclusions have relied on flawed assessments of William’s use of the term fortuna, fortune. They adhere to a broader status quo that imagines all medieval thinkers took for granted that fortune’s reverses were inscrutable and inevitable. On the contrary, this article argues that William was ...
The question of whether or not our decisions and efforts make a difference in an uncertain and uncon...
The main point of Parallel Lives is that by looking at medieval saints' lives as expressions of idea...
William Longchamp (d. 1197), bishop of Ely, papal legate for the British Isles, chief justiciar of E...
This thesis suggests that four twelfth-century English historians – Orderic Vitalis, William of Malm...
The article constitutes an attempt to interpret one of the newly discovered source texts concerning ...
The goddess Fortuna, who ruled over chance and the giving of worldly gifts was a pagan deity who sur...
William of Malmesbury’s “Fortune” (Gesta Rerum Anglorum II 12) – An Attempt at a New Interpretation ...
Describing William of Malmesbury, scholars have often found it appropriate to draw upon superlatives...
This article offers an effective and original interpretation of two crucial sources that have long b...
The article constitutes an attempt to interpret one of the newly discovered source texts concerning ...
In this paper I advance the thesis that the portrayal of Fortuna, in the "Monk's Tale," is developed...
William of Malmesbury wrote his Gesta Regum ‘out of love for his homeland’ (‘propter patriae caritat...
The article brings to the attention of the scholarly world a hardly known medieval source Gesta Regu...
Though Robert of Cricklade described William of Malmesbury as a cantor, his exercise of this office ...
As Professor Rod Thomson noted in 1997 ('William of Malmesbury, Historian of Crusade', Reading Medie...
The question of whether or not our decisions and efforts make a difference in an uncertain and uncon...
The main point of Parallel Lives is that by looking at medieval saints' lives as expressions of idea...
William Longchamp (d. 1197), bishop of Ely, papal legate for the British Isles, chief justiciar of E...
This thesis suggests that four twelfth-century English historians – Orderic Vitalis, William of Malm...
The article constitutes an attempt to interpret one of the newly discovered source texts concerning ...
The goddess Fortuna, who ruled over chance and the giving of worldly gifts was a pagan deity who sur...
William of Malmesbury’s “Fortune” (Gesta Rerum Anglorum II 12) – An Attempt at a New Interpretation ...
Describing William of Malmesbury, scholars have often found it appropriate to draw upon superlatives...
This article offers an effective and original interpretation of two crucial sources that have long b...
The article constitutes an attempt to interpret one of the newly discovered source texts concerning ...
In this paper I advance the thesis that the portrayal of Fortuna, in the "Monk's Tale," is developed...
William of Malmesbury wrote his Gesta Regum ‘out of love for his homeland’ (‘propter patriae caritat...
The article brings to the attention of the scholarly world a hardly known medieval source Gesta Regu...
Though Robert of Cricklade described William of Malmesbury as a cantor, his exercise of this office ...
As Professor Rod Thomson noted in 1997 ('William of Malmesbury, Historian of Crusade', Reading Medie...
The question of whether or not our decisions and efforts make a difference in an uncertain and uncon...
The main point of Parallel Lives is that by looking at medieval saints' lives as expressions of idea...
William Longchamp (d. 1197), bishop of Ely, papal legate for the British Isles, chief justiciar of E...