"Incarceration and Liberation: Prisons in the Cistercian Monastery." This article explores the means by which Cistercians from the thirteenth century were able to use and justify imprisonment in their monastic houses. It traces the invention of the monastic prison from the advent of cenobitic monasticism and explores the discursive construction of captivity as a fundamental element of western monastic life. The author particularly looks at the tension between spiritual understandings of freedom in confinement, and the reality of actual incarceration in a monastic setting. The article positions a history of monastic prisons within specific cultural contexts; in this way, it departs from a traditional reading of imprisonment as part of legal ...
How much was a medieval monastery reminiscent of a modern prison? Or insane asylum? And if it was in...
This article uses analytical concepts from cognitive science to explore and deepen our understanding...
This article will examine the changing place of architecture and the contested nature of prison spac...
This book explores the world of religious thinking on imprisonment, and how images of imprisonment w...
At the rear of the Church of the Holy Sepulcher in Jerusalem is a small chapel known as the Prison o...
This dissertation investigates the connection between incarceration and purgative penance as it deve...
Following the Council of Trent (1545-1563), Catholic religious orders underwent substantial reform. ...
Incarceration was one of the ways in which religious who had committed a crime were punished. In thi...
Ulrich L. Lehner, Monastic Prisons and Torture Chambers: Crime and Punishment in Central European Mo...
There has been a growing awareness among scholars of the close and complex relationship between writ...
An article review of Ralph B. Pugh, Imprisonment in Medieval England, Cambridge, at the University P...
The Cistercians were born out of a spirit of reform and a desire for closer adherence to the Rule of...
Aeternum Dei servitium ad sanctum locum. The Penance of the Murderers of Five Martyred Brethren in a...
One of the few things that prisons were not used for, in a legal sense, was punishment. However, a m...
From the end of the xiiith century, the commune of Tournai has held, within the territorial limits o...
How much was a medieval monastery reminiscent of a modern prison? Or insane asylum? And if it was in...
This article uses analytical concepts from cognitive science to explore and deepen our understanding...
This article will examine the changing place of architecture and the contested nature of prison spac...
This book explores the world of religious thinking on imprisonment, and how images of imprisonment w...
At the rear of the Church of the Holy Sepulcher in Jerusalem is a small chapel known as the Prison o...
This dissertation investigates the connection between incarceration and purgative penance as it deve...
Following the Council of Trent (1545-1563), Catholic religious orders underwent substantial reform. ...
Incarceration was one of the ways in which religious who had committed a crime were punished. In thi...
Ulrich L. Lehner, Monastic Prisons and Torture Chambers: Crime and Punishment in Central European Mo...
There has been a growing awareness among scholars of the close and complex relationship between writ...
An article review of Ralph B. Pugh, Imprisonment in Medieval England, Cambridge, at the University P...
The Cistercians were born out of a spirit of reform and a desire for closer adherence to the Rule of...
Aeternum Dei servitium ad sanctum locum. The Penance of the Murderers of Five Martyred Brethren in a...
One of the few things that prisons were not used for, in a legal sense, was punishment. However, a m...
From the end of the xiiith century, the commune of Tournai has held, within the territorial limits o...
How much was a medieval monastery reminiscent of a modern prison? Or insane asylum? And if it was in...
This article uses analytical concepts from cognitive science to explore and deepen our understanding...
This article will examine the changing place of architecture and the contested nature of prison spac...