This doctoral dissertation investigates the writings of the Venerable Bede (673-735) in the context of miracles and the miraculous. It begins by exploring the patristic tradition through which he developed his own historical and hagiographical work, particularly the thought of Gregory the Great in the context of doubt and Augustine of Hippo regarding history and truth. It then suggests that Bede had a particular affinity for the Gospel of Luke and the Acts of the Apostles as models for the writing of specifically ecclesiastical history. The use of sources to attest miracle narratives in six hagiographies known to Bede from Late Antiquity are explored before applying this knowledge to Bede and five of his early Insular contemporaries. The re...
During the Middle Ages, anthologies played a significant role in the diffusion of the theology and e...
This thesis explores the relationship between Creation and the saints Cuthbert and Guthlac in their ...
Thesis advisor: Robin FlemingEarly medieval readers read texts differently than their modern scholar...
Whilst Bede’s Prose Life of St Cuthbert has been several times edited and translated, and has been d...
This thesis examines the historia works of Bede in the light of the influence of genre and rhetoric ...
Bede\u27s use and revision of the anonymous Life of St Cuthbert and the redeployment of patristic te...
This thesis examines a number of miracle collections and hagiographies written by Winchester monks i...
In Bede's lifetime (c. 673–735) the churches at Wearmouth-Jarrow were richly decorated with panel pa...
Bede was (and is) justly renowned for his scholarship and admired for his piety; an early cult, such...
Today, the Venerable Bede's (672/3-735) Historia ecclesiastica gentis Anglorum (HE) is widely consid...
This thesis is a study of the historiography of the period AD375-650 in the north of the former prov...
This paper focuses on miracle accounts in Bede’s Ecclesiastical History, especially accounts of visi...
Bede's decision to diverge from the mainstream chronological tradition, based on the Septuagint, in ...
This dissertation analyses a collection of Lives (vitae) of lay saints from western Europe who were ...
This thesis is based on a study of miracle stories recorded by Anglo-Saxon ecclesiastical writers in...
During the Middle Ages, anthologies played a significant role in the diffusion of the theology and e...
This thesis explores the relationship between Creation and the saints Cuthbert and Guthlac in their ...
Thesis advisor: Robin FlemingEarly medieval readers read texts differently than their modern scholar...
Whilst Bede’s Prose Life of St Cuthbert has been several times edited and translated, and has been d...
This thesis examines the historia works of Bede in the light of the influence of genre and rhetoric ...
Bede\u27s use and revision of the anonymous Life of St Cuthbert and the redeployment of patristic te...
This thesis examines a number of miracle collections and hagiographies written by Winchester monks i...
In Bede's lifetime (c. 673–735) the churches at Wearmouth-Jarrow were richly decorated with panel pa...
Bede was (and is) justly renowned for his scholarship and admired for his piety; an early cult, such...
Today, the Venerable Bede's (672/3-735) Historia ecclesiastica gentis Anglorum (HE) is widely consid...
This thesis is a study of the historiography of the period AD375-650 in the north of the former prov...
This paper focuses on miracle accounts in Bede’s Ecclesiastical History, especially accounts of visi...
Bede's decision to diverge from the mainstream chronological tradition, based on the Septuagint, in ...
This dissertation analyses a collection of Lives (vitae) of lay saints from western Europe who were ...
This thesis is based on a study of miracle stories recorded by Anglo-Saxon ecclesiastical writers in...
During the Middle Ages, anthologies played a significant role in the diffusion of the theology and e...
This thesis explores the relationship between Creation and the saints Cuthbert and Guthlac in their ...
Thesis advisor: Robin FlemingEarly medieval readers read texts differently than their modern scholar...