It is somewhat rare to be able to analyze the membership of an early medieval women's religious community in any detail. Sant Joan de Ripoll, which operated from the late ninth century until 1017 at modern-day Sant Joan de les Abadesses in Catalonia, provides not just this opportunity but the even rarer chance to evaluate the nuns’ command of writing, by means of a single original charter of 949 that several of them signed autograph. This article argues that the signatures of these nuns indicate that they had in fact been taught to write before joining the nunnery. They are thus a source for female lay, rather than religious, literacy in this time and area. Consolidating this, the article provides a prosopography of the known nuns derived f...
The Augustinian convent of Jericho in Brussels was one of the main centres of textual, literary, and...
Literacy in Anglo-Saxon England is usually considered to have been restricted to a small group of ma...
Book description:EMF 11 brings together contributions by eleven historians and literary specialists ...
Late medieval English nuns have rarely commanded the attention of historians. Most scholars concentr...
This paper is about a research i on the literacy and writing skills of Neapolitan sisters in medieva...
A selection of documents, translated primarily from medieval Latin but occasionally from Old French,...
Though studies on medieval literacy have flourished since the late 20th century, highlighting a “wri...
This article deals with women's contribution to the book production in the Low Countries in the 14th...
Antonella Ambrosio seeks a viable way of carrying out research on this topic: the palaeographic anal...
During the early medieval period in Scandinavia, writing could be accomplished using one of two diff...
Through an examination of the role of nuns and the place of convents in both the spiritual and socia...
Founders and patrons, prioresses and sub prioresses, novice mistresses and cantrices, scribes and il...
Abbess Emma of Sant Joan de les Abadesses, post-Visigothic Catalonia's first known nunnery, left a s...
The traditional view of historians is that Scottish female religious establishments were not worthy ...
This thesis examines the function and transmission of late medieval visionary writings with devotion...
The Augustinian convent of Jericho in Brussels was one of the main centres of textual, literary, and...
Literacy in Anglo-Saxon England is usually considered to have been restricted to a small group of ma...
Book description:EMF 11 brings together contributions by eleven historians and literary specialists ...
Late medieval English nuns have rarely commanded the attention of historians. Most scholars concentr...
This paper is about a research i on the literacy and writing skills of Neapolitan sisters in medieva...
A selection of documents, translated primarily from medieval Latin but occasionally from Old French,...
Though studies on medieval literacy have flourished since the late 20th century, highlighting a “wri...
This article deals with women's contribution to the book production in the Low Countries in the 14th...
Antonella Ambrosio seeks a viable way of carrying out research on this topic: the palaeographic anal...
During the early medieval period in Scandinavia, writing could be accomplished using one of two diff...
Through an examination of the role of nuns and the place of convents in both the spiritual and socia...
Founders and patrons, prioresses and sub prioresses, novice mistresses and cantrices, scribes and il...
Abbess Emma of Sant Joan de les Abadesses, post-Visigothic Catalonia's first known nunnery, left a s...
The traditional view of historians is that Scottish female religious establishments were not worthy ...
This thesis examines the function and transmission of late medieval visionary writings with devotion...
The Augustinian convent of Jericho in Brussels was one of the main centres of textual, literary, and...
Literacy in Anglo-Saxon England is usually considered to have been restricted to a small group of ma...
Book description:EMF 11 brings together contributions by eleven historians and literary specialists ...