In the mystery cycles of York and Towneley, Jesus Christ is compared to a jester or a (wise) fool by his opponents, something which is not so surprising if one takes into account the place given to the fool in medieval society. Indeed, despite his “wisdom” and because of his traditional lack of regard for his own person or status, the wise fool was the regular target of the same sort of abuse that the professional jester incurred, for it was the price they both had to pay for the special type of freedom they were awarded. The humiliations that Christ is subjected to in Christ Before Herod and The Buffeting, which his tormentors use to ridicule him, are evidence of their own folly and a testament to their victim’s fortitude. They exhibit the...
In october 1388, in Paris, a trial for heresy results for the first time in the use of forensic evid...
Engraving of Will Sommers by Francis Delaram, 1615-1624 ‘As ‘all men were fools before God, an...
‘Madness and Christianity go hand in hand ’ (Screech 1985, 25). This claim can be considered quite a...
Dans les Mystères de York ou de Towneley, le Christ tient à la fois du fou de cour et du fou sage, c...
At first glance, the medieval Corpus Christi plays from N-Town, Wakefield, and York detailing the ev...
Clerks and jesters in mediaeval society 2th- 13th centuries Carla CASAGRANDE et Silvana VECCHIO The ...
Symeon of Emesa is a holy fool. When holy fools appear in public, they behave as if they were mad, b...
The Idea of Folly in Text and Image : Sebastian Brant and the insipiens - The concept of folly under...
International audienceLunatics are not familiar figures in English medieval works. Indeed, they hard...
This article delineates the conceptual, thematic and structural links of Erasmus’s The Praise of Fol...
Current scholarship on the devotional practices of late medieval England has emphasized two represen...
The goal of this thesis is to understand the meaning of holy folly. The Bible often uses the term fo...
The Early Christian Church, more attracted by philosophy man theatre, discovered in stoicism a moral...
This thesis studies John Foxe's treatment of the Henrician Reformation in The Acts and Monuments, an...
In october 1388, in Paris, a trial for heresy results for the first time in the use of forensic evid...
Engraving of Will Sommers by Francis Delaram, 1615-1624 ‘As ‘all men were fools before God, an...
‘Madness and Christianity go hand in hand ’ (Screech 1985, 25). This claim can be considered quite a...
Dans les Mystères de York ou de Towneley, le Christ tient à la fois du fou de cour et du fou sage, c...
At first glance, the medieval Corpus Christi plays from N-Town, Wakefield, and York detailing the ev...
Clerks and jesters in mediaeval society 2th- 13th centuries Carla CASAGRANDE et Silvana VECCHIO The ...
Symeon of Emesa is a holy fool. When holy fools appear in public, they behave as if they were mad, b...
The Idea of Folly in Text and Image : Sebastian Brant and the insipiens - The concept of folly under...
International audienceLunatics are not familiar figures in English medieval works. Indeed, they hard...
This article delineates the conceptual, thematic and structural links of Erasmus’s The Praise of Fol...
Current scholarship on the devotional practices of late medieval England has emphasized two represen...
The goal of this thesis is to understand the meaning of holy folly. The Bible often uses the term fo...
The Early Christian Church, more attracted by philosophy man theatre, discovered in stoicism a moral...
This thesis studies John Foxe's treatment of the Henrician Reformation in The Acts and Monuments, an...
In october 1388, in Paris, a trial for heresy results for the first time in the use of forensic evid...
Engraving of Will Sommers by Francis Delaram, 1615-1624 ‘As ‘all men were fools before God, an...
‘Madness and Christianity go hand in hand ’ (Screech 1985, 25). This claim can be considered quite a...