Margery Kempe journeyed on pilgrimage from England to Compostela in 1417, a visit briefly noted in her quasi-autobiographical Book. This article examines and contextualises that journey as a facet of a life and a text marked by many similar pilgrimages. In addition, it fits pilgrimage into her life as viatrix, engaged on a spiritual journey not to terrestrial shrines, but to heavenly salvation.Margery Kempe peregrinó desde Inglaterra a Compostela en 1417, una visita de la que dejó constancia en su cuasi-autobiográfico Libro. Este artículo analiza y contextualiza esa travesía como una parte de una vida y un texto marcados por peregrinajes similares. Además, integra la peregrinación en su vida como viatrix, comprometida con un viaje espiritua...
Based upon the last will of Maruša of Dubrovnik, drafted while returning from the pilgrimage to the ...
Medieval Christians perceived themselves as pilgrims, or peregrini, with the concept of pilgrimage i...
Many scholarly articles claim that the pilgrimage to Santiago de Compostela was moribund at the turn...
Margery Kempe (c. 1373-1438), the author--not the writer--of The Book of Margery Kempe, lived--when ...
Book of Margery Kempe, lived—when she was not traveling to the Holy Land or Assisi, the Shrine of St...
Movement in literature is a technique used by authors to uncover richer and deeper meaning which can...
The simplest, and yet most knotty, place to start with The Book of Margery Kempe is to ask plainly: ...
Book synopsis: This is a new account of the late-fourteenth-century mystic and pilgrim Margery Kempe...
The file attached to this record is the author's final peer reviewed version.Long regarded as a medi...
Anthony Baleߣs essay takes up recent scholarship on the historicity and production of The Book of Ma...
Pilgrims are so frequently encountered in the pages of medieval literature that their presence (and ...
This article is based on my fieldwork conducted in two important destinations in the spiritual lands...
In The Book of Margery Kempe, the protagonist shifts between identities and geographies as a nomadic...
This chapter explores real and imagined pilgrimages, beginning with the fictional journeys of Chauce...
As the IVth century neared its end, the nun Egéria set off from northern Iberia on a pilgrimage to P...
Based upon the last will of Maruša of Dubrovnik, drafted while returning from the pilgrimage to the ...
Medieval Christians perceived themselves as pilgrims, or peregrini, with the concept of pilgrimage i...
Many scholarly articles claim that the pilgrimage to Santiago de Compostela was moribund at the turn...
Margery Kempe (c. 1373-1438), the author--not the writer--of The Book of Margery Kempe, lived--when ...
Book of Margery Kempe, lived—when she was not traveling to the Holy Land or Assisi, the Shrine of St...
Movement in literature is a technique used by authors to uncover richer and deeper meaning which can...
The simplest, and yet most knotty, place to start with The Book of Margery Kempe is to ask plainly: ...
Book synopsis: This is a new account of the late-fourteenth-century mystic and pilgrim Margery Kempe...
The file attached to this record is the author's final peer reviewed version.Long regarded as a medi...
Anthony Baleߣs essay takes up recent scholarship on the historicity and production of The Book of Ma...
Pilgrims are so frequently encountered in the pages of medieval literature that their presence (and ...
This article is based on my fieldwork conducted in two important destinations in the spiritual lands...
In The Book of Margery Kempe, the protagonist shifts between identities and geographies as a nomadic...
This chapter explores real and imagined pilgrimages, beginning with the fictional journeys of Chauce...
As the IVth century neared its end, the nun Egéria set off from northern Iberia on a pilgrimage to P...
Based upon the last will of Maruša of Dubrovnik, drafted while returning from the pilgrimage to the ...
Medieval Christians perceived themselves as pilgrims, or peregrini, with the concept of pilgrimage i...
Many scholarly articles claim that the pilgrimage to Santiago de Compostela was moribund at the turn...