The article discusses the Europe-wide late medieval phenomenon of the cult of the Holy Name, using it as a case study to discuss the relationship of micro-and macro-historical transformations by scrutinizing the enormous success of a religious innovation which managed to spread to many different local contexts and social groups. After pointing out contradictions in earlier explanations of this success, the article gives a detailed reading of several different realizations of this form of devotion, discussing authors like Richard Rolle, but also religious compilations and documentary evidence. This evidence suggests that the meaning and significance of devotion to the Holy Name remained open, malleable and unstable. It therefore appears nece...
Expanding upon recent work on the heterogeneity of Catholicism and the challenges facing Tridentine ...
This article provides a diachronic and overall view to analyze the creation of an identity in medi...
This article identifies an important contour of “discursive Christianity” in early-twentieth-century...
This article explores the ways in which the newly founded and highly contested Christian confession ...
Introducing a thematic section, this article presents an overview and some of the theoretical consid...
This article argues that the age of the Protestant and Catholic Reformations and the global spread o...
This article seeks to identify a vein of ‘Puritanism’ running through orthodox religious culture in ...
Of the Christocentric devotions which achieved widespread in popularity in later medieval Scotland, ...
Introducing a thematic section, this article presents an overview and some of the theoretical consid...
In the article the author focuses on the Pentecostal-Charismatic Renewal movements that attract rapi...
This article examines how the Carthusian Peter Dorlandus (1454–1507) rewrote the material about well...
The present article sets out to examine H.L. Mikoletzky's thesis that the Carolingian Age, and, more...
This article examines a particular set of texts in an early fifteenth-century religious anthology co...
This article examines changes to the role of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre (CHS) from its constru...
This article explores the cult of Thérèse of Lisieux in Austria within a larger context of popular d...
Expanding upon recent work on the heterogeneity of Catholicism and the challenges facing Tridentine ...
This article provides a diachronic and overall view to analyze the creation of an identity in medi...
This article identifies an important contour of “discursive Christianity” in early-twentieth-century...
This article explores the ways in which the newly founded and highly contested Christian confession ...
Introducing a thematic section, this article presents an overview and some of the theoretical consid...
This article argues that the age of the Protestant and Catholic Reformations and the global spread o...
This article seeks to identify a vein of ‘Puritanism’ running through orthodox religious culture in ...
Of the Christocentric devotions which achieved widespread in popularity in later medieval Scotland, ...
Introducing a thematic section, this article presents an overview and some of the theoretical consid...
In the article the author focuses on the Pentecostal-Charismatic Renewal movements that attract rapi...
This article examines how the Carthusian Peter Dorlandus (1454–1507) rewrote the material about well...
The present article sets out to examine H.L. Mikoletzky's thesis that the Carolingian Age, and, more...
This article examines a particular set of texts in an early fifteenth-century religious anthology co...
This article examines changes to the role of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre (CHS) from its constru...
This article explores the cult of Thérèse of Lisieux in Austria within a larger context of popular d...
Expanding upon recent work on the heterogeneity of Catholicism and the challenges facing Tridentine ...
This article provides a diachronic and overall view to analyze the creation of an identity in medi...
This article identifies an important contour of “discursive Christianity” in early-twentieth-century...