Some of the earliest references to ritual lamentation or keening in the early Irish sources are found in the penitential handbooks dated to around the seventh and eighth centuries. In previous scholarship, these passages have commonly been interpreted as evidence of the continuous attempts of the Church to curb pagan practices among the 'nominally Christian' populace, thus assuming that such regulations were primarily used as a means of social control. This article examines the wider theological and intellectual context of these texts, by focusing in particular on the influence of the Old Testament on early Irish ecclesiastical writing. It will be argued that the demonstrable preoccupation of these sources with issues such as ritual purity ...
This dissertation studies liturgical blessing and its role in the religious life of people in the Mi...
In 1691, after the defeat of Jacobite forces by William III, the foregoing declaration against trans...
The conversion process of Ireland resulted in a culture that reflected both its pagan, Celtic roots ...
Some of the earliest references to ritual lamentation or keening in the early Irish sources are foun...
peer-reviewedIn his 1909 work ‘Rites De Passage’, Arnold van Gennep acknowledges that a ritual often...
This is a study of the so-called Irish Penitentials. The documents which compose this documental cor...
From the introduction of Christianity into Ireland in the fifth century to the arrival of the Viking...
This article examines the loss of lament from the worship of the Church of Scotland in the twentieth...
This research note examines how the terms ‘pagan’ and ‘paganism’ have variously been used in Irish ...
As commonly used in its moral sense I will, for the purposes of this paper, take the concept of “con...
This paper will examine the suppression and 'de-ritualisation' of the pagan practice of Irish keenin...
This article presents a reassessment of the evidence provided by the extant medieval Irish medical ...
In his 1909 work ‘Rites De Passage’, Arnold van Gennep acknowledges that a ritual often ...
peer-reviewedThis work proposes the sourcing of a theology of music with particular reference to lit...
This article reviews the reform of popular piety, both Protestant and Catholic, in Ireland between 1...
This dissertation studies liturgical blessing and its role in the religious life of people in the Mi...
In 1691, after the defeat of Jacobite forces by William III, the foregoing declaration against trans...
The conversion process of Ireland resulted in a culture that reflected both its pagan, Celtic roots ...
Some of the earliest references to ritual lamentation or keening in the early Irish sources are foun...
peer-reviewedIn his 1909 work ‘Rites De Passage’, Arnold van Gennep acknowledges that a ritual often...
This is a study of the so-called Irish Penitentials. The documents which compose this documental cor...
From the introduction of Christianity into Ireland in the fifth century to the arrival of the Viking...
This article examines the loss of lament from the worship of the Church of Scotland in the twentieth...
This research note examines how the terms ‘pagan’ and ‘paganism’ have variously been used in Irish ...
As commonly used in its moral sense I will, for the purposes of this paper, take the concept of “con...
This paper will examine the suppression and 'de-ritualisation' of the pagan practice of Irish keenin...
This article presents a reassessment of the evidence provided by the extant medieval Irish medical ...
In his 1909 work ‘Rites De Passage’, Arnold van Gennep acknowledges that a ritual often ...
peer-reviewedThis work proposes the sourcing of a theology of music with particular reference to lit...
This article reviews the reform of popular piety, both Protestant and Catholic, in Ireland between 1...
This dissertation studies liturgical blessing and its role in the religious life of people in the Mi...
In 1691, after the defeat of Jacobite forces by William III, the foregoing declaration against trans...
The conversion process of Ireland resulted in a culture that reflected both its pagan, Celtic roots ...