This article examines the religious and architectural history of the Royal Abbey of Fontevrault, in the French province of Anjou, investigating the active and deliberate role women played in shaping the physical and symbolic space of this female monastic community. Founded in the early 12th century and active until the French Revolution, the abbey was a rare institution in which administrative power was in the hands of women, enabling them to exert almost complete control over the built environment. The nature and impact of this control is examined by tracing the development of the abbey from an initial settlement of rough dwellings into a large monastic complex comprising five distinct communities. By exploring the planning and building of...
Cet article explore le rôle clé qu’ont joué les femmes dans la construction de réseaux sociaux catho...
This article examines the Ursuline community in Bordeaux, France between 1606 and 1625. It integrate...
The religious life was central to Norman society in the middle ages. Professed religious and the cle...
This article examines the religious and architectural history of the Royal Abbey of Fontevrault, in ...
This article examines the religious and architectural history of the Royal Abbey of Fontevrault, in ...
The order of Fontevraud is well known for its particular organisational structure: in 1115, Fontevra...
Women's Access to Relic Shrines in the Early Middle Ages - This paper examines why women were exclud...
The Cistercian order, which had its origins in the late eleventh century, transformed the spiritual ...
The Order of Fontevraud, founded in 1100 by the hermit/preacher Robert of Arbrisssel was the only tw...
This article examines the written fragments of a dispute of the 1620s between a group of nuns at St ...
Is Gender relevant in the context of Early Medieval Monasticism (VIth- VIIth centuries) ? During...
International audienceLanguedoc Cistercian women religious have long been overlooked because of the ...
International audienceThis contribution is the chapter of a collective book for Anglo-Saxon students...
This article traces approaches to social space back to the 1950s and the subsequent pursuit of the ‘...
This paper embraces the opportunity to discuss life at medieval castles outside of the traditional n...
Cet article explore le rôle clé qu’ont joué les femmes dans la construction de réseaux sociaux catho...
This article examines the Ursuline community in Bordeaux, France between 1606 and 1625. It integrate...
The religious life was central to Norman society in the middle ages. Professed religious and the cle...
This article examines the religious and architectural history of the Royal Abbey of Fontevrault, in ...
This article examines the religious and architectural history of the Royal Abbey of Fontevrault, in ...
The order of Fontevraud is well known for its particular organisational structure: in 1115, Fontevra...
Women's Access to Relic Shrines in the Early Middle Ages - This paper examines why women were exclud...
The Cistercian order, which had its origins in the late eleventh century, transformed the spiritual ...
The Order of Fontevraud, founded in 1100 by the hermit/preacher Robert of Arbrisssel was the only tw...
This article examines the written fragments of a dispute of the 1620s between a group of nuns at St ...
Is Gender relevant in the context of Early Medieval Monasticism (VIth- VIIth centuries) ? During...
International audienceLanguedoc Cistercian women religious have long been overlooked because of the ...
International audienceThis contribution is the chapter of a collective book for Anglo-Saxon students...
This article traces approaches to social space back to the 1950s and the subsequent pursuit of the ‘...
This paper embraces the opportunity to discuss life at medieval castles outside of the traditional n...
Cet article explore le rôle clé qu’ont joué les femmes dans la construction de réseaux sociaux catho...
This article examines the Ursuline community in Bordeaux, France between 1606 and 1625. It integrate...
The religious life was central to Norman society in the middle ages. Professed religious and the cle...