Mystical handbooks, or how-do-it books describing the path to union with God, was a genre that arose in Western Europe in the 12th century and lasted into the Early Modern period. These works, though rarely original, have often been overlooked, but they played an important role in disseminating mystical teaching to an increasingly broad audience. Many religious writers contributed to the genre: Benedictines, Cistercians, Carthusians, Dominicans, and so on. This article concentrates on the Franciscan friars, who played a major part in the production and spread of the handbooks
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This article offers an analysis of the complex and contradictory nature of lay religious texts produ...
This study explores the shared spaces and common ground between the moral theosophies of Sufism and ...
Spirituality has been increasingly studied to determine the laity’s role within Church history in th...
This thesis examines the function and transmission of late medieval visionary writings with devotion...
Between roughly the years 1050 and 1500, a flowering of new spiritual expressions, forms and ideas t...
Throughout the whole history of religious experience there have been two supplementary emphases, the...
This essay will suggest the main elements of western monastic mysticism as found in its classic text...
This thesis examines the distinctive nature of early Franciscan mystical theology. Working from Bern...
Introduction: The Brothers of Our Lady of Mount Carmel were a religious order of Roman Catholic herm...
This thesis highlights the role of Carmelite friars in the composition and circulation of religious ...
The need to provide the friars with a sound theological formation for preaching and pastoral care fo...
The focus of this work is to explore medieval women mystics of Europe. In examining the works of th...
"Utilizes the collection of magic texts from the late Middle Ages at St. Augustine's, Canterbury, to...
This thesis addresses attitudes towards mystical theology in seventeenth-century England. While curr...
This dissertation analyses a collection of Lives (vitae) of lay saints from western Europe who were ...
This article offers an analysis of the complex and contradictory nature of lay religious texts produ...
This study explores the shared spaces and common ground between the moral theosophies of Sufism and ...
Spirituality has been increasingly studied to determine the laity’s role within Church history in th...