An introduction to and edition of a previously unpublished legend for the Canonization Day of the Swedish national saint, Birgitta Birgersdotter. The legend exists today in one single manuscript, Uppsala University Library, ms. C 24, written in the second half of the fifteenth century. The legend has three main parts: the first describes the holy life of St Birgitta in the form of two "sermons"; the second part is a very brief account of miracles performed by or through the saint; and the third part describes the process leading to her canonization. The legend as a whole draws on about a dozen identifiable sources and one or more that cannot be identified. From an unknown source come two miracles that appear in part three
This book examines the religious authority of St Birgitta of Sweden, the charismatic moral reformer ...
A group of prayer books in the written material from the late mediaeval Vadstena Abbeythat still sur...
Saint Birgitta (Saint Bridget of Sweden) lived between 1303 and 1373 and was designated one of Europ...
An edition of a previously unpublished liturgical legend for the Canonization Day of St. Birgitta of...
In the first few years after Birgitta of Sweden’s death (1373) her confessors, both named Peter, com...
Early Iconography of St. Birgitta of Sweden The development of iconography of St. Birgitta of Sweden...
St Birgitta of Sweden was one of the most charismatic figures in the late medieval mystical traditio...
This bilingual volume (Latin text with English translation) is the second in the series presenting h...
A survey of the Latin Lives of St Birgitta of Sweden, with an edition of a brief life found in an En...
The very existence of the virgin martyr Saint Barbara, one of the “quattuor virgines capitales,”1 is...
S. Birgitta (Bridget) of Sweden (about 1303-1373) lived in a period of flourishing Christian mystici...
The purpose of this essay is to evaluate whether or not saintly biographies can provide readers with...
In the later Middle Ages there was a vivid activity of preaching at the Abbey of Vadstena. Apart fro...
Birgittine Manuscripts and Medieval Book Production This article is an attempt to identify the scrib...
Saint Birgitta of Sweden (1303–1373), one of the most powerful visionary women from the late Middle ...
This book examines the religious authority of St Birgitta of Sweden, the charismatic moral reformer ...
A group of prayer books in the written material from the late mediaeval Vadstena Abbeythat still sur...
Saint Birgitta (Saint Bridget of Sweden) lived between 1303 and 1373 and was designated one of Europ...
An edition of a previously unpublished liturgical legend for the Canonization Day of St. Birgitta of...
In the first few years after Birgitta of Sweden’s death (1373) her confessors, both named Peter, com...
Early Iconography of St. Birgitta of Sweden The development of iconography of St. Birgitta of Sweden...
St Birgitta of Sweden was one of the most charismatic figures in the late medieval mystical traditio...
This bilingual volume (Latin text with English translation) is the second in the series presenting h...
A survey of the Latin Lives of St Birgitta of Sweden, with an edition of a brief life found in an En...
The very existence of the virgin martyr Saint Barbara, one of the “quattuor virgines capitales,”1 is...
S. Birgitta (Bridget) of Sweden (about 1303-1373) lived in a period of flourishing Christian mystici...
The purpose of this essay is to evaluate whether or not saintly biographies can provide readers with...
In the later Middle Ages there was a vivid activity of preaching at the Abbey of Vadstena. Apart fro...
Birgittine Manuscripts and Medieval Book Production This article is an attempt to identify the scrib...
Saint Birgitta of Sweden (1303–1373), one of the most powerful visionary women from the late Middle ...
This book examines the religious authority of St Birgitta of Sweden, the charismatic moral reformer ...
A group of prayer books in the written material from the late mediaeval Vadstena Abbeythat still sur...
Saint Birgitta (Saint Bridget of Sweden) lived between 1303 and 1373 and was designated one of Europ...