SHAW, Robert Laurence John. The Minims, Their Rule, and French Religious Society at the Turn of the Sixteenth Century. Viator. Brepols, 2020, vol. 51, No 2, p. 335-387. ISSN 0083-5897. Available from: https://dx.doi.org/10.1484/J.VIATOR.5.128757.
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Basic information
Original name The Minims, Their Rule, and French Religious Society at the Turn of the Sixteenth Century
Authors SHAW, Robert Laurence John (826 United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, guarantor, belonging to the institution).
Edition Viator, Brepols, 2020, 0083-5897.
Other information
Original language English
Type of outcome Article in a journal
Field of Study 60304 Religious studies
Country of publisher United States of America
Confidentiality degree is not subject to a state or trade secret
WWW Article available on Brepols Online
RIV identification code RIV/00216224:14210/20:00124200
Organization unit Faculty of Arts
Doi http://dx.doi.org/10.1484/J.VIATOR.5.128757
UT WoS 000755645300010
Keywords in English Order of Minims; mendicant orders; mendicants; monastic orders; monasticism; monastic studies; French history; Reformation; Renaissance; Italy; Calabrai
Tags International impact, Reviewed
Changed by Changed by: Mgr. Ivona Vrzalová, učo 361753. Changed: 4/5/2022 14:08.
Abstract
The mendicant Order of Minims was founded by a Calabrian hermit and healer, St. Francesco di Paola (1416-1507), who left his homeland behind in 1483 to attend to the ailing Louis XI in France at the latter’s request. They received papal approval for a new “rule” (despite the injunction of the Fourth Lateran Council against such developments in 1215) and a previously unheard-of vow (“Lenten life”), and enjoyed a growing presence across western and central Europe by the end of the founder’s life. The Minims appear hard to interpret: while they do not fit more traditional perspectives on pre-Reformation monastic “decline,” they also are not much easier to place in more recent and more positive reappraisals of late medieval reform, which have focused more on the push that reformers provided than their pull. This article emphasizes the productive religious conversations between vowed religious activists and external supporters in the period. It is argued that the Minims’ harsh and punctilious lives dovetailed tightly with the programmatic piety in favor among the pious laity of the aristocracy and the towns. Building on these foundations, the rigorous rule that they created was the product of a deep religious interaction with society, above all that which they found in France. The Minims’ evolving social connectivity and their boundary-crossing religious development meant that they were no outlier, but rather a natural focal-point within French religious society.
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