SHAW, Robert Laurence John. The French Celestine "network" (ca. 1350-1450) : cross-order and lay collaboration in late medieval monastic reform. In Bonde, Sheila; Maines, Clark. Other Monasticisms : Studies in the History and Architecture of Religious Communities Outside the Canon, 11th - 15th Centuries. Turnhout: Brepols, 2022, s. 33-63. ISBN 978-2-503-58784-4.
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Základní údaje
Originální název The French Celestine "network" (ca. 1350-1450) : cross-order and lay collaboration in late medieval monastic reform
Autoři SHAW, Robert Laurence John (826 Velká Británie a Severní Irsko, garant, domácí).
Vydání Turnhout, Other Monasticisms : Studies in the History and Architecture of Religious Communities Outside the Canon, 11th - 15th Centuries, od s. 33-63, 31 s. 2022.
Nakladatel Brepols
Další údaje
Originální jazyk angličtina
Typ výsledku Kapitola resp. kapitoly v odborné knize
Obor 60304 Religious studies
Stát vydavatele Belgie
Utajení není předmětem státního či obchodního tajemství
Forma vydání tištěná verze "print"
WWW URL
Kód RIV RIV/00216224:14210/22:00127726
Organizační jednotka Filozofická fakulta
ISBN 978-2-503-58784-4
Klíčová slova anglicky monasticism; Celestines; Colettines; Carthusians; Observant reform; late medieval France; religious benefaction; networks
Štítky rivok
Příznaky Mezinárodní význam, Recenzováno
Změnil Změnila: Mgr. Eva Jandová, učo 177744. Změněno: 9. 3. 2023 14:29.
Anotace
This article draws attention to a largely unnoticed later medieval monastic reform congregation, the French arm of the Celestine order, a Benedictine reform originally founded by the famed Abruzzo hermit St. Peter of Morrone (who became Celestine V in 1294). At first sight, the French Celestines might seem unremarkable: while they became independent from their Italian cousins in 1380, their growth pales in comparison to the reformed congregations of earlier ‘golden ages’ of monasticism: they added 20 mostly rather small houses between 1300 and 1450, and very few thereafter before their eighteenth-century suppression. Even within those recent studies of later medieval monastic reform that have begun to escape the teleology of pre-Reformation ‘decline’, they remain a footnote, seemingly dwarfed by larger contemporary Observant Benedictine reform movements in Germany and Italy. And yet, the French Celestines had an impact upon their place and time that was much greater than their numbers would suggest. This article argues that the French Celestines were one of the lynchpins of a far wider network of religious interests and actors, and one that deserves as much attention as the order itself. Firstly, it will show how they became a hub of ‘Observant’-style reform in their region: they formed part of a network of cross-order reformist interaction both in their own region and beyond, involving Carthusians, Franciscan Observants, and the Colettine reform of the Claresses, as well as other Benedictine reformers. Secondly, this article demonstrates how this network was supported by another, an intricate web of interested laity. They ranged from princely benefactors who deployed monastic reform as part of their public image, secular intellectuals who found common ideological cause, as well as pious townspeople in Northern France and Burgundy. If conflict within orders and the issue of ‘competition’ with lay piety have been important issues in recent treatments of later medieval monastic reform, this paper will re-appraise a little-known reform group by escaping such institutional boundaries and sketching the contours of a larger human and ideological network.
VytisknoutZobrazeno: 29. 5. 2024 22:39