共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
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Kingship,Legislation and Power in Anglo‐Saxon England. Edited by Gale R. Owen‐Crocker and Brian W. Schneider. Publications of the Manchester Centre for Anglo‐Saxon Studies 13. Woodbridge: The Boydell Press. 2013. £60. ISBN 978 1 84383 877 7. 下载免费PDF全文
John Hudson 《Early Medieval Europe》2016,24(3):383-385
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Helen Foxhall Forbes 《Gender & history》2011,23(3):653-684
In early medieval Winchester, three monastic communities were enclosed together in the south‐eastern corner of the town. By the later Anglo‐Saxon period, Old Minster was a monastic cathedral and New Minster and Nunnaminster were monastic communities for men and women respectively. This paper addresses ways in which the three foundations collaborated and co‐ordinated with each other and with the city. While gender segregated these communities, both liturgy and the urban context integrated them, as can be seen from the books used and produced by religious men and women in this city in later Anglo‐Saxon England. The importance of prayer to the inhabitants of the city and the wider locale can be seen in the documents that request liturgical services – most often prayers and masses – in return for grants of land and other gifts. Ecclesiastical and lay individuals alike allied themselves to these religious houses, seeking commemoration and often also burial in their cemeteries and hoping to benefit spiritually from their prayers. The ways in which gender affected the religious experiences of Winchester's citizens and their consecrated brothers and sisters are complex, but they are also important in understanding how the saints and their servants on earth related to God, to each other and to the surrounding urban space. 相似文献
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Francesca Tinti 《Early Medieval Europe》2014,22(2):246-248