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BriefeGregory, Wittig, Michael. January 1981 (has links)
Michael Wittig's Thesis (doctoral)--Universität Würzburg, 1980. / Includes indexes. Includes bibliographical references (p. 262-272).
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Beasts and birds in the Lives of the early Irish saints ...MacNickle, Mary Donatus, January 1934 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Pennsylvania, 1933. / Bibliography: p. 245-255.
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Pope Benedict XIV concerning saints' causes /Scarcella, Philip J. January 1986 (has links)
Thesis (J.C.L.)--Catholic University of America, 1986. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 73-77).
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Edward II : England's lost saint?Bowman, Gaynor January 2013 (has links)
The cult that arose around the posthumous memory of Edward Il is currently recognised but dismissed as a brief, localised aberration, dependent upon external stimulus. The subsuming understandings required to support and project an image of Edward Il as a saintly figure remain unexplored. Therefore, this thesis through a synthesis and analysis of literary and material sources, read against contemporary political, cultural and religious views, aims to identify the foundations of his alleged sanctity and assess the nature, scope and duration of his veneration. This study contends that the idea of Edward Il as a martyr developed three years after his death when it was announced that he had been murdered. The vital nucleus to this was the deeply acculturated belief in the ' inherent sanctity of an anointed king, catalysed into veneration by the abject horror of his murder. This conviction adopted a political dimension in retrospective criticism of the regime of Isabella and Mortimer, which had supplanted the rule of Edward Il and usurped the rule of Edward Ill. The understanding of Edward Il as a saintly figure who stood against the usurpation of God's order became quiescently embedded into the contemporary spiritual hierarchy, resulting in some evidence of it becoming overlooked (as perhaps in the Luttrel/ Psalter) or under evaluated. This argument is explored through fresh interpretations, some re -dating and close readings of four literary pieces. The Lament of Edward If reveals a previously undetected analogy of Edward Il as Boethius. The Vita et Mars is suggested as a hagiography for the king. The Fieschi Letter is considered as a piece of anti-English propaganda emanating from the Hundred Years War and Adam Davy's 5 Dreams about Edward If is re-contextualised as a piece of propaganda possibly written or adapted to gain support for Bishop Despenser's crusade of 1383.
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From EADHREDIG to GYNG : a feminist re-evaluation of the Legend of St JulianaWalsh, Arlene 11 1900 (has links)
St Juliana is a legendary saint, whose actual existence is most improbable, although
relics purportedly existed. The approximate date of her martyrdom is c. 305-310. According
to the Bollandist Acta Sanctorum , the facts of her story are very briefly as follows: her
legend is set in the time of the Diocletian persecutions, when Juliana, daughter of Affricanus
(a pagan) lived in Nicomedia. She was betrothed to Eleusius, an official ofNicomedia and a
cohort of Maximian the emperor. When Eleusius enquired about the wedding, Juliana
(already a convert) refused to marry him until he became a prefect When he had achieved
this promotion, Juliana now required his conversion to Christianity. First her father and then
Eleusius tortured her. Upon being imprisoned, a demon attempted to trick her, but she foiled
him and miraculously escaped further harm as an angel appeared to assist her. The tortures
meant for her harmed many of Eleusius' soldiers, and others, impressed by her example,
converted to Christianity and were immediately beheaded. Juliana, impervious to whatever
hideous tortures had been devised for her, was beheaded. Sephonia/Sophia, a devout
Christian woman of some material wealth, carried her body to Puzzeoli in Italy and buried it
with ceremony. Meanwhile Eleusius and his soldiers drowned at sea and their bodies were
eaten by beasts.
Cynewulf makes a number of emendations to this story, some in order to improve the
character of the heroine, but he was clearly reliant upon the common source, which certainly
ante-dated AD 568, when Juliana's remains were removed from Puzzeoli, an event which the
source does not mention.
The first reference to her legend is found in a martyrology ascribed to Jerome (d. 420)
entitled Martyrologium Vetustissium. Bede includes a very short version in his Latin
Martyrology, but the first vernacular English version of her tale is Cynewulf's Juliana, which
was written in the ninth century. It is generally agreed that the source for Cynewulf's version
is either the first of two Latin lives of St Juliana published in the Acta Sanctorum for
February 16 by Bolland in the seventeenth century, or a version very close to it. Although
Bolland's compilation is a seventeenth-century work, the sources which he used were very
inuch older. (Her tale is omitted from Aldhelm's De Virginitate, as well as from Aelfric's
Lives of the Saints.) The Liflade is a twelfth-century early Middle English version. Seyn
Julien is a fourteenth-century ScDttish version which is based on the Legenda Aurea, but the
version from the South English Legendary is not
Versions of the tale of St Juliana appear in Anglo-Norman, Irish, Italian (Peter,
Archbishop ofNaples 1094-1111), Swedish, Greek (Symeon Metaphrastes (d. 965). Jacobus
de Voragine's Legenda Aurea, prepared in the thirteenth century by a Dominican, is the basis
for many of the versions, most certainly of Caxton's translation of 1483.
Her day is remembered on 16 February. / English Studies / M.A. (English)
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Pallid corpses in golden coffins : relics, reliquaries, and the art of relic cults in the Adriatic Rim /Munk, Ana. January 2003 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Washington, 2003. / Vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 340-373).
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Prologue and epilogue in Old French lives of saints before 1400 ...Jones, Paul John, January 1933 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Pennsylvania, 1927.
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Saint Roch: genèse et première expansion d'un culte au XVe siècleBolle, Pierre January 2001 (has links)
Doctorat en philosophie et lettres / info:eu-repo/semantics/nonPublished
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Contributions of the Latin chronicles and saints' lives to our knowledge of the literature and learning of Cambro-Roman and Anglo-Saxon timesNoonan, John Patrick. January 1948 (has links)
Call number: LD2668 .T4 1948 N6 / Master of Science
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The iconography of local saints in Tuscan painting from the thirteenth to the end of the fifteenth centuryKaftal, George January 1946 (has links)
No description available.
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