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Jonas of Bobbio and the Legacy of Columbanus
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 345

Jonas of Bobbio and the Legacy of Columbanus

Jonas of Bobbio's life mirrored many of the transformations of the seventh century, while his three saints' Lives provide a window into the early medieval Age of Saints and the monastic and political worlds of Merovingian Gaul and Lombard Italy.

Columbanus and the Peoples of Post-Roman Europe
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 345

Columbanus and the Peoples of Post-Roman Europe

In this wonderful collection of essays the reader travels with Columbanus through the Christian West, from Ireland to Brittany, from Northern Gaul to the Rhine, Bavaria, Alamannia, and Italy. Through the great Irishman's encounters with secular and ecclesiastical elites, with various religious cultures, Roman traditions, post-Roman states and peoples, this volume illuminates the profound changes that characterize the transition from the ancient to the medieval world.

Saint Columbanus
  • Language: en

Saint Columbanus

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2015
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  • Publisher: Veritas

A beautiful selection of writings encapsulating the teachings of one of Ireland's best-known saints.

Jonas of Bobbio
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 400

Jonas of Bobbio

  • Type: Book
  • -
  • Published: 2015-06-30
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  • Publisher: Unknown

Jonas of Bobbio was an Italian monk, author, and abbot, active in Lombard Italy and Merovingian Gaul during the seventh century. He is best known as the author of the Life of Columbanus and His Disciples, one of the most important works of hagiography from the early medieval period, that charts the remarkable journey of the Irish exile and monastic founder, Columbanus (d. 615), through Western Europe, as well as the monastic movement initiated by him and his Frankish successors in the Merovingian kingdoms. In the years following Columbanus’s death numerous new monasteries were built by his successors and their elite patrons in Francia that decisively transformed the inter-relationship betw...

Dancing at the Edge
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 198

Dancing at the Edge

Maureen O'Hara and Graham Leicester explore the competencies - the ways of being, doing, knowing and organising - that can help us navigate in complex and powerful times. They argue that these competencies are innate and within reach of all of us - given the right setting, plenty of practice and some gentle guidance. But they are seldom seen because they are routinely undervalued in today's culture. That must change, the authors insist, and this book is intended to begin that change.The book is based on the authors' extensive research and their practical experience observing the qualities demonstrated by some of today's most successful cultural, political and business leaders. They write of ...

A Flock Divided
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 333

A Flock Divided

Catholicism, as it developed in colonial Mexico, helped to create a broad and remarkably inclusive community of Christian subjects, while it also divided that community into countless smaller flocks. Taking this contradiction as a starting point, Matthew D. O’Hara describes how religious thought and practice shaped Mexico’s popular politics. As he shows, religion facilitated the emergence of new social categories and modes of belonging in which individuals—initially subjects of the Spanish crown, but later citizens and other residents of republican Mexico—found both significant opportunities for improving their place in society and major constraints on their ways of thinking and beha...

Western Monasticism Ante Litteram
  • Language: en

Western Monasticism Ante Litteram

Space has always played a crucial part in defining the place that monks and nuns occupy in the world. Even during the first centuries of the monastic phenomenon, when the possible varieties of monastic practice were nearly infinite, there was a common thread in the need to differentiate the monk from the rest: whatever else they were supposed to be, monks were beings apart, unique, in some sense separate from the mainstream. The physical contours of monastic topographies, natural and constructed, are thus fundamental to an understanding of how early monks went about defining the parameters of their everyday lives, their modes of religious observance, and their interactions with the larger wo...

The Irish in Early Medieval Europe
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 288

The Irish in Early Medieval Europe

Irish scholars who arrived in Continental Europe in the early Middle Ages are often credited with making some of the most important contributions to European culture and learning of the time, from the introduction of a new calendar to monastic reform. Among them were celebrated personalities such as St Columbanus, John Scottus Eriugena, and Sedulius Scottus who were in the vanguard of a constant stream of arrivals from Ireland to continental Europe, collectively known as 'peregrini'. The continental response to this Irish 'diaspora' ranged from admiration to open hostility, especially when peregrini were deemed to challenge prevalent cultural or spiritual conventions. This volume brings together leading historians, archaeologists, and palaeographers who provide-for the first time-a comprehensive assessment of the phenomenon of Irish peregrini in their continental context and the manner in which it is framed by modern scholarship as well as the popular imagination.

Rubbish Belongs to the Poor
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 240

Rubbish Belongs to the Poor

An ethnography of Uruguayan waste-pickers that reconceptualizes rubbish as a form of modern-day commons.

Scarlett
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 848

Scarlett

The sequel to Margaret Mitchell's Gone with the wind.__