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E-raamat: Mendicants and the Urban Mediterranean, c.1200-1500 [Taylor & Francis e-raamat]

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This volume explores the relationship of mendicant men and women to cities and their inhabitants in the Mediterranean world, c.1200 to 1500.



This volume explores the relationship of mendicant men and women to cities and their inhabitants in the Mediterranean world, c.1200 to 1500. It asks questions including what was specifically “urban” about the mendicant movement; what does it mean to think of the mendicants as an “urban phenomenon”; and was there anything common to mendicant experiences in the cities of the Mediterranean.

In addressing these questions, the volume expands our understanding of the mendicants by offering chapters that examine this religious movement within urban environments from the Iberian Peninsula, North Africa, Southern France, and Italy, to the Dalmatian Coast, Aegean Islands, Egypt, and the Levant. The chapters treat a wide array of textual, artistic, and architectural sources to consider how mendicants navigated and negotiated the unique social dynamics of Mediterranean cities in their interactions with political potentates, merchants, prisoners, pilgrims, religious and intellectual elites, non-Christians, and inhabitants of the surrounding countryside. It thus offers an interdisciplinary and broad survey of mendicancy as a social-religious phenomenon of the urban Mediterranean, demonstrating that these communities can be defined by much more than their traditionally accepted roles as beggars, preachers, and teachers.

Mendicants and the Urban Mediterranean will be of interest to scholars and students across multiple disciplines engaged in questions about medieval mendicancy, gender, urban society, inter-religious encounters, and the Mediterranean.

Introduction: By Jon Paul Heyne and Austin Powell

Tunis & Paris



Purposes for a Polemical Pair: Reading Ramon Martís De seta Machometi and
Explanatio simboli Apostolorum in Dominican Urban Contexts by Amy Boland

Portugal



Clarissan Reform, Miraculous Objects and Shared Devotions: Portuguese
Colettine Nuns within their Urban Communities by Paula Cardoso

Egypt



In the Cities of the Sultans: Mendicants in Mamluk Egypt by Jon Paul Heyne

Southern France



Hostile people invading the country: Social Unrest and the Forced
Relocation of the Poor Clares in the Fourteenth-Century Midi by Hannah
Jones

Castile



Postmodum autem missus Palentiam: The Urbanizing Upbringing of the
Castilian Canon Domingo de Caleruega, Founder of the Order of Preachers by
Kyle C. Lincoln


Venice



Immigration, Sex, and Prayer: Dominicans and Humanists in Venice, 1390 -
1440 By Austin Powell

Jerusalem



Being Franciscans in Mamluk Jerusalem: Three Years in the Life of the
Franciscan Custody of the Holy Land (1436-1438) by Camille Rouxpetel

Aegean



Mendicant Convents in the Aegean Sea: Visual and Material Impact on Urban
and Insular Dynamics (13th-16th c.) by Panayota Volti

Dubrovnik



The Coordinated Development of the Mendicant Convents and City Walls of
Dubrovnik by Joseph Williams
Jon Paul Heyne is an Assistant Professor of History at the University of Dallas and holds a PhD in history from The Catholic University of America. His research interests include pilgrimage, the Franciscan Custody of the Holy Land, and interfaith interactions across the Mediterranean.

Austin Powell holds a PhD in history from The Catholic University of America and has been a postdoctoral scholar and lecturer in the Classics Program at the University of CaliforniaDavis. His research explores the interconnections between the mendicant orders, penitent laywomen, mysticism, and textual communities in late medieval Italy.