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E-raamat: Poverty and Devotion in Mendicant Cultures 1200-1450 [Taylor & Francis e-raamat]

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Ever since the time of Francis of Assisi, a commitment to voluntary poverty has been a controversial aspect of religious life. This volume explores the interaction between poverty and religious devotion in the mendicant orders between the thirteenth and fifteenth centuries. While poverty has often been perceived more as a Franciscan than as a Dominican emphasis, this volume considers its role within a broader movement of evangelical renewal associated with the mendicant transformation of religious life. At a time of increased economic prosperity, reformers within the Church sought new ways of encouraging identification with the person of Christ. This volume considers the paradoxical tension between voluntary poverty as a way of emulating Christ and involuntary poverty as situation demanding a response from those with the means to help the poor. Drawing on history, literature and visual arts, it explores how the mendicant orders continued to transform religious life into the time of the renaissance. The papers in this volume are organised under three headings, prefaced with an introductory essay by the editors: Poverty and the Rule of Francis, exploring the interpretation of poverty in the Franciscan Order; Devotional Cultures, considering aspects of devotional life fostered by mendicant religious communities, Franciscan, Augustinian and Dominican; Preaching Poverty, on the way poverty was promoted and practiced within the Dominican Order in the later Middle Ages and Renaissance.
Figures
vii
Contributors viii
Abbreviations xii
Introduction 1(10)
PART I Poverty and the Rule of Francis
11(66)
1 Apostolic ideals in the mendicant transformation of the thirteenth century: from sine proprio to holy poverty
13(19)
Constant J. Mews
2 The decree Exivi de paradise and its implications for mendicant poverty
32(13)
Riccardo Saccenti
3 Poverty in The Tree of the Crucified Life of Jesus by Ubertino da Casale
45(16)
Campion Murray Ofm
4 Religious dissent in the vernacular: the literature of the fraticelli in late fourteenth-century Florence
61(16)
Antonio Montefusco
PART II Devotional cultures
77(72)
5 Francis of Assisi, Sister Bird and interpretations of the founder in thirteenth- and fourteenth-century sources
79(13)
Anna Welch
6 A feast of love: visual images of Francis of Assisi and Mary Magdalen and late medieval mendicant devotion
92(13)
Claire Renkin
7 The prayer Anima Christi and Dominican popular devotion: late medieval examples of the interface between high ecclesiastical culture and popular piety
105(23)
Earl Jeffrey Richards
8 St Thomas Aquinas's relics and lay devotion in fourteenth century southern Italy
128(21)
Marika Rasanen
PART III Preaching poverty
149(61)
9 Performing poverty: the vices and virtues of the Order of Preachers
151(13)
Anne Hollo Way
10 `Beggars in silky robes and palaces': Dominicans preaching and practising poverty in medieval Scandinavia
164(21)
Johnny Grandjean GØgsig Jakobsen
11 Ideas of poverty in late medieval Dominican preaching materials from Catalonia and Aragon
185(13)
Lidia Negoi
12 `Where the poor of Christ are cherished': poverty in the preaching of Antoninus of Florence
198(12)
Peter Howard
Index 210
Constant J. Mews is Professor within the School of Philosophical, Historical and International Studies and Director of the Centre for Studies in Religion and Theology at Monash University, Australia.





Anna Welch (Ph.D. 2011, University of Divinity) works in the History of the Book department at State Library Victoria (Melbourne). Her first monograph is based on her doctoral research: Liturgy, Books and Franciscan Identity in Medieval Umbria (2015).