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2. The Anchoress of Colne Priory: A Solitary in Community
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Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- List of Illustrations ix
- Acknowledgements x
- List of Contributors xi
- Abbreviations xiv
- Introduction: ‘No Such Thing as Society?’ Solitude in Community Cate Gunn and Liz Herbert McAvoy 1
- 1. ‘O Sely Ankir!’ 13
-
Part I. Religious Communities
- 2. The Anchoress of Colne Priory: A Solitary in Community 37
- 3. Anchorites in their Heavenly Communities 53
- 4. Rule Within Rule, Cell Within Cloister: Grimlaicus’s Regula Solitariorum 68
-
Part II. Lay Communities
- 5. English Nuns as ‘Anchoritic Intercessors’ for Souls in Purgatory: The Employment of A Revelation of Purgatory by Late Medieval English Nunneries for Their Lay Communities 85
- 6. ‘In aniversaries of ower leoveste freond seggeth alle nihene’: Anchorites, Chantries and Purgatorial Patronage in Medieval England 101
- 7. ‘Item receyvyd of ye Anker’: The Relationships between a Parish and its Anchorites as Seen through the Churchwardens’ Accounts 117
- 8. The Curious Incident of the Hermit in Fisherton 131
- 9. Was Julian’s Nightmare a Māre? Julian of Norwich and the Vernacular Community of Storytellers 147
-
Part III. Textual Communities
- 10. Anchoritic Textual Communities and the Wooing Group Prayers 167
- 11. The Anchoress Transformed: On wel swuðe god ureisun of God almihti and þe wohunge of ure lauerd in the Fourteenth-Century A Talkyng of the Love of God 183
- 12. Ancrene Wisse and the Egerton Hours 199
- Bibliography 221
- Index 244
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- List of Illustrations ix
- Acknowledgements x
- List of Contributors xi
- Abbreviations xiv
- Introduction: ‘No Such Thing as Society?’ Solitude in Community Cate Gunn and Liz Herbert McAvoy 1
- 1. ‘O Sely Ankir!’ 13
-
Part I. Religious Communities
- 2. The Anchoress of Colne Priory: A Solitary in Community 37
- 3. Anchorites in their Heavenly Communities 53
- 4. Rule Within Rule, Cell Within Cloister: Grimlaicus’s Regula Solitariorum 68
-
Part II. Lay Communities
- 5. English Nuns as ‘Anchoritic Intercessors’ for Souls in Purgatory: The Employment of A Revelation of Purgatory by Late Medieval English Nunneries for Their Lay Communities 85
- 6. ‘In aniversaries of ower leoveste freond seggeth alle nihene’: Anchorites, Chantries and Purgatorial Patronage in Medieval England 101
- 7. ‘Item receyvyd of ye Anker’: The Relationships between a Parish and its Anchorites as Seen through the Churchwardens’ Accounts 117
- 8. The Curious Incident of the Hermit in Fisherton 131
- 9. Was Julian’s Nightmare a Māre? Julian of Norwich and the Vernacular Community of Storytellers 147
-
Part III. Textual Communities
- 10. Anchoritic Textual Communities and the Wooing Group Prayers 167
- 11. The Anchoress Transformed: On wel swuðe god ureisun of God almihti and þe wohunge of ure lauerd in the Fourteenth-Century A Talkyng of the Love of God 183
- 12. Ancrene Wisse and the Egerton Hours 199
- Bibliography 221
- Index 244