Results 21 to 30 of about 114 (84)

Dudon de Saint-Quentin et Fécamp

open access: yesTabularia, 2002
The town of Fécamp was the place of birth and death of Duke Richard I who had a collegiate church built there, which was consecrated in 990. Dudo of Saint-Quentin, the historiographer of the first dukes of Normandy, provides little information about the ...
Pierre Bouet
doaj   +1 more source

Un pouvoir d’abbé en acte(s) : Raoul d’Argences, abbé de Fécamp (1190-1219)

open access: yesTabularia, 2011
As soon as Normandy was attached to the Royal domain, Philip II Augustus gave Royal status to all the Norman Benedictine abbots and reinforced links that existed since the XIIth century between the Capetian rulers and the Norman prelats.
Fabien Paquet
doaj   +1 more source

Reading Augustine’s Confessions in Normandy in the 11th and 12th Centuries

open access: yesTabularia, 2014
Scholars such as Pierre Courcelle have observed an intensification in interest in Augustine’s Confessions in medieval Europe after the 11th century. This intensification was manifested in Normandy in two ways: first, in the early 11th century, Abbot John
Lauren Mancia
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Une reconstitution hypothétique du cheminement des Annales de Flodoard, depuis Reims jusqu’à Fécamp

open access: yesTabularia, 2004
It is well known that Dudo of Saint-Quentin used the Annals of Flodoard to write his story of the first dukes of Normandy. The Annals' presence in Fécamp is generally attributed to the reformer of Cluny, William of Volpiano, just after year 1000. However,
Stéphane Lecouteux
doaj   +1 more source

Fécamp et l’architecture en Normandie

open access: yesTabularia, 2003
In this paper I have tried to place the abbey church of Fecamp in the broad context of romanesque and gothic architecture in Normandy and, where relevant, England.
Lindy Grant
doaj   +1 more source

Guillaume de Volpiano en Normandie : état des questions

open access: yesTabularia, 2002
Richard II’s appeal to William of Volpiano, an Italian-Burgundian reformer in 1001, must be regarded as an important stage in the revival of monasticism in the Norman principality.
Véronique Gazeau
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La genèse architecturale de l’église de la Trinité de Fécamp

open access: yesTabularia, 2002
The Church of the Holy Trinity in Fécamp, constructed in three major phases between the eleventh and the fourteenth century, stands where Richard I built a collegiate church in 990.
Katrin Brockhaus
doaj   +1 more source

Le Sang du Christ : sang eucharistique ou sang relique ?

open access: yesTabularia, 2009
There is an intriguing coincidence between the moment when the Latin Church abandoned the rite of receiving communion wine and the development of the cult of the "natural" precious Blood relic, of Christ on the cross.
Marc Venard
doaj   +1 more source

La suscription dans les actes des abbés de Fécamp (XIe-début du XIVe siècle)

open access: yesTabularia, 2012
From a corpus of more than 150 abbatial acts dated before 1330, with unfortunately huge inequalities depending upon the abbot, this study of superscription aims to throw new light on the phenomenon of imitation but also on the individual titles of each ...
Michaël Bloche
doaj   +1 more source

À propos des articles de K. Brockhaus, « La genèse architecturale de l’église de la Trinité… » et de L. Grant, « Fécamp et l’architecture en Normandie ». L’apport de l’archéologie des charpentes pour l’étude historique et architecturale de l'église de La Trinité de Fécamp

open access: yesTabularia, 2003
Archaelogical study of the wood which is part of the structure of the church of the abbey of Fécamp has shown, thanks to dendrochronology, that some of the structures which are still there in the nave can be dated back to 1227-1228. This medieval roof is
Frédéric Épaud
doaj   +1 more source

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