Results 141 to 150 of about 3,011,548 (213)
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Tracy Collins, Female monasticism in medieval Ireland: an archaeology
Peritia, 2023Conleth Manning
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Female Patrons of Monasticism in the Late Medieval Balkans (13th-14th Centuries)
Endowment Studies, 2019This article focuses on the role of women as patrons of monastic institutions, monks and church hierarchs in the late medieval Balkans. Two case studies from medieval Serbia are examined to demonstrate the peculiarities of the relationship between female
T. Leber
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Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy: Archaeology, Culture, History, Literature, 2022
:This project provides new insights into the chronology and character of St Catherine's, Shanagolden, the best-preserved later medieval nunnery in Ireland. Fieldwork comprised a survey of the ruins followed by two seasons of excavation.
Tracy Collins
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:This project provides new insights into the chronology and character of St Catherine's, Shanagolden, the best-preserved later medieval nunnery in Ireland. Fieldwork comprised a survey of the ruins followed by two seasons of excavation.
Tracy Collins
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Female Monasticism in Italy: A Sociological Investigation
, 2014G. Dalpiaz
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Spiritual Economies: Female Monasticism in Later Medieval England (review)
Parergon, 2013Alexandra Barratt
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2023
By 500 ce, Christian women monastics lived in almost all the corners of the former western Empire and beyond, in places like Frisia and Ireland. These religious communities were not guided by the same rules. They differed in size, number and sex of inhabitants, wealth, architecture, and many other ways.
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By 500 ce, Christian women monastics lived in almost all the corners of the former western Empire and beyond, in places like Frisia and Ireland. These religious communities were not guided by the same rules. They differed in size, number and sex of inhabitants, wealth, architecture, and many other ways.
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CHAPTER 1.The Expansion of Female Monasticism in the Central Middle Ages
Women's Monasticism and Medieval Society, 2018semanticscholar +2 more sources
Spiritual Economies: Female Monasticism in Later Medieval England by Nancy Bradley Warren (review)
Studies in the Age of Chaucer, 2016Barbara Newman
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Church History: Studies in Christianity and Culture, 2019
“First Saxon Capitulary,” which describes tithes and the exploitation of the vast mineral resources of the Harz Mountains. Charlemagne’s policy of central direction is misunderstood by Rembold (167–171) but is illustrated by the Vita Sturmi.
L. Bitel
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“First Saxon Capitulary,” which describes tithes and the exploitation of the vast mineral resources of the Harz Mountains. Charlemagne’s policy of central direction is misunderstood by Rembold (167–171) but is illustrated by the Vita Sturmi.
L. Bitel
semanticscholar +1 more source
An Archaeological Perspective on Female Monasticism in the Middle Ages in Ireland
, 2015Tracy Collins
semanticscholar +2 more sources

