The English Catholic Refugees on the Continent 1558-1795
Author: Peter Guilday
Publisher:
Published: 1914
Total Pages: 556
ISBN-13:
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Author: Peter Guilday
Publisher:
Published: 1914
Total Pages: 556
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Caroline Bowden
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Published: 2024-10-28
Total Pages: 407
ISBN-13: 1040243800
DOWNLOAD EBOOKBetween 1600 and 1800 around 4,000 Catholic women left England for a life of exile in the convents of France, Flanders, Portugal and America. These closed communities offered religious contemplation and safety, but also provided an environment of concentrated female intellectualism. The nuns’ writings from this time form a unique resource.
Author: Alison Shell
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Published: 1999-07-08
Total Pages: 323
ISBN-13: 1139425382
DOWNLOAD EBOOKThe Catholic contribution to English literary culture has been widely neglected or misunderstood. This book sets out to rehabilitate a wide range of Catholic imaginative writing, while exposing the role of anti-Catholicism as an imaginative stimulus to mainstream writers in Tudor and Stuart England. It discusses canonical figures such as Sidney, Spenser, Webster and Middleton, those whose presence in the canon has been more fitful, and many who have escaped the attention of literary critics. Among the themes to emerge are the anti-Catholic imagery of revenge tragedy and the definitive contribution made by Southwell and Crashaw to the post-Reformation revival of religious verse in England. Alison Shell offers a fascinating exploration of the rhetorical stratagems by which Catholics sought to demonstrate simultaneous loyalties to the monarch and to their religion, and of the stimulus given to the Catholic literary imagination by the persecution and exile so many of these writers suffered.
Author: Caroline Bowden
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Published: 2024-08-01
Total Pages: 400
ISBN-13: 1040233929
DOWNLOAD EBOOKBetween 1600 and 1800 around 4,000 Catholic women left England for a life of exile in the convents of France, Flanders, Portugal and America. These closed communities offered religious contemplation and safety, but also provided an environment of concentrated female intellectualism. The nuns’ writings from this time form a unique resource.
Author: Caroline Bowden
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Published: 2024-08-01
Total Pages: 342
ISBN-13: 104024372X
DOWNLOAD EBOOKBetween 1600 and 1800 around 4,000 Catholic women left England for a life of exile in the convents of France, Flanders, Portugal and America. These closed communities offered religious contemplation and safety, but also provided an environment of concentrated female intellectualism. The nuns’ writings from this time form a unique resource.
Author:
Publisher:
Published: 1914
Total Pages: 962
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKA weekly review of politics, literature, theology, and art.
Author: Nicky Hallett
Publisher: Routledge
Published: 2016-05-06
Total Pages: 310
ISBN-13: 1317104056
DOWNLOAD EBOOKNicky Hallett has uncovered a major new source of material by and about English nuns living in exile in the Low Countries during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. This volume presents the women's voices in unmediated form, direct in all their vibrancy, with an extensive introduction that provides historical and cultural contexts for an understanding of the Lives, their sources and their authors. Lives of Spirit draws upon several remarkable sets of papers compiled in enclosed convents between 1619 and 1794. These documents show that religious women developed an astute system of auto/biographical practice within a protean political situation, and that, even in exile and from within enclosure, they sought to shape a distinctive contribution to devotional change within a reforming church. This volume reveals how the women's Lives challenge, as well as affirm, notions of gendered spirituality, refiguring traditions of female life-writing that extend from Catherine of Siena (1347 - 80) through the work of the Carmelite reformer, Teresa of Avila (1515 - 82), into the later modern period. The newness of the material in this book allows a radical reappraisal of the self-representation of religious women and of paradigms of life-writing in, and beyond, the early modern period. This book is of significant interest to scholars interested in early modern women's writing, female spirituality, and auto/biography more widely as a genre.
Author: Liesbeth Corens
Publisher:
Published: 2019
Total Pages: 255
ISBN-13: 0198812434
DOWNLOAD EBOOKIn the wake of England's break with Rome and gradual reformation, English Catholics took root outside of the country, in Catholic countries across Europe. Confessional Mobility explores their arrival and the foundation of convents and colleges on the Continent as well as their impact beyond that initial moment of change.
Author: Nicky Hallett
Publisher: Routledge
Published: 2017-11-22
Total Pages: 254
ISBN-13: 1351143026
DOWNLOAD EBOOKPresenting a remarkable set of previously unpublished papers, this book concerns the bewitchment, possession and exorcism of two seventeenth-century nuns living in exile in an English convent in the Spanish Netherlands. The two women left behind an extensive set of personal writing that reveals unprecedented detail about their devotional lives and spiritual states before, during and after exorcism. Unlike other similar cases, here the women write for themselves; for the first time in 350 years this book allows their voices - and their silences - to resound in all their vibrancy. An extensive introduction discusses the politics of piety and possession at a time when exorcism had become increasingly contentious, amidst conflicting claims for rival church reform. The book includes both autobiographical and biographical material, written by the nuns and about them, and casting new light on processes of female self-writing at just the time when the 'modern subject' is often said to have emerged.