Understanding the Old Hispanic Office

Understanding the Old Hispanic Office

Author: Emma Hornby

Publisher: Cambridge University Press

Published: 2022-11-30

Total Pages: 475

ISBN-13: 1108845894

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

An innovative, scholarly introduction to the distinctive and enigmatic Christian liturgy of early medieval Iberia.


Text, Liturgy, and Music in the Hispanic Rite

Text, Liturgy, and Music in the Hispanic Rite

Author: Raquel Rojo Carrillo

Publisher: Oxford University Press

Published: 2020-11-20

Total Pages: 384

ISBN-13: 0197503772

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

The Hispanic rite, a medieval non-Roman Western liturgy, was practiced across the Iberian Peninsula for over half a millennium and functioned as the most distinct marker of Christian identity in this region. As Christians typically began every liturgical day throughout the year by singing a vespertinus, this chant genre in particular provides a unique window into the cultural and religious life of medieval Iberia. The Hispanic rite has the largest corpus of extant manuscripts of all non-Roman liturgies in the West, which testifies to the importance placed on their transmission through political and cultural upheavals. Its chants, however, use a notational system that lacks clear specification of pitch and has kept them barred from in-depth study. Text, Liturgy and Music in the Hispanic Rite is the first detailed analysis of the interactions between textual, liturgical, and musical variables across the entire extant repertoire of a chant genre central to the Hispanic rite, the vespertinus. By approaching the vespertini through a holistic methodology that integrates liturgy, melody, and text, author Raquel Rojo Carrillo identifies the genre's norms and traces the different shapes it adopts across the liturgical year and on different occasions. In this way, the book offers an unprecedented insight into the liturgical edifice of the Hispanic rite and the daily experience of Christians in medieval Iberia.


A Bishopric Between Three Kingdoms

A Bishopric Between Three Kingdoms

Author: Carolina Carl

Publisher: BRILL

Published: 2011-08-25

Total Pages: 305

ISBN-13: 9004180125

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

This book explores the peculiarities of the Bishopric of Calahorra’s eleventh- and twelfth-century institutional development, and their profound relationship to the see’s location on a highly volatile frontier between the emergent and fiercely competitive Christian kingdoms of north-eastern Iberia.


Life and Selected Revelations

Life and Selected Revelations

Author: Saint Bridget (of Sweden)

Publisher: Paulist Press

Published: 1990

Total Pages: 366

ISBN-13: 9780809131396

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

This was the massive, simplified structure which had been built on Birgitta's orders, using the foundations and the walls of the castle given to her by King Magnus.


Hospitaller Women in the Middle Ages

Hospitaller Women in the Middle Ages

Author: Anthony Luttrell

Publisher: Ashgate Publishing, Ltd.

Published: 2006

Total Pages: 292

ISBN-13: 9780754606468

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

This volume brings together recent and new research, with several items specially translated into English, on the sisters of the largest and most long-lived of the military-religious orders, the Hospital of St John of Jerusalem. It explores the roles which the Hospitaller sisters performed within their Order; examines the problems of having men and women living within the same or adjoining houses; studies relations between the Order and the patrons of its women's houses; and looks at the career of a prominent woman within the Order during the Middle Ages.


The Iberian Qur’an

The Iberian Qur’an

Author: Mercedes García-Arenal

Publisher: Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG

Published: 2022-09-20

Total Pages: 661

ISBN-13: 3110779048

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Due to the long presence of Muslims in Islamic territories (Al-Andalus and Granada) and of Muslims minorities in the Christians parts, the Iberian Peninsula provides a fertile soil for the study of the Qur’an and Qur’an translations made by both Muslims and Christians. From the mid-twelfth century to at least the end of the seventeenth, the efforts undertaken by Christian scholars and churchmen, by converts, by Muslims (both Mudejars and Moriscos) to transmit, interpret and translate the Holy Book are of the utmost importance for the understanding of Islam in Europe. This book reflects on a context where Arabic books and Arabic speakers who were familiar with the Qur’an and its exegesis coexisted with Christian scholars. The latter not only intended to convert Muslims, and polemize with them but also to adquire solid knowledge about them and about Islam. Qur’ans were seized during battle, bought, copied, translated, transmitted, recited, and studied. The different features and uses of the Qur’an on Iberian soil, its circulation as well as the lives and works of those who wrote about it and the responses of their audiences, are the object of this book.